An IAPE Reminder on Glint and Goal Setting

In an email from Karen Pensiero and Kate Ortega, IAPE-represented News personnel have been advised they should participate in a “goal-setting exercise” via Glint, the platform Dow Jones used last year to conduct performance evaluations. Reporters and editors have been asked to provide “two to three new goals” before Friday, Nov. 26.

We expect other departments will deliver similar requests to employees soon.

We want to remind all IAPE-represented employees of the union’s position, recognized by Dow Jones, on setting goals and self-assessments. 

First, as they were last year, self-assessments are still optional. Second, entering your own goals is also a voluntary exercise. The addition of goals is considered part of “Employee Prep,” all of which was labeled in last year’s Glint introduction documents as “optional.”

We realize these employee/manager discussions are often employees’ best opportunities to talk about goals, expectations, performance and pay. IAPE is not opposed to members setting their own goals—we simply want you to know that you are not required to submit yours if you would rather have your manager set those targets for you.

If you do decide to provide your own goals, please know you are under no obligation to admit any shortcomings. A better approach may be offering suggestions your manager can follow to help you meet performance targets.

We continue to believe that setting expectations and evaluating performance are management functions, but we also want to be clear that this should not in any way prevent you from having constructive conversations with your boss about your future at Dow Jones.

Finally, we would like to remind you that Article XXI of the IAPE/DJ collective agreement states, “The Company and the Union agree that performance evaluations under this Article shall not be considered disciplinary actions.” That’s important—IAPE-represented employees are always entitled to union representation during disciplinary meetings, and Article XI of the contract requires at least three hours’ advance notice of disciplinary meetings (except “in the event of exigent circumstances”). A discussion of disciplinary action should not occur during a meeting to talk about goals or expectations.

If your manager ever invites you to a disciplinary meeting, please contact an IAPE director or steward, or email union@iape1096.org for assistance.

Physical Fitness Reimbursement Deadline Nov. 30
Another reminder from IAPE—the deadline for submitting physical fitness reimbursement claims for the 2021 benefit year is Tuesday, Nov. 30.

Full-time or regular part-time employees represented by IAPE can receive up to $600 of the employee-only costs of physical fitness activities and memberships ranging from health club memberships and personal trainers to entry fees for road races and tennis court fees. For the 2021 benefit year, IAPE-represented employees also may claim expenses for purchases of home gym equipment dating back to Jan. 1, 2020.

Gym equipment purchases will not be eligible for reimbursement in 2022.

You may request reimbursement by logging into www.wageworks.com and submitting your request or by completing a reimbursement request form available on the Dow Jones HR Hub. Expenses must be submitted to WageWorks by Nov. 30 to count towards the 2021 limit and to be reimbursed by the end of that calendar year.

Any expenses submitted after Nov. 30 will count toward the maximum benefit payable for the 2022 benefit year. Reimbursements from the Physical Fitness Program will be included on your Form W-2 as taxable income and will be subject to withholding taxes.

If you have any questions about your eligibility for this benefit or whether an activity fee is covered, please contact WageWorks at 877-924-3967.

Happy Thanksgiving From IAPE!

It’s Thanksgiving on Thursday, and the officers, directors and staff of IAPE would like to extend best wishes to our members working in the United States for a safe and happy Thanksgiving. IAPE staffers will be away from their phones and inboxes on Thursday and Friday, but will be back at work bright and early on Monday morning.

If you are not scheduled to work on Thursday, we hope you enjoy your holiday. If you are required to work, please remember to file for your Holiday Pay!

The collective agreement between IAPE and Dow Jones requires time-and-one-half for all regular hours worked on a holiday (double-time for extra hours) plus an additional day off in lieu of the holiday or an additional day’s pay.

The contract gives IAPE-represented employees the discretion to choose additional pay over an additional day off for all holidays worked after July 3rd in any calendar year. If you are assigned to work Thursday and you want extra pay instead of an additional day off, please inform your manager.

