Garbage strike hits Huntington Beach
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A strike by sanitation workers this week means garbage collection has
shut down in Huntington Beach and 16 other Orange County cities with
trash left to pile up in homes and city streets.
There has been no residential and limited commercial and industrial
garbage collection since Monday, and negotiators do not know when
collection will resume.
Workers, who are holding out for a 75% increase over five years,
rejected a deal agreed to by their labor union, for a 33.5% pay and
benefit increase over five years.
Gil Ortiz, a sanitation worker in Huntington Beach, said he currently
has trouble paying his rent and raising a family with the increased costs
of living.
“What they pay is not enough,” he said.
Ortiz and his co-workers said they do not feel that 33.5% is a large
enough increase.
“We’re asking for a reasonable pay increase for the workers to the
level of current living standards,” said Teamsters representative Bill
Huff, who said he is going back to the table for workers. “The offer
right now is unfair, the employees deserve more money.”
The agreement was signed by teamsters, but rejected by the men, said
Ron Shenkman, of Rainbow Disposal, which serves Huntington Beach and
several surrounding cities.
The offer on the table increased medical benefits, which cover workers
and their families at no cost and put the pay rate for a first-year
employee at $13.90 an hour plus raises every year for five years up to
$16 in fifth year, Shenkman said.
“Even at the [offered] rate now with the benefits and overtime that’s
a push for all of us,” Shenkman said.
The problem, Shenkman said, were promises of 75% made by teamsters to
workers at the start of negotiations.
It is an amount, Shenkman said, he has no intention of offering, but
said he holds no grudges against workers who he feels have been misled.
“We’ll welcome them back -- we think the world of them,” Shenkman
said. “We think they took advice that wasn’t good, but they’ve always
been good workers.”
Shenkman did warn that the offer of 33.5% won’t be on the table long
if they don’t take it.
In the meantime, federal negotiators are being brought in, Rainbow
Disposal is looking to find replacement drivers and residents may drop
off their trash at the Rainbow Disposal Transfer Station gate 5, 17121
Nichols St. free of charge.
If residents wish to wait for service to resume they are asked not to
leave it on the street, but put it in garages or out of sight, said Rich
Barnard, director of communications for the city of Huntington Beach.
* DANETTE GOULET is the assistant city editor. She can be reached at
(714) 965-7170 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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