Open Bargaining Today and a Coffee Break

Yesterday, Dow Jones laid off 11 IAPE members and some of our non-union colleagues. We're furious and heartbroken for those who lost their jobs.

After more than 300 days of bargaining, we continue to ask the company to recognize our work with a fair contract. Instead they’re cutting jobs despite record profits, avoiding questions about rumored restructuring and holding a town hall about artificial intelligence instead of negotiating with us about it at the bargaining table.

So what can we do about it?

Join open bargaining at 10:00 a.m. EDT. See your email to register.

Later today, join your colleagues in your bureau or on Zoom for a 15-minute coffee break at 4:00 p.m. EDT / 3:00 p.m. CDT / 1:00 p.m. PDT. If your managers expect you to be working at that time, tell them you’re busy. Let’s show solidarity for our colleagues who were laid off and discuss future actions.

In-person break locations will be announced later today. Join our coffee break via Zoom (meeting link emailed to all members).

Set your away message on Slack to "I'm on a coordinated coffee break in solidarity with our colleagues laid off this week. No more layoffs! Fair contract now!"

We’re sick of the way management is treating us—now is the time to show it!

CAT Action: Join “Mobilizing 1:1 Conversations”

As IAPE’s Bargaining Committee prepares to resume negotiations with Dow Jones on Thursday, the union’s Contract Action Team (CAT) is hard at work continuing to plan member activities to build support for a fair contract. And we could use your help!

Tomorrow, the IAPE CAT is hosting our second “mobilizing 1:1 conversations” basic boot camp! We will be learning how to have effective conversations with our colleagues—to build solidarity and move them to action!

Mark your calendars for Tuesday, April 9 at 6:30 p.m. EDT!

Sign up using this link: https://forms.gle/cS5wZUxEf1xUrG5Z6

Invite your friends! Invite your colleagues! Invite your community!

Bargaining Update: Waiting for a Reply

When contract negotiations between IAPE and Dow Jones resumed yesterday, the union Bargaining Committee expected to receive proposal number 17 from management, perhaps a comprehensive response to IAPE proposals from Mar. 28. Instead, the company opted to share a presentation of different numbers—errors it claimed to have found in IAPE comparisons of Dow Jones proposals and pay at The New York Times.

That’s right. Instead of responding to union proposals to achieve a fair contract for 1,400 IAPE-represented employees across the United States and Canada, Dow Jones thought a better use of their time would be to explain how IAPE calculations and Dow Jones calculations differ by as little as 0.01%.

In fairness, Dow Jones also believes IAPE comparisons for employees earning more than $160,000 are inaccurate by approximately 2.1%. So, while we would prefer to spend time digging into a meaningful contract proposal from management, we’ll review our math.

Management also insisted, again, that when medical premiums at Dow Jones and The New York Times are factored into the equation, IAPE-represented employees could have “the best deals in town” if members accepted the company’s current proposal. IAPE representatives suggested that Dow Jones management should also review the average salary at The Times.

If the company thought members would be persuaded by its data, they were mistaken. Following yesterday’s contract meeting, hundreds of IAPE members participated in a “reply all” action sending messages to Dow Jones executives.

Members emailed through late afternoon telling CEO Almar Latour and fellow top managers that “IAPE members need a fair contract!” Many highlighted the frustration felt at the company’s failure to recognize the value of a workforce responsible for generating record profits quarter after quarter. Some worked lyrics from Taylor Swift, Adele and even BTS into their notes.

Are IAPE and Dow Jones never, ever, ever getting back together? Well, we’ll be back at the bargaining table next week, and you can join open bargaining as an observer. Rumor has it Dow Jones might come to the table with a new proposal. Management knows what it needs to do to make it right.

Sign Up for Contract Expiration Virtual Town Halls

As mentioned in yesterday’s member note, the IAPE contract expired 12:01 a.m. EDT Apr. 1.

IAPE members are currently working without a contract. What does this mean?

Well, for starters it means that negotiations are continuing. We’re still meeting with company representatives for open bargaining sessions. The next session is scheduled for this Thursday, Apr. 4 at 10:00 a.m. EDT.

The expiration of the contract also means we can continue to escalate our collective actions to put pressure on the company to come to a fair deal. The more participation in these actions the more serious our demands are taken at the table.

Join us this Thursday, Apr. 4 at 4:00 p.m. EDT and Friday, Apr. 5 at 12:00 p.m. EDT for Contract Expiration Virtual Town Halls where we’ll discuss working without a contract, collective actions, and escalations. We’ll also take time to answer any questions you may have about these subjects and negotiations. See your email for meeting registration links.