You may file for your Holiday Pay through Workday. If you have any questions about pay for working on a holiday or receiving your extra day’s pay or day off (again, your choice), please contact the IAPE office.

Today: IAPE 101
When you were hired by Dow Jones, were you surprised to learn that you were a union-represented employee? Have you ever wondered about your rights as a union member? If you have a half-hour to spare today at 2:00 p.m. EST, please join us for the next installment of IAPE 101 and see if we can answer your questions.

IAPE 101 is a Zoom presentation addressing the basics of IAPE membership: What is a union? How does IAPE function? How does IAPE fit into Dow Jones? What are the benefits of union membership? All these questions and more will be covered in this class, perfect for those brand new to IAPE, or even for veteran members interested in learning more about their union. All members are welcome; register today on the IAPE Events page.

2022 CWA Scholarship
IAPE’s parent union, the Communications Workers of America (CWA), is pleased to announce the CWA Joe Beirne Foundation has approved the awarding of 16 partial college scholarships of $4,000 each for two years. Eligible for the scholarships for the 2022-23 academic year are CWA members, their spouses, children, and grandchildren, including the dependents of retired, laid-off, or deceased members. Applications are available online for submission on the Foundation’s website at http://cwa-union.org/beirne-application

Final deadline for applications is 11:59 p.m., EDT, April 30, 2022. Applications are easy to complete online, including submission of a short, original essay. When applying, please note your “Member District” is District 1, and your “Member Local” is 1096.

Winners will be chosen in a lottery drawing.

The Joe Beirne Scholarship Program honors CWA’s founding president, who served in that capacity for more than 30 years. Joe Beirne took great pride in the roles he played in furthering educational opportunity and working for social justice.

This Week: General Membership Meeting

Join IAPE President Jodi Green on Wednesday or Thursday for some union conversation and Q&A. We’ll talk about 2022 open enrollment, look ahead to next year’s Dow Jones contract negotiations and provide an update of discussions with the company over Covid relief and plans for returning to Dow Jones office spaces.

Members have two Zoom sessions to choose from: Wednesday, Nov. 10 at 2:00 p.m. EST or Thursday, Nov. 11 at 2:00 p.m. EST. Both meetings are scheduled for one hour, but we’ll have plenty of time for questions.

Meetings are open to IAPE-represented employees at all locations. To receive your Zoom link to attend, please register on the IAPE Events Page.

In Two Weeks: IAPE 101
When you were hired by Dow Jones, were you surprised to learn that you were a union-represented employee? Have you ever wondered about your rights as a union member? If you have a half-hour to spare on Tuesday, Nov. 23 at 2:00 p.m. EST, please join us for the next installment of IAPE 101 and see if we can answer your questions.

IAPE 101 is a Zoom presentation addressing the basics of IAPE membership: What is a union? How does IAPE function? How does IAPE fit into Dow Jones? What are the benefits of union membership? All these questions and more will be covered in this class, perfect for those brand new to IAPE, or even for veteran members interested in learning more about their union. All members are welcome; register today on the IAPE Events page.

2021 Pay Raises: Were You Above Average?

Rates of pay for IAPE-represented employees increased, on average, by 4.98% in 2021. That’s the takeaway from an IAPE review of pay data since July 1, the effective date for the union’s negotiated pay raises.

Overall, 471 IAPE-represented employees received 2021 pay increases above minimum raises required by the IAPE/DJ contract.

An examination of new Dow Jones-provided pay data showed 1,328 IAPE-represented employees were entitled to a union-negotiated pay increase in July. Approximately 56% of those employees received the minimum percentage raise of 2.75%, boosted from the negotiated rate of 2.5% as a result of the IAPE/DJ contract’s “upside protection” clause.

The rest of the bargaining unit received larger pay hikes, either through negotiated minimum-dollar or scale increases, discretionary raises, possible pay equity adjustments or raises as a result of promotions.

IAPE also looked at pay increase rates by gender, while noting that salaries vary significantly from title to title. The union found the average pay increase for female IAPE-represented employees in 2021 was 5.20%, while the average rate for male bargaining unit employees was 4.76%. However, average and median weekly dollar increases for those female employees were $81.73 and $56.11, respectively. Average and median weekly raises for males were $86.65 and $64.89.

