The Michigan Daily-Thursday, May21 1981-Page 3 Pickets at Wordprocessors Labor and management at odds again By ANDREW CHAPMAN Several employees of The Wor- dprocessors have set up a picket line outside the State Street copy shop, and are urging customers to boycott all further use of the store. Union Shop Steward Dave Her- man said the group is picketing because the Wordprocessors owners have "broken agreements made with the employees." James Forrester, a former employee, said the agreements were broken because "the owners hired two people not on the preferential hiring }: :list." . THE preferential hiring list is a. list of people that the owners of The Wordprocessors agreed to use to fill any future positions that open in the store. The list is made up of people who were fired last April following a picket and boycott staged by em- ployees. The National Labor Relations Board ruled then that these former employees must be rehired as soon as any jobs become available in The Wordprocessors shop. THE PICKETING workers, who call themselves Employees Against ; r ..~ Arbitrary Action, claim that the recent hiring of the two workers not on this list constitutes unfair labor -. 'practices. According to Herman, the picketing workers want "the owners of The Wordprocessors to offer the two positions under contention to all the people currently on the preferen- S- .tial hiring list, and to distribute Daily Photo by JACKE BELL payment of the wages that these two FORMER AND CURRENT Wordprocessors employees walk a picket line established in people have been receiving among front of the shop to protest the hiring of two new employees by the shop's owners. The the people currently on the list." picketers claim the hiring violates the provisions of a NLRB ruling. Joshua Peck, above left, Joshua Peck, one of the two per- is one of the new employees, and, lower right, Wordprocessors union Shop Steward Dave sons hired recently, said, "When I Herman, who is leading the boycott of the shop. began working I had no idea that the union-management conflict was boiling as furiously as it indeed was." June Smith, the owner and manager of The Wordprocessors, de clined to comment, but her lawyer, Russ Boltz, said "we are very puz- zled by the picket line and the boycott .., we can't figure out why they're out there." In response to a flyer the picketers were distributing, Boltz said, "We are very hurt by their accusations." Boltz said it is unclear whether the two employees in question are part of "the bargaining unit." The bargaining unit is a term applied to employees of Wordprocessors who are covered by the NLRB set- tlement. If these two employees are within the bargaining unit they are subject to NLRB jurisdiction and cannot be hired because of the existence of the preferential hiring list. If these workers fall outside the bargaining unit, however, they are not subject to the guidelines placed upon em- ployment by the preferential hiring list and are eligible for their current positions. Herman said the two people are part of the bargaining unit because "people holding the same jobs in 1979 were considered by the owners to be part of the bargaining unit. There is no difference in the jobs, thus Peck's job should now be con- sidered part of the bargaining unit." "We don't want to see anybody get canned," said Herman when ex- plaining the union's position, "but he (Peck) was hired contrary to the law and the agreement which they (the owners) signed." See WORDPROCESSORS, Page 7 SEARCH FOR ACCEPTABLE TAX REFORM CONTINUES: Milliken-Tisch meeting fizzles LANSING (UPI)-A post-election summit con- ference between Gov. William Milliken and Robert Tisch on the future of property tax reform fizzled yesterday because the tax cut crusader refused to keep it private. Tisch, who never has met face-to-face with Milliken, arrived at the executive office late in the day to find the governor gone. THE BIZARRE episode capped a day of reassessment in which Milliken and other gover- nment leaders vowed to continue seeking an accep- table tax reform plan in the wake of Proposal A's stunning defeat. Milliken met with top legislative leaders who had joined him in supporting the ballot proposal as a sub- stitute for radical tax slashing. No firm conclusions were reached on the next step and it was not clear whether action could come in time to affect summer tax bills. THE NEARLY 3-1 rejection of Proposal A Tuesday was the main topic of discussion during the regular morning session of the Senate. There was general agreement that the vote was a repudiation of the legislature, and some calls for immediate action on tax cuts deeper than those offered by the proposal. Final unofficial returns from the secretary of state's office showed Proposal A was rejected 1,447,318 to 563,050 in an election which drew a sur- prisinglyhigh turnout of 35.1 percent. The magnitude of the defeat was impressive, as Proposal A failed in all 83 counties and was rejected in liberal and conservative communities alike. IT CONTINUED a trend of nay-saying on property tax reform issues over the past several elections. Voters rejected two Tisch proposals, in 1978 and 1980, and another moderate plan proposed by the governor and legislators last fall. The proposal would have cut local property and in- come levies in half in return for an increase in the state sales tax from 4 percent to 5.5 percent. The campaign committee raised between $200,000 and $250,000 to promote the measure. The strongest support came from labor unions and school organizations. Milliken allies downplayed the significance of the defeat for his political career. It is an almost im- possible task, they said, to develop a concensus on the complex tax reform issue. MILLIKEN SAID he would talk to various persons to "get a sense of what now would be appropriate" but stressed he would accept nothing "irresponsible" such as the past Tisch proposals. Milliken agreed to a meeting requested by Tisch on the condition that it be private, insisting that was his normal policy when meeting with citizens on public issues. The governor cancelled the meeting when Tisch balked..-