Covi strikes back with anti-union ad
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Noaki Schwartz
NEWPORT BEACH -- Covi Concrete Construction has accused the Carpenters
Union of misusing $1.5 million in dues since 1997 to pay nonunion workers
to protest in front of its building sites.
The accusations are the latest development in a three-year battle between
the construction company and the union. Two weeks ago at Newport Center,
nearly 500 Local Union 944 protesters showed up at a Covi job site,
demanding the company to hire union workers.
In a one-page paid advertisement appearing in the Los Angeles Times on
Monday, a message from the Covi company said the union has paid “nonunion
workers nonunion wages, without benefits, to intimidate, threaten and
harass” the Covi construction company. The ad accuses the union of
hypocrisy in its campaign to force Covi to hire union workers and pay
union wages.
Union representatives said they viewed the ad as a victory in their
long-running dispute with the million-dollar construction company.
While union spokesman Mike McCarron admitted that a considerable amount
of money has been spent on the campaign -- and that a small percentage of
nonunion workers are used in protests -- he said it is worth the effort.
“The membership backs the leadership,” he said. “Everybody got a kick out
of this ad.”
Covi owner Paul Bissin and his attorney Phillip Greer could not be
reached for comment Monday.
McCarron said that when 500 workers picketed a Covi job site in Newport
Center on Feb. 3, about 95% to 100% of the protesters were union members.
Huntington Beach-based Covi did $20 million in business last year and has
been responsible for Newport Beach projects such as Fletcher Jones Motor
Cars and the Colony parking lot at Fashion Island.
“Obviously we’re effective or he wouldn’t have spent [anywhere from
$7,000 to $12,000] to put the ad in the newspaper,” McCarron said. “This
is desperation.”
McCarron said companies like Covi prefer to use nonunion workers because
they don’t have to provide health insurance and can pay them less than
the $26-an-hour union wage. In this way, he said, construction companies
can stay competitive in the cutthroat building business.
But Greer has argued that instead of turning the money over to the union
in dues, Covi prefers to give it directly to workers. However, Covi
employees two weeks ago said they were making less than the union wage
and did not receive any benefits.
The dispute climaxed last year when Bissin found his South Orange County
home surrounded by picketers. Neighbors at his Nellie Gail Ranch
community -- where homes prices average about $3 million -- were so
disturbed by the protesters that they went to court to stop them.
An Orange County Superior Court judge ordered protesters to stay clear of
Bissin’s home, but allowed them to picket at the community’s entrance.
Since then, a handful of protesters still picket outside the
neighborhood.
McCarron said Covi’s recent effort to incite an upheaval within the union
ranks has yet to garner any support. He said the union had not received
any calls from irate members after the ad was published.
“Covi has unfair wages, no health care and no pension,” McCarron said.
“There may be companies that don’t want to use Covi. The battle
continues.”
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