(Note: IAPE plans on taking a fresh, detailed look at gaps in pay across lines of gender and ethnicity, similar to earlier IAPE projects in 2016, 2017 and 2019. Watch for that report in the New Year.)

The review of 2021 pay data also highlighted 189 union-represented employees requested and received an individual IAPE pay review between January and June of this year. Members often request individual reviews prior to initiating salary discussions with their managers.

In 2021, more than half of the employees who asked for an IAPE pay review received a pay increase in excess of the 2.75% compensatory increase.

To request your own personal salary review, please contact IAPE at payreview@iape1096.org.

Next Week: General Membership Meeting
Join IAPE President Jodi Green next week for some union conversation and Q&A. We’ll talk about 2022 open enrollment, a look ahead to next year’s Dow Jones contract negotiations and an update of discussions with the company over Covid relief and plans for returning to Dow Jones office spaces.

Members have two Zoom sessions to choose from: Wednesday, Nov. 10 at 2:00 p.m. EST or Thursday, Nov. 11 at 2:00 p.m. EST. Both meetings are scheduled for one hour, but we’ll have plenty of time for questions.

Meetings are open to IAPE-represented employees at all locations. To receive your Zoom link to attend, please register on the IAPE Events Page.

Today: IAPE 101 - Job Security
If you have an hour to spare this afternoon (or this morning, if you’re on the west coast), please join us for our IAPE Contract 101 class at 2:00 p.m. EDT. We’ll focus on job security, just cause protections against discipline, layoffs and seniority. Visit the IAPE Events Page to register.

If you’re curious about your own seniority within your department, remember, you can always contact the IAPE office to find out more about your seniority protection.

Our Pumpkin Contest Winners!
Congratulations to Princeton member Kirti Mahajan and New York member Angela Calderon, winners of last week’s Great IAPE Pumpkin contest. Kirti’s photo submission was voted best in the “carved pumpkin” category, while Angela’s photos received top “painted pumpkin” honors. Kirti and Angela each received first-prize $50 gift cards.

Thanks to all IAPE members who participated in our Halloween contest!

Last Chance: The Great IAPE Pumpkin Contest

In case you missed earlier IAPE notes (and it would be understandable, buried beneath weightier messages about seniority and Covid proposals), today is the final day to submit your entry for The Great IAPE Pumpkin Contest.

If you or your loved ones have amazing pumpkin decorating skills, or are a whiz with a jack-o-lantern carving knife, you have until 3:00 p.m. EDT today to share your best work with other IAPE members and win a prize!

We want to display our members’ creativity for all to see. Email photos of painted and carved pumpkins to union@iape1096.org. We’ll feature them in upcoming posts on IAPE Twitter, Instagram and Facebook feeds. Our panel of IAPE judges will determine the most impressive member submissions, and will award a $50 gift card to the best in each category: decorated or carved.

Winners will be announced tomorrow, National Pumpkin Day!

Happy Wag-o-Ween from Union Plus
In keeping with the Halloween spirit, Union Plus is celebrating union members’ best friends with a photo contest!

To enter the Union Plus Wag-o-Ween Contest, submit a photo of your cat or dog in costume. Entries must be submitted between Oct. 21 and Oct. 31. Union Plus will select the finalists, and union members from across the United States will vote on winners between Nov. 5 and Nov. 10. Two winners will each win a $500 Grand Prize and ten First Prize winners will receive $50!

Only cat or dog submissions from union members in good standing and retired union members will be eligible to win. Enter now!

Desk Items in Storage? Reclaim Them Today!
Members in New York, Princeton and Washington, if you had personal items from your desk packed and stored by Dow Jones Facilities, you have until today to reclaim your items!

IAPE recommends searching your inbox for an email from Dow Jones's Workplace Design Team, which should have been received on or about Oct. 12. This email has a prepopulated request form for you to fill out. If you cannot find that email, please use the form linked here. To claim your items you must complete this form before tomorrow.

