Trucking Plays Key Role in Three-Way Teamsters Race

By Rip Watson, Senior Reporter

This story appears in the Sept. 12 print edition of Transport Topics.

Trucking is playing an important role in the battle to lead the Teamsters union, as incumbent James Hoffa touts success in saving YRC Worldwide Inc. and challengers Sandy Pope and Fred Gegare lambaste him for failing to organize more freight haulers.

The election at the union, which claims 1.4 million members 鈥 about 20% in trucking 鈥 is coming down to the wire, with ballots scheduled to be mailed out later this month and a vote count due in late October.



Claiming credit for the union鈥檚 agreement to wage and pension cuts that prevented a potential YRC bankruptcy filing, Hoffa is seeking his third five-year term at the union. He was last elected in 2006 by a 2-1 margin.

In addition to criticizing efforts to organize nonunion carriers such as Con-way Freight, both challengers say Hoffa鈥檚 tactics have created inequality among YRC, ABF Freight and UPS Freight. Those three less-than-truckload carriers鈥 Teamsters contracts have different wage levels and benefits such as pensions.

鈥淗e鈥檚 going in the opposite direction of his father鈥檚 legacy,鈥 said Pope, referring to the elder Hoffa鈥檚 negotiation of the National Master Freight Agreement to standardize Teamsters contracts nearly 50 years ago. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e stealing freight from each other.鈥

Hoffa did not give Transport Topics an interview to discuss campaign-related issues.

Pope, the first woman to run for union president, is currently president of Local 805 in New York and is backed by Teamsters for a Democratic Union.

Gegare is a Wisconsin-based international vice president whose supporters include Fred Zuckerman, the union official who led the recent car-hauler talks.

Gegare honed in on the drop in Teamsters LTL workers from more than 115,000 in 1999, to less than 50,000 today, and said Hoffa was ignoring the rank-and-file鈥檚 eagerness to reverse that slide.

鈥淗e never filed one petition to organize nonunion freight competitors,鈥 Gegare said. 鈥淭he members want to help. He鈥檚 running from the membership and trying to live on his name.鈥

From Hoffa鈥檚 perspective, the successful organizing of 12,000 workers at UPS Freight three years ago was a resounding success. Hoffa claims other 68,000 new members in other industries since 2006.

Hoffa also claimed success in assuring wage increases for UPS Teamsters.

His campaign literature also turns YRC鈥檚 15% wage cut into a positive, saying the union 鈥渢urned a disastrous situation at YRCW into a new restructuring that saved Teamsters union jobs and hope for the future.鈥

Pope said Hoffa鈥檚 2007 agreement to allow UPS Inc. to pay $6.1 billion to exit the Central States Pension Fund, which covers ABF and YRC workers, was 鈥渙ne of the most negative and stupid things done by the Hoffa administration.鈥

Gegare also blasted that move, saying the fund鈥檚 financial condition is classified as 鈥渃ritical鈥 by the federal government because payments into the fund lag far behind disbursements.

Hoffa鈥檚 campaign literature depicts Pope and Gegare in an embrace, saying the two 鈥渉ave joined together to divide the Teamsters鈥 and stating 鈥渢heir honeymoon is over. Teamsters will not be divided.鈥

Hoffa appeared last week with President Obama and also was a guest on several television shows, including a Sept. 4 broadcast on CNN.

In the CNN interview, Hoffa said, 鈥淲e need a WPA [Works Progress Administration] type of program鈥 to boost hiring.

He called for tax incentives to shake loose billions of dollars that corporations are accumulating because of reluctance to spend on job growth.

鈥淸Jobs are] an American problem,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e all got to get into the game. Instead of building the next factory in Mexico, build it here.鈥

He singled out Apple Inc., questioning its patriotism because of extensive offshore workforces. He also singled out UPS Inc., the largest Teamsters employer, as proof that companies with U.S. operations can thrive financially.

Gegare and Pope took swipes at Hoffa鈥檚 high profile.

鈥淭he Hoffa name is now mud among the members,鈥 Gegare said. 鈥淗e doesn鈥檛 have celebrity status with them.鈥

鈥淗offa dwells on politics and his celebrity status,鈥 Pope said. 鈥淗e thought that would make the union strong, and it hasn鈥檛.鈥

鈥淲e need to have all the workers pull together and defend middle-class jobs,鈥 she added. 鈥淗offa failed miserably at doing these things.鈥

Gegare sounded similar themes on the issues.

鈥淗offa forgot who brought him to the dance,鈥 Gegare said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not about the members anymore. It鈥檚 all about him.鈥

Gegare also blasted Hoffa鈥檚 performance on grievance panels, in which the union has lost 90% of cases.

鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 tolerate caving to management,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he problem is that they are wining and dining and golfing with management.鈥

Both Pope and Gegare aligned themselves with Hoffa鈥檚 drive against allowing nationwide access for Mexican trucks. Both candidates said such a move, announced earlier this year by the Obama administration, would take away jobs from U.S.-based union truckers by allowing fleets to hire lower-paid Mexican drivers.