Le Lézard
Classified in: Oil industry
Subject: LBR

Strike Looms at Nuclear Power Plants in Illinois - Constellation Energy Corporation Fair Contract Now for Braidwood, LaSalle & Dresden


Security officers at nuclear power plants operated by Constellation energy company may go on strike after the union representing them and the company have so far failed to reach an agreement on a new contract. Under federal law, nuclear plants must operate under a costly contingency plan in the run-up to and during a strike, and the union highlights the fact that cost of the contingency plan far exceeds the cumulative cost to the company of the annual wage increases to the security officers during the life of the contract.

BRACEVILLE, Ill., April 3, 2024 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Security officers at nuclear power plants operated by Constellation energy company may go on strike after the union representing them and the company have so far failed to reach an agreement on a new contract. Under federal law, nuclear plants must operate under a costly contingency plan in the run-up to and during a strike, and the union highlights the fact that cost of the contingency plan far exceeds the cumulative cost to the company of the annual wage increases to the security officers during the life of the contract.

As Ronald Reagan had once said "When you can't make them see the light, make them feel the heat."

Baltimore, Maryland-based Constellation Energy describes itself as the U.S. largest producer of carbon-free energy to millions of homes, institutional customers, the public sector, and businesses, including three fourths of Fortune 100 companies.

The company relies on nuclear, hydro, wind, and solar generation facilities to power more than 16 million homes and businesses, providing 10 percent of all clean power on the grid in the U.S. Nearly 90 percent of the company's more than 32,400 megawatts of capacity and annual output are carbon-free.

Constellation operates fourteen nuclear plants.

The security officers in four of Constellation's fourteen nuclear plants are represented by the National Union of Nuclear Security Officers (NUNSO), a division of United Federation LEOS-PBA. These plants are Braidwood Generation Station, in Braceville, IL; Lasalle County Generation Station, in Marseilles, IL.; Clinton Power Station, in Clinton, IL; and R. E. Gina nuclear Power Plant in Ontario, NY.

The security officers at Braidwood have been represented by NUNSO for the last three years, and NUNSO has organized the security officers at LaSalle back in November of 2023.

Security officers at one other Constellation nuclear plant, the Dresden Generating Station in Morris, IL, are represented by SEIU Local 1 in Chicago. They are presently negotiating with Constellation over new contracts and are in the same position as NUNSO is in.

When a contract with employees at a nuclear plant is about to expire, the company operating the plant must, at least thirty days before the expiration if a contract, notify the National Regulatory Commission (NRC) of a possible strike. Usually, the union representing the employees would sign a Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) extension agreement with the company to extend the CBA for at least 30 to 60 days.

This is done to avoid forcing the company to implement a contingency plan, which is costly. The estimated cost of continency plans to the operator are more than $53,000 a day, and upward of $371,000 a week, per plant.

The negotiations between Constellation and NUNSO have been going on for a while, and things are coming to a head in the coming weeks, with the possibility of a strike and several of the plants looming.

Constellation's position is that the company tried, in good faith, to reach a new contract with the two unions ? NUNSO and SEIU ? but since such an agreement has not been reached, some of the company's plants have been operating under a costly contingency plan since 14 March. The Lasalle plant has been operating under a contingency plan since March 18th.

The company informed the two unions that its "offers to date have been premised on not incurring NRC-mandated contingency costs," and warned the unions:

If you do not agree to an extension..., the Company will begin incurring contingency costs. Those costs, which compound daily, will be considered by the Company in formulating all further proposals, which, given those costs, may not be as favorable as our current proposals have been. In a good faith effort to reach an agreement, the Company requests that the Union reconsider their stance on signing an extension before we are forced to incur these costs and consider them.

Steve Maritas, the Organizing Director of LEOS-PBA, described the company's offer as a "wage reduction," because the company's offer reduced the wage increases each year of the contract from 2.5 percent to 2.2 percent, and reduced the ratification bonus to security officers from $1,000 to $400.

The union also criticizes Constellation's negotiating tactics. While the two sides were negotiating over the contract at LaSalle, Constellation, without warning, decided to put on the table what the company described as "a last, best final offer." People familiar with labor negotiations say this his highly unusual, since the two sides were still in negotiations and the negotiations did not reach an impasse.

Maritas wrote the company, saying:

we must reject the current offer. It is important to note that our negotiations have not reached an impasse. We have negotiation dates scheduled and federal mediation arranged with both sites, which are critical next steps in our collective bargaining process. These planned meetings are a testament to our commitment to continue negotiations in good faith, with the aim of reaching an agreement that is acceptable to all parties involved.

On, Friday, NUNSO went back to the negotiation table, and the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service (FMCS) has joined the negotiations after the last negotiation sessions got heated and voices were raised.

The CBA with the security officers at Braidwood expires on Monday, 1 April 2024. NUNSO has not signed an extension agreement, so the plant is in a contingency plan right now. Once the CBA contract expires on 1 April, NUNSO can legally strike not only at Braidwood, but also at all of Constellation's other fourteen facilities around the country, except Clinton and R. E. Ginna. NUNSO represents the security officer at these plants, but there is a no-strike clause in the security officers' contracts at the plants.

At LaSalle, the union cannot strike the plant until 19 April owing to an extension agreement MOU, which expires on 18 April.

LEOS-PBA said that if NUNSO decides to call a strike at Braidwood, it may expand its strike against the company and security officers at the following Constellation plants may go on strike on 2 April:

At Lasalle, an extension agreement MOU expires 18 April, so strike cannot start before 19 April.

The security officers contract in these two plants have a no-strike clause:

If a nationwide strike is called against Constellation energy company by the Union, LEOS-PBA expects that the other unions would honor its strike line ? essentially, shutting down Constellation energy company's nuclear sites nationwide.

Source: Homeland Security Newswire.

https://www.homelandsecuritynewswire.com/dr20240401-strike-looms-at-nuclear-power-plants?page=0,0

www.WeWantRESPECT.ORG

United Federation LEOS-PBA

National Union of Nuclear Security Officers NUNSO

Media Contact

Steve Maritas, LEOS-PBA, 1 202-595-3510, [email protected], LEOS-PBA

Twitter

SOURCE LEOS-PBA


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