By filling out the form, you can have your packed boxes in storage delivered to your home by Certified, Dow Jones's professional moving company. Your items will be shipped in November— they will not be returned to the office.

Unclaimed personal items will be discarded.

IAPE 101 - Nov. 3
The next IAPE Contract 101 class will be held on Nov. 3 at 2:00 p.m. EDT. We’ll focus on job security, just cause protections against discipline, layoffs and seniority. Visit the IAPE Events Page to register.

If you’re curious about your own seniority within your department, remember, you can always contact the IAPE office to find out more about your seniority protection.

New Proposals for Workplace Returns

On Oct. 15, IAPE reps met with Dow Jones officials and presented a new set of pandemic proposals addressing remote work and eventual returns to company workplaces. New proposals from the union cover health and safety concerns and union rights to negotiate over compulsory in-office assignments, as well as notice to employees when potential exposure to Covid-19 cases exist.

IAPE also proposed a requirement for “proof of full vaccination against Coronavirus for all Employees, vendors and guests who wish to enter a Dow Jones facility.”

The latest union document also repeats demands first presented one year ago seeking monthly stipends for home internet service and reimbursement of up to $750 per employee for home office expenses—proposals Dow Jones has yet to address.

The company’s failure to negotiate over IAPE proposals from October of 2020 prompted the National Labor Relations Board to issue a complaint against Dow Jones in September.

IAPE “Attends” Union Conventions
IAPE reps Jodi Green, Patricia Corley and Tim Martell joined their union siblings from across the continent this week to attend virtual conventions of our parent unions, The NewsGuild and the Communications Workers of America. Originally planned to be held in New Orleans, both meetings were moved to Zoom due to the ongoing pandemic.

IAPE’s delegates were active participants in the sector conference of The NewsGuild, with Green serving as a member of the union’s credentials committee, while Martell was elected as an alternate on TNG’s election committee.

NewsGuild members were at the forefront of the convention as CWA constitutional amendments, proposed by Guild members, addressing harassment and discrimination were overwhelmingly approved by union delegates. During the preceding TNG sector conference, members also adopted a resolution requiring local union officers to “take self-guided or guided anti-discrimination and anti-harassment training in the first three months of each term in office.” Both measures were proposed in response to disturbing news last year involving allegations of misconduct by a former president of the Newspaper Guild of Pittsburgh.

The next conventions are scheduled—fingers crossed—for the summer of 2023 in St. Louis.

Contract Ratified in Bowling Green
On Oct. 14, IAPE members at The Wall Street Journal printing plant in Bowling Green, OH voted 7-1 to approve a new, two-year collective agreement.

The new deal provides for 2% pay increases retroactive to Jul. 1 as well as lump-sum payments of 0.75% of each employee’s pay as of Jul. 1. Effective Jul. 1, 2022, wages will increase again by 2%. Minimum salaries have also been increased.

Juneteenth will be a contract-recognized holiday beginning in 2022 and employees will be excused from work early on evenings prior to a requirement to serve jury duty.

The Great IAPE Pumpkin Contest!
Do you have amazing pumpkin decorating skills? Are you a whiz with a jack-o-lantern carving knife? You still have a few days left to share your best work with other IAPE members and win a prize!

We want to display our members’ creativity for all to see. Email photos of your or your loved ones’ painted and carved pumpkins to union@iape1096.org. We’ll feature them in upcoming posts on IAPE Twitter, Instagram and Facebook feeds. Our panel of IAPE judges will determine the most impressive member submissions, and will award a $50 gift card to the best in each category: decorated or carved. Deadline for entries is Oct. 25 at 3:00 PM EDT.

Winners will be announced on Oct. 26, National Pumpkin Day!

Happy Wag-o-Ween from Union Plus!
In keeping with the Halloween spirit, Union Plus is celebrating union members’ best friends with a photo contest!