In Solidarity!

No Fooling: We’re Working Without a Contract

At 12:01 a.m. EDT today, the collective bargaining agreement between IAPE and Dow Jones expired. IAPE-represented employees across Dow Jones are now working without a contract.

Neither IAPE nor Dow Jones requested another extension of the agreement. The contract, which has a printed expiration date of June 30, 2023, was automatically extended for 60 days through the end of August. The parties agreed to additional two-month extensions in September and November of last year, followed by month-to-month agreements in January, February and March.

IAPE will continue to meet and negotiate with Dow Jones in hopes of reaching a successor agreement. Bargaining is scheduled to resume Thursday, Apr. 4 at 10:00 a.m. EDT. All IAPE members are welcome to join that meeting as open bargaining observers.

In the short term, working without a contract will be indistinguishable from working under an extended agreement. Most substantive terms and conditions of employment continue indefinitely. Now that the contract has expired, the “No Strikes” provision of the Agreement—Article XXIII—is no longer in effect. IAPE members can now participate in coercive economic activity, such as picketing outside of Dow Jones workplaces.

IAPE members have continued to work without a contract during previous rounds of negotiations, most recently in 2007 when IAPE and Dow Jones negotiated for ten months before reaching a contract agreement. Prior to that, the CBA expired in 2003 and IAPE members worked without a contract until a new agreement was ratified in August of 2004.

CORRECTION: This post has been updated to correct the date of the next bargaining meeting between IAPE and Dow Jones, scheduled for Thursday, Apr. 4.

New Grievances Filed
Concerned about an uptick in disciplinary meetings involving IAPE members, the union’s Grievance Committee has filed seven new complaints alleging Dow Jones has violated employee rights and workplace protections.

The new grievances challenge an assortment of management actions, with four claims that discipline—written warning letters—has been issued without just and sufficient cause, one claim of discharge without cause, one allegation of discrimination for failing to recognize workplace accommodations, and one charge alleging management has violated the “Rehire” provision of the collective agreement.

The IAPE Grievance Committee is scheduled to meet with Dow Jones counterparts on Wednesday afternoon.

Bargaining Update: IAPE Says Members Have Sacrificed Enough

Members Roast Mgmt, Espresso Dissatisfaction with Company Offers
“Gimme a Break, Dow Jones!”

IAPE representatives delivered a new, comprehensive proposal to Dow Jones management on Thursday, emphasizing the need for retroactive wage increases and pay hikes commensurate with company performance.

The new document, proposal number 21 from the union in this round of negotiations, withdrew key demands including improvements to inflation protection and retirement contributions. IAPE also reduced its wage increase proposal, calling for raises of 8.5% effective—and retroactive to—July 1, 2023; 5.5% on July 1, 2024 and July 1, 2025; and 4.0% on July 1, 2026.

Dow Jones representatives scoffed at IAPE suggestions that members have sacrificed more than management during these negotiations. To the union’s demand for retroactive pay, management said, “what is retro, but a lump sum payment.”

The company’s Mar. 21 proposal offered lump sums of $1,500, which amounts to the equivalent of a 1.52% raise for the median IAPE wage earner.

Following negotiations, IAPE members across the United States and in Canada walked away from their desks in a coordinated coffee break to support demands for a fair contract. Members set their away messages to “Gimme a break, Dow Jones – we deserve more!” and gathered at coffee areas in New York, Princeton, Washington, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Members working remotely joined colleagues via Zoom, or just enjoyed a much-needed break from work.

Negotiations are scheduled to resume on April 4.

We're Walking Out . . . For Coffee

ACTION ALERT!

Join your IAPE colleagues for a 15-minute coordinated coffee break on Thursday, March 28 at 1:00 p.m. EDT/12:00 p.m. CDT/10:00 a.m. PDT.

We’re letting management know we’re insulted by their recent wage proposal, which did not include meaningful increases or retroactive pay. Dow Jones is making record profits and our cost of living is still sky high. We deserve a fair contract now.

To participate:

1) Set your avatar to an IAPE logo
2) Set your away message to “Gimme a break, Dow Jones – we deserve more!”
3) Wear an IAPE or red t-shirt and join your colleagues (if you’re in the office!) at these designated locations:

New York - Coffee station on 6
Chicago - Central break room
San Francisco - Kitchen on 11
Princeton - Coffee Bar
Washington - 1:30 p.m. Location TBD

People working remotely can still participate on Slack by setting an away message and taking a 15 minute break at the same time.

