P-I Online Reporter
Dispute
The Guild has filed a federal lawsuit to compel
the Seattle Post-Intelligencer to arbitrate a grievance over
a dispute about online work. Here are some questions and answers
to help P-I Guild members understand the background on this
issue.
Q. The P-I says
that the grievance filed over online work is not suitable
for arbitration. Is that true?
A.
The Guild says no. But even so, when there is a dispute over
whether a subject is proper for arbitration, the Guild/P-I
contract says, “…in any case where either party
contests the arbitrability of the grievance, the arbitrator
shall hold a separate proceeding and rule on that issue prior
to hearing the matter on the merits (Article 10[C]3).”
In the current case, the P-I refused to mutually select an
arbitrator and sent a letter to the American Arbitration Association,
telling it to stop processing the Guild’s demand for
arbitration. Instead of insisting on an arbitrability hearing,
the P-I simply said it wouldn’t participate in the process.

Q. The P-I says
the Guild unilaterally terminated the New Media Agreement.
When did that happen, and why?
A. The New Media
Agreement was a side agreement negotiated in 1997. It had
no expiration date, and no language about renewal or renegotiation.
The Guild sent the P-I a letter in March 2006 terminating
the agreement because it was outdated. In addition, the Guild
told the P-I that its current policy is to eliminate side
agreements that aren’t part of the contract, whenever
possible. These side agreements are invisible to the members
and tend to be forgotten. Current Guild leaders believe the
members have a right to know what agreements its union has
signed, and that the agreements should be readily available
to members.
Q. What did the
P-I do when the Guild terminated the New Media Agreement?
A. Nothing. Although
the P-I acknowledges it received the Guild’s letter,
it made no response, either verbal or written. It didn’t
protest, or file a grievance, or demand to bargain a new agreement.
P-I officials didn’t even make a phone call. The P-I
also didn’t propose another New Media Agreement when
the Guild contract was negotiated in the summer of 2006. The
P-I says now that the Guild’s action was outrageous,
but at the time, the P-I didn’t respond at all. It was
only after the grievance was filed in July 2007 that the P-I
protested.
Q. Why did the
Guild file a grievance over the online reporter issue?
A. We all know
that in the future, more and more of the content generated
by P-I reporters will be used on the Web site and not in the
print edition of the newspaper.
The Guild’s contract says, “It is agreed that
the Guild has, and shall retain, jurisdiction over all work
presently being performed by Guild members in the Editorial,
and Business Office, except for those jobs specifically excluded
under the Preamble of this agreement.”
As of the time this contract was agreed to,
and even more now with the P-I’s “Web first”
focus, Guild members blog, write breaking news online, shoot
photos, record audio and video and perform other tasks for
seattlepi.com. This work clearly falls under the definition
of “work presently being performed by Guild members.”
Therefore, when the P-I assigned online reporter duties to
a new position that wasn’t in the bargaining unit, the
union filed a grievance.
Q. Why did the
Guild file a federal lawsuit? The P-I just concluded costly
litigation with the Times over the JOA. Isn’t there
another action the Guild could take?
A. Arbitration
is always cheaper and quicker than litigation, which is why
union contracts include arbitration to resolve disputes. However,
the P-I’s refusal to follow the contract grievance procedure
moved this dispute to a different, more serious level. The
Guild Local Executive Board voted to proceed with litigation
after seeking advice from the union’s attorney and the
union’s international. We want the court to tell the
P-I it must follow the grievance procedure it agreed to.
Q. Is the Guild
willing to negotiate with the P-I over the online issue?
A. Yes, Guild
representatives made that clear in a grievance meeting with
the employer. However, the P-I wanted the Guild to put the
issue on hold and wait until the current contract expires,
which at the time was a year away. The Guild is still willing
to negotiate, and the P-I has said it is trying to identify
suitable dates. But we’re not willing to stand by and
do nothing while the P-I refuses to follow the contract grievance
procedure. That is egregious and unacceptable. If the P-I
can refuse to arbitrate this grievance, it could refuse to
arbitrate any grievance.
A copy of the U.S. District Court complaint
filed by the union and the exhibits are posted on the site
along with this Q and A. We invite members to inspect the
documents. If you have further questions, or comments, please
talk to one of your workplace leaders or shop stewards. They
are:
- P-I Guild Unit Chairwoman Lisa Stiffler.
- P-I Shop Stewards: Gene Achziger, Curt Milton, Kery Murakami,
Greg Roberts and Chris West.
- Local 37082 Executive Board members: Gene Achziger, Athima
Chansanchai and Kristin Dizon.
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