New Museum employees vote to strike if no agreement is reached with management

Arts

A demonstration in June outside the New Museum's summer exhibitions opening reception called attention to union negotiations Courtesy of the New Museum Union

Members of the union that has represented employees of the New Museum in New York since January have voted overwhelmingly to strike if an agreement is not reached with the institution on a new contract, the union chapter announced today.

The New Museum Union (NewMuU of UAW Local 2110) has been immersed in negotiations with the museum for months on issues like pay and health benefits. Union representatives expect to continue talks all day today and possibly over the weekend, the local says, and eventually plan to set a strike deadline if no progress is made.

The vote on Thursday night on a potential strike was 69 in favour and 3 opposed, said Dana Kopel, a senior editor and publications coordinator at the museum who is a member of the unions bargaining committee. Overall, 87 employees in professional and technical staff positions are represented by the union, she says.

The museum had no immediate comment on the union's statement.

Negotiators representing the New Museum have been “quite hostile” from the start, Kopel said in an interview. “The museum has been really resistant.” The union chapter has cited managements decision to hire an anti-union consulting firm, Adams Nash Haskell & Sheridan, to guide it through labour negotiations before the union was formed.

One goal of the union is to see a minimum wage of $51,000 set for full-time employees, Kopel says. She says the lowest salary level for full-time workers is currently just under $40,000.

Union members have contended that salary levels are unseemly in light of “disproportionately high” executive salaries and the museums current $89m capital campaign to finance an expansion designed by the star architect Rem Koolhaas. The drive for higher pay also comes amid a Read More – Source