Join us!!

Don’t Forget to Feed the CAT . . . Survey
As IAPE awaits a new contract proposal from Dow Jones, the union’s Contract Action Team (CAT) is looking for your feedback on current proposals and wants to know how you feel about potential member actions to support our campaign for a fair contract.

Take our CAT survey!

There are two parts to this survey: Testimonials and Union Escalation comfort levels. You can tell the CAT how you are affected by the current cost of living, what affordable health care looks like for you, whether you’re concerned about the company’s use of AI, how you feel about your job and more!

This CAT survey will only take a few minutes of your time. See your email for survey links. Submit yours today!

Bargaining Update: Checking Dianne's Math

TL, DR: Sorry Dow Jones. You’re Wrong Again.

IAPE and Dow Jones bargaining teams—and more than 100 IAPE member observers—met yesterday morning as contract talks between the parties, now in their tenth month, continued. Management presented its 16th proposal, focusing on wages, and shared health care data comparing premiums paid at Dow Jones to those paid by staff at The New York Times.

More on that in a moment.

After negotiations concluded, IAPE members were treated to another update from Dow Jones CPO Dianne DeSevo, who referred to the company’s new proposal as “a good faith effort to close the gap between the parties” with “several significant enhancements” in the area of compensation.

Let’s take a closer look, shall we?

Yesterday’s Dow Jones proposal offers to increase the pay of IAPE members by at least 6.75%—with larger pay increases for many thanks to our new minimum-dollar raise threshold. Dianne said “over 11% for some,” and it’s actually as much as 13%, but “some” means approximately 40 of the 1,400 employees IAPE represents.

The new proposal effectively adds 0.25% onto earlier Dow Jones proposals of 3.5% for year one and 3% for year two, which the company has now combined into a proposal for a single pay increase.

Once again, the company is not proposing a retroactive adjustment in wages.

Dianne noted that the new pay increase could be implemented “as early as May 1, 2024” if this deal is ratified by IAPE members. What does that really mean? Considering the company’s previous proposal on wages—which also was not retroactive—it means an employee earning $100,000 per year would receive an extra $500 total over four pay periods in May and June.

Dianne also mentioned “a ratification bonus of $1,500.” Yesterday, when IAPE representatives asked whether management had given any consideration to proposing a retroactive pay increase, company reps said, “That’s what the $1,500 is for.”

For those of you keeping score at home, $1,500 would equal a year of retro pay at 3.5%, if an employee was paid a salary of approximately $42,000. On the IAPE-represented median salary of $98,000, a $1,500 lump sum payment would match a year of retro pay on a raise of approximately 1.52%.

Dianne confirmed the company’s proposal to pay a lump sum bonus of “up to 0.5%” remains in place for 2025, but that is payable to employees whose health care premiums increase by that amount of salary or more. Management’s 2025 wage proposal is unchanged, at 3%, but the company did offer to add a fourth year to the next contract with another 3% pay raise effective July 1, 2026.

Finally, Dianne wrote, “The Company’s current proposal would result in a total compensation package that surpasses those reached at our peer companies, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Associated Press and Reuters in their recent labor negotiations.”

Let’s unpack that just a bit, specifically by comparing the latest Dow Jones offer to the settlement reached last year at the New York Times.

We did the math.

When we look at comparable salaries dating back to 2021—the effective date of the current contract for Guild members at The Times—and tally up all raises and lump sum payments at various salary levels, yesterday’s Dow Jones proposal still lags behind.

We’re sure management will say—as they did during yesterday’s bargaining meeting—that employee payments toward healthcare must also be considered. Dow Jones helpfully shared a chart showing that a New York Times employee earning a salary of $100,000 in 2020 will have paid almost $20,000 more in medical premiums over a six-year period than will be paid by an IAPE-represented employee earning the same salary.

But . . .

Take a close look at the “percentage” row for both plans. Is the rate at The Times higher than the rate paid by IAPE members? Yes.

Has the Times rate changed? No.

Would an employee who leaves Dow Jones to work for The Times receive a salary adjustment to offset any additional health care costs? We suspect many of you have former colleagues who might be able to answer that question.

Dow Jones still wants to be able to increase premiums in 2025—the year-over-year hike for the example provided yesterday is more than 16%—and again in 2026. Will management seek the flexibility to boost premiums by even more than 30% when the company provides a new projection for 2027? We’ll see.

