Today, Providence City Council President Rachel Miller announced that the city council will be honoring an “informational boycott” of WLNE-TV television news station, the ABC affiliate for the Providence market, in response to a request from workers at the station who have been engaged for over a year in contract negotiations with parent company Standard Media.
The newsroom union representing workers at the station, NABET-CWA, issued a request on the morning of June 11th for elected officials to cease all non-essential correspondence and engagement with the network, following management’s recent abandonment of good-faith negotiations with the union. Organizers at the station, operating as NABET-ABC6, are seeking standard job benefits and a livable wage.
“The need for high-quality local journalism is fundamental to any functioning democracy. This need is more acute now than ever, at a time when both our democracy and our information environment are facing existential threats from the federal government,” said Council President Miller. “So it is particularly disappointing and disturbing that Standard Media has chosen not to pay its workers a fair wage. Providence City Council will not work with any business that treats workers in this way. We urge station management to return to the negotiating table immediately.”
With the exception of urgent situations affecting the safety of Providence residents, this release will be the final communication the Providence City Council office sends to ABC6 until workers and station management reach a fair contract.
Under the leadership of Council President Miller, Providence City Council has consistently demonstrated unwavering support for the essential right of Providence workers to collectively bargain. In March of last year, Providence City Council unanimously passed a resolution in support of unionization efforts at ABC6. In October, President Pro Tempore Juan M. Pichardo (Ward 9), Councilor Miguel Sanchez (Ward 6), and Chief of Staff June Rose spoke at a rally outside of the ABC6 headquarters.
More recently, councilors passed resolutions supporting unionizing educators at Highlander and Cuffee charter schools as well as striking healthcare workers at Butler Hospital, just a few of the 13 such resolutions passed by city council this term. Last month, Council President Miller, Councilor Justin Roias (Ward 4), and Councilor Miguel Sanchez joined Butler workers with SEIU 1199 NE on the picket line.
Providence City Council will continue to advocate and show up for organized labor in our city and defend the right of workers everywhere to demand fair wages, safe working conditions, and the dignity they deserve.