Bus Woes Could Be Returning for City Residents

Once again, it looks like those of us who rely on public transportation on a daily basis could be faced with a strike of some sort, unless Cap City Metro and the unionized drivers and mechanics can come to terms. We are not very hopeful.
Last night the Cap City Metro Board held an emergency meeting to discuss the problem. Union workers from the Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1091 were told after the meeting that federal mediator Mike McMillon had declared that both sides should return to the bargaining table. But...under one stipulation, the union must agree to further concessions. Union chief Jay Wyatt said, not so fast. "All the concessions that have been made n this negotiation have been made by us," Wyatt said.
And we see his point. Last year Cap Metro was insisting that new hires greatly reduce their pay and that employees pay more towards the group healthcare plan. (As for the mandatory drug-testing, we can more or less get behind that demand. If we wanted a stoned person driving us all over town we wouldn't have let Ben Brown leave so hastily.)
After arguing almost all of last year over these sticking points, Cap Metro unilaterally put into place a wage for new hires that was 20% lower than the previous contract. Graciously, according to them, they did leave the healthcare plan as is. So they feel they have done just as much to meet in the middle. The union does not feel the same. Something's gotta give. However, board vice chairwoman and Travis County Commissioner Margaret Gomez was apparently trying to take the weak our-hands-are-tied excuse saying that state law states the board can not legally intervene in a contract dispute of this nature. But Austin City Council Member Danny Thomas was not trying to hear that. "There is a time someone has to come forward and say, despite the rules and regulations, 'Enough is enough.'" Go 'head, Danny Thomas.
So how does this get resolved? Who's right and who's wrong? And do you care?
One of our faithful readers, Mike Dahmus, has been a watchdog on transportation-related community issues for years. Check out his insights into this matter on the Cap City commuter archive section of his blog.