There are two very notable factors from these negotiations that are not at all changed by yesterday’s company proposal: Dow Jones is still a top-performing company raking in record profits quarter after quarter, and IAPE-represented employees are still in need of real raises that offset cost of living increases.

We appreciate yesterday’s proposal from management, but let’s recognize the changes for what they are: an increase of 0.25% over the last offer, a new $1,500 lump sum sweetener and a fourth contract year to consider.

As we said yesterday at the bargaining table, this represents a new starting point.

Negotiations resume next Thursday, Mar. 28. Join us for open bargaining, and stay tuned for new membership activities from the Contract Action Team.

MarketWatch NYC Unionizes, Joins IAPE

MarketWatch staff working in New York announced yesterday they have formed a union and are joining their colleagues at locations across the country already represented by IAPE.

Through a mission statement delivered to Dow Jones CEO Almar Latour, Barron’s Editor in Chief David Cho, two-dozen other managers at MarketWatch and all MKTW News staff, New York-based employees stated their intention “to join our brethren employees at other branch offices of MarketWatch and Dow Jones as a collective unit under the IAPE Local 1096.”

IAPE TNG-CWA Local 1096 called on Dow Jones management to voluntarily recognize the representation demand from their MarketWatch employees.

“We are excited to welcome these new members to IAPE,” said Local 1096 President, Jodi Green. “We believe the proper union home for our colleagues is in the same bargaining unit as their fellow MarketWatchers working in other offices.”

Dow Jones & Company won a bidding war to purchase CBS MarketWatch in November of 2004, an acquisition that was finalized in January of the following year. MarketWatch staff in Boston, Chicago, Dallas, San Francisco and Washington have been represented by IAPE since 2006. MarketWatch employees are part of the same bargaining unit and covered by the same contract as staff at The Wall Street Journal, Barron’s, Dow Jones Newswires, Factiva and other company products.

Until yesterday, the New York newsroom was the largest remaining non-union MarketWatch operation.

The new union siblings said they were joining IAPE “because it is a way to ensure fair and equitable treatment for MarketWatch employees of all backgrounds and ages.”

“Being union members will give us a seat at the bargaining table and afford us an opportunity to negotiate a proper contract.”

Missed the News? Join IAPE Slack!
IAPE members, you may have missed yesterday’s MarketWatch news when it was released on various social media platforms. Did you know we also posted the announcement on IAPE Slack?

What’s that? You’re not a member of IAPE Slack yet? We should fix that.

IAPE Slack is a members-only location for all the latest union news and conversation, collective action ideas and open bargaining registration. We even have a channel to show off your favorite pets! IAPE Slack access is available by invitation only—to request yours, please sign up here.

Don’t Forget to Feed the CAT . . . Survey
As IAPE awaits a new contract proposal from Dow Jones, the union’s Contract Action Team (CAT) is looking for your feedback on current proposals and wants to know how you feel about potential member actions to support our campaign for a fair contract.

Take our CAT survey!

There are two parts to this survey: Testimonials and Union Escalation comfort levels. You can tell the CAT how you are affected by the current cost of living, what affordable health care looks like for you, whether you’re concerned about the company’s use of AI, how you feel about your job and more!

This CAT survey will only take a few minutes of your time. see your email for survey links. Submit yours today!

Talk to the CAT: The IAPE Contract Survey

As IAPE awaits a new contract proposal from Dow Jones, the union’s Contract Action Team (CAT) is looking for your feedback on current proposals and wants to know how you feel about potential member actions to support our campaign for a fair contract.

Take our CAT survey!

There are two parts to this survey: Testimonials and Union Escalation comfort levels. You can tell the CAT how you are affected by the current cost of living, what affordable health care looks like for you, whether you’re concerned about the company’s use of AI, how you feel about your job and more!

This CAT survey will only take a few minutes of your time. See your email for survey links. Submit yours today!

You Should Join the IAPE Board
The IAPE Board of Directors is a group of fellow IAPE members who volunteer their time to oversee all union matters. From IAPE administration to member representation, these are your workplace representatives—even if your workplace is your home!

From time to time, vacancies on the IAPE Board occur. At this moment, the union is looking for location directors in the Northeast (New York and Boston), Mid-Atlantic (Princeton) and Southwest (Texas and Southern California) regions, as well as classification directors in Technology and Sales/Administrative.

We think you would make a perfect IAPE Director!

If you’re interested in learning more about the IAPE Board of Directors, or volunteering to fill a vacancy, please email union@iape1096.org.