To enter the Union Plus Wag-o-Ween Contest, submit a photo of your cat or dog in costume. Entries must be submitted between Oct. 21 and Oct. 31. Union Plus will select the finalists, and union members from across the United States will vote on winners between Nov. 5 and Nov. 10. Two winners will each win a $500 Grand Prize and ten First Prize winners will receive $50!

Only cat or dog submissions from union members in good standing and retired union members will be eligible to win. Enter now!

Join us for Contract 101 - Job Security
The next IAPE Contract 101 class will be held on Nov. 3 at 2:00 p.m. EDT. We’ll focus on job security, just cause protections against discipline, layoffs and seniority. Visit the IAPE Events Page to register.

If you’re curious about your own seniority within your department, remember, you can always contact the IAPE office to find out more about your seniority protection.

Layoffs and Seniority: Your “Department” Matters

Seniority is a bedrock right of the labor movement. In a union-represented environment, the presence of a seniority clause within a contract generally means employees with longer tenure have greater protection when a company chooses to eliminate positions through layoff. 

Seniority protection rewards experienced employees, often those with higher salaries, for their loyalty to a company and protects those staffers from being targeted for economic layoffs when an employer seeks a quick and easy way to save money through workforce reductions.

The collective agreement between IAPE and Dow Jones contains a seniority clause, but it has loopholes that have left some members vulnerable to layoff even though they aren’t the most junior employees. That’s because seniority applies at the department level, and how Dow Jones defines your work group can have significant ramifications for whether you’re protected.

Under the terms of the IAPE/DJ contract, seniority groups are determined by reviewing hire dates of employees with the same title, working in the same department and assigned to the same location. However, a department is defined as “the area of the Company in which the Employee in question works and which is supervised by a Department Head who reports to a Manager at a level equivalent to a Vice President or a Deputy to a Vice President.”

Practically what this means is this: You may have a job similar to a colleague who has less service time, but you still may be exposed to an economic layoff if you work under different managers. Customer Service Associates assigned to the Customer Service - Consumer department aren’t all part of the same seniority group. Their seniority protection is determined according to which of the eight Customer Service department heads supervise their work. The same is true for sales staff working under one of five department heads in Direct Sales, Reporters and Special Writers assigned to one of five department heads in Life & Work, or Software Engineers working under five department heads in WSJ Mobile.

We could go on.

The “department” issue has long been a problem for IAPE. The company’s ability to determine department structures gives management significant discretion in reducing seniority protection. We’ve seen exactly this all too often.

Closing contract loopholes can only be achieved through the collective bargaining process. When the union and the company will negotiate a successor contract next year, you can be sure that IAPE will attempt to strengthen job security through the modification of existing contract language.

In the meantime, we encourage IAPE members to be aware of their own seniority protection. If you’re considering a move to a new team, find out exactly what the department structure is for that group, and how your seniority protection will be affected. If you’re unsure of your seniority standing within your current department, find out who the department head is for your group. If you require assistance, IAPE can provide your seniority ranking relative to other employees reporting to the same department head.

Contract 101: Job Security
You can learn more about seniority and other contract job security protections when IAPE hosts its next Contract 101 class on Nov. 3. The Contract 101 series is a great way to learn more about the IAPE/DJ agreement, especially as we seek suggestions for contract improvements before we return to the bargaining table next year.

To enroll, visit the IAPE Events page. This class is virtual, Zoom links will be emailed to all participants on the day of the class.

The Great IAPE Pumpkin Contest!
Do you have amazing pumpkin decorating skills? Are you a whiz with a jack-o-lantern carving knife? Share your best work with other IAPE members and win a prize!

We want to display our members’ creativity for all to see. Email photos of your or your loved ones’ painted and carved pumpkins to union@iape1096.org. We’ll feature them in upcoming posts on IAPE Twitter, Instagram and Facebook feeds. Our panel of IAPE judges will determine the most impressive member submissions, and will award a $50 gift card to the best in each category: decorated or carved. Deadline for entries is Oct. 25 at 3:00 PM EDT.

Winners will be announced on Oct. 26, National Pumpkin Day!

Get Social With IAPE!

