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Negotiations with AFSCME District Council 33 and the city stalled on Tuesday, which prompted workers to walk off the job at ...
Almost 10,000 city workers in Philadelphia, who take 911 calls, collect trash, and perform other duties, went on strike on Tuesday after negotiations over a contract fell through.  Blue-collar ...
It's been a little less than 24 hours since District Council 33, Philadelphia's largest workers' union, went on strike and dumpsters are already overflowing at designated trash drop-off sites.
Philadelphia's largest city workers' union is on strike for the first time in nearly 40 years on Tuesday after a deal ...
The strike is now causing reduced hours at recreation centers and closures of pools. It's impacting pools and rec centers at ...
A judge temporarily ordered 911 dispatchers to return to work, but other critical city services such as trash collection will ...
Trash is piling up across Philadelphia as the city's largest blue-collar union begins a massive strike, bringing essential ...
With 63 temporary trash drop-off sites placed throughout the city, residents are reacting to the overflowing dumpsters and ...
Union members walking picket lines talked about low wages and fair treatment while residents tried to figure out what to do ...
Trash pickup and a host of other city services were disrupted Tuesday when Philadelphia municipal workers went on strike.
Mayor Cherelle Parker said the city would suspend residential trash collection, close some city pools and shorten recreation ...
The workers’ union announced the strike early Tuesday after contract talks failed. The mayor says residential trash pickup will be suspended, some pools will close and recreation center hours will be ...