In a groundbreaking victory in their second-ever contract,
Security Officer members of SEIU Local 26 in Minneapolis and Saint Paul won
access to affordable health insurance, higher wages, improved training and
equipment, and sick leave in a tentative contract agreement reached
late last night with their employers.
“I have four kids without health insurance, so this contract
will make all the difference for my family,” said Howard Worley, a security
officer at Town Square
in Saint Paul
and a member of the union bargaining committee. “Now we need to keep it going
and win affordable health care for everyone who stood with us and for all
working families in Minnesota.”
The five-year agreement, which will be put to a ratification
vote on Saturday with a recommendation by the bargaining team for approval,
includes the following improvements:
- Affordable health care
for full-time security officers for the first time ever.
o Single Coverage
reduced to $20 per month. The employer’s premium contribution for single
coverage will increase from as little as 57% now to 96% by the end of the
contract, while the monthly cost to employees will drop from as much as $190
per month now to $60 per month immediately and $20 per month by the end of the
contract.
o Family Coverage
reduced to $260 per month. The employer’s premium contribution for family
coverage will increase from as little as 20% now to 65% by the end of the
contract, while the cost to employees to cover themselves and their children will
drop by as much as $570 per month and will be capped at $260 per month for the
duration of the contract.
- Major wage increases
of 25% - 32%. Wages will
increase by at least 50 cents in each year, with some officers seeing increases
of up to $3.20 over the course of the contract.
- A process for building
stronger training and equipment standards to improve public safety in Minneapolis and Saint
Paul. Officers at Block E in downtown Minneapolis have already been fitted for
bullet-proof vests as a result of heightened public awareness due to security
officers’ efforts.
- Sick days that will
allow full-time security officers to access the health care they need to stay
healthy at work.
The tentative bargaining agreement with security
contractors ABM, Allied Barton, American, Securitas, and Viking
comes after officers held a one-day strike in February highlighting
the need for affordable health care for all Minnesotans.
“This victory for security officers is a major step forward
in restoring Minnesota’s
middle class,” said Javier Morillo,
president of SEIU Local 26. “Now, working families in the Twin Cities are
prepared to keep up the fight to show what can and should be done to ensure
everyone in our state has access to quality, affordable health care.”
At our membership meeting on Saturday, May 12, security officers, window cleaners, and janitors ratified and launched a new organizing campaign for Local 26.
For the first time in our history, we are organizing in every part of our union at the same time to unite our strength. No longer can we afford to think of our union as separate pieces: janitors, security officers, and window cleraners. We all work in the same industry of Property Services.
One Industry. One Union.
Earlier this year, our victory with the janitors’ contract showed the building owners of Minneapolis and St. Paul that we are serious about raising standards in our industry for affordable family health insurance and livable wages.
But we only addressed one part of the industry: contract janitorial cleaning. The security officers who guard the same buildings and the window cleaners who clean their windows still lack the affordable health insurance that we just won with our new janitors contract.
If the building owners, managers, and contractors thought they had a fight on their hands last year, they haven’t seen anything yet!
In an historic act of non-violent civil disobedience, nine Twin Cities security
officers were among those arrested earlier today while calling attention to the
need for the city’s private security force to have access to quality affordable
health care. The protest marks the first time in the nation’s history that
private security officers, who were acting to promote public safety by ensuring
good jobs with health care for the more than 800 security officers who protect
the Twin Cities’ largest downtown buildings, have taken the extraordinary
measure of principled non-compliance with the law.
“This is about
protecting working families and protecting people who live, work, and play in
our city’s downtown,” says Harrison Bullard, a security officer at the Hennepin
County Government Center. “People who come downtown want strong, healthy, and
well-trained security officers to provide protection for
them.”
The non-violent
protest in the lobby of the IDS Center, Minneapolis’ tallest building, followed
a community forum at nearby Gethsemane Church to which security officers invited
the CEOs of Minneapolis-based US Bancorp and Ameriprise to explain to parents
and community leaders their refusal to support health care for downtown security
officers and their families.