IAPE members, are you connected with your union on social media?

We’re revamping our social presence with new, fun and informative ways to hear from IAPE representatives. In addition to these regular email updates, you can get IAPE news, event invitations, contract tips and holiday notices on your favorite social platform: Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram.

Take today, for instance: y’all can have your “national coffee day,” we’re an international union, so we observe #InternationalCoffeeDay.

(Yes, it’s a thing.)

Please follow, like and share—but most importantly, interact with IAPE and let us know what you’d like to see more of from your union. Reach out to IAPE Staff Rep/Mobilizer Marlena Fitzpatrick with your suggestions!

Take Action! Sign the IATSE Petition for a Good Union Contract
IATSE members are the working-class backbone of the studios that create the TV programs, films and streaming content that entertain and comfort millions of people around the world.

Now, 60,000 of these behind-the-scenes workers are mobilizing to win a union contract that guarantees basic human necessities like adequate sleep, meal breaks, and living wages from the wealthiest media corporations and studios in the world.

Your union siblings in IATSE need your support.

Will you take two minutes to sign their petition demanding that The Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers and the studios provide equitable treatment for the unsung heroes of the entertainment industry?

This petition is open to IATSE members and non-member allies. Please CLICK HERE to sign their petition. And thanks for your support!

Tim Merle Named IAPE Director
Congratulations to Princeton member Tim Merle, named this week as the newest addition to the IAPE Board of Directors. Tim fills the vacant Location Director - Mid-Atlantic position and joins Dow Jones colleagues from across the United States and Canada representing our members on a daily basis.

IAPE’s Bylaws describe the process for filling vacant Board seats: “A vacancy in any directorship shall be filled by appointment of the Board of Directors on recommendation of the Executive Council. The appointed Director shall be vested with the full powers of the office.”

As a Mid-Atlantic Director, Tim joins Patricia Corley and Whitney Henderson as location representatives from the Dow Jones campus in Princeton, NJ.

Interested in learning more about becoming an IAPE Director, or perhaps a union steward? Email union@iape1096.org for more information!

NLRB Issues Complaint Against Dow Jones

The National Labor Relations Board has filed a complaint against Dow Jones alleging that our employer has violated the National Labor Relations Act by refusing to negotiate in good faith over the working conditions of IAPE-represented employees following the onset of the pandemic.

This action comes after we, as a union, brought this to the NLRB in February.

In August, Labor Board investigators told both sides they agreed with us: that Dow Jones could not unilaterally set these conditions and must bargain over terms and conditions of employment not covered by the IAPE/DJ contract.

The Board offered Dow Jones a settlement, one which would have allowed the company to not even admit any fault—they only had to publicly post a notice stating they would comply with federal labor law in the future, and would bargain with IAPE as required by law. Under Board standards, because Dow Jones routinely communicates with IAPE-represented employees electronically, this notice had to be distributed electronically to the IAPE-covered workforce as well. Dow Jones refused.

Company representatives refused to post a notice anywhere other than on physical bulletin boards in the office—where no one was working at the time and even now has very few people. (The first week of Phase Two voluntary return saw fewer than 100 people in the New York office at any one time, out of 1,600 employees.)

Here’s what happens next:

  • Because Dow Jones would not agree to this standard settlement language requiring electronic distribution of the notice, the NLRB will now prosecute its complaint against Dow Jones before an Administrative Law Judge, and seek a legal order requiring Dow Jones to negotiate in good faith with IAPE.

  • Why is this important? It sets a precedent. IAPE will not back down from insisting that Dow Jones follow the law and respect the rights of IAPE-represented employees and the union. Dow Jones representatives have refused to include union members in discussions about work from home benefits or policies and have stated the company has “no obligation to ‘bargain’ over a proposal just because the union puts it forth between contract cycles.” In our opinion, this is a clear violation of our legally recognized right to bargain over changes in working conditions. If the NLRB rules in our favor, it sends a strong message to Dow Jones that they must negotiate in good faith with the union in the future.

  • A hearing date has been set for Dec. 7. Prior to that hearing, Dow Jones is required to deliver a response to the NLRB complaint by Oct. 6. Here’s more info on how the process works.

  • IAPE is currently developing proposals intended to address 2022 plans for the “Phase Three” return to offices. We hope to resume negotiations over original internet and equipment proposals as part of those discussions.

More details on the Labor Board complaint:

  1. The complaint, issued by the Region 22 office of the NLRB and based on a charge filed by IAPE on Feb. 26, states, “Since about October 2, 2020, (Dow Jones) has failed and refused to bargain collectively and in good faith with the Union.”

  2. The Labor Board noted that, in October of 2020, IAPE requested that Dow Jones “bargain collectively about the impact of the COVID pandemic on the terms of the allowance for broadband / internet access, and over the reimbursement program for equipment and technology expenses, subjects not covered under the parties’ agreement, and are terms and conditions of employment of the Unit.”

  3. IAPE has attempted to negotiate over internet and equipment payments on several occasions during the past year, without ever receiving any meaningful response or discussion other than being informed of decisions already made. 

  4. The Board complaint notes that union proposals relate “to the wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment of the employees employed by the Employer in the Unit and are mandatory subjects for the purposes of collective bargaining.”

  5. In the “Remedy” section of the filing, the NLRB states, “the General Counsel seeks an Order requiring Respondent to bargain in good faith with the Union, on request, as the recognized bargaining representative in the Unit. The General Counsel further seeks all other relief as may be just and proper to remedy the unfair labor practices alleged.”

We will keep you informed! Please reach out to union@iape1096.org with any questions.

Directors Adopt Bargaining Year Budget

The IAPE Board of Directors met on Saturday and adopted an aggressive budget for the union’s new fiscal year, which commences on Oct. 1.

Expecting particularly challenging contract negotiations with Dow Jones in 2022, the union Board approved a 56.48% increase in expenditures compared to the budget for the current fiscal year. Key categories with projected spending increases include Benefits and Payroll - Staff, reflecting the addition of a new, full-time IAPE employee; Payroll - Contract, anticipating the addition of a consultant to assist with contract negotiations; Legal, with the expectation the union will require additional legal assistance during bargaining; and Mobilization, for costs associated with the 2022 IAPE contract campaign.

Proposals for most other line items track with current fiscal year spending.

The new budget projects a small deficit of $13,512.40, compared to anticipated revenue of $897,310. As a result of the merger agreement between IAPE and its parent union, the Communications Workers of America, 40% of all union dues is paid directly to CWA.

Full details of the new IAPE budget, including notes for all categories, are available on the IAPE website Budget page.

Tentative Agreement in Bowling Green
IAPE and Dow Jones representatives reached a tentative agreement for a new two-year contract covering employees at the company’s Bowling Green, Ohio printing plant.

The final agreement provides for 2% pay increases retroactive to July 1, 2021 as well as lump-sum payments of 0.75% of each employee’s pay as of July 1. Effective July 1, 2022, wages will increase again by 2%. Minimum salaries have also been increased.

Employees will be excused from work early on evenings prior to a requirement to serve jury duty and Juneteenth will be a contract-recognized holiday beginning in 2022. Metrics for earning an additional personal day will be set using defined WSJ Production Department goals. IAPE accepted a company’s proposal to eliminate the outdated Mailer job title, but rejected proposals to modify seniority. An IAPE proposal to amend bereavement leave was withdrawn.

IAPE and Dow Jones also agreed to settle a grievance filed on behalf of two part-time employees.

The IAPE office will arrange for members at the Bowling Green plant to vote on this contract package through a mail-in ratification election. Ballots will be delivered to members as soon as possible.

Steward 101 on Wednesday
Interested in becoming an IAPE steward to advocate for your fellow members? There’s still time  to register for our next Steward 101 session scheduled for Wednesday, Sept. 22. In this class, we’ll cover the role and rights of a steward as well as the best practices to properly represent and empower your fellow members. For additional details, and to register, visit the IAPE Events page.