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By
Felice J. Freyer
2.28.02 8:28
p.m.
PAWTUCKET,
R.I. --
A letter
of support for the Guild from the International Longshoreman's Union
became a subject of dispute today at the Providence Journal's trial
on 46 charges of violating labor law.
Journal lawyer
Richard A. Perras sought to use it as evidence that the Guild's
plans for a reader boycott had hurt the company, but Administrative
Law Judge William G. Kocol would not allow the letter to be admitted.
The exchange
came on the fourth day of the Journal's trial, as Perras finished
his cross-examination of Guild Administrator Tim Schick.
This afternoon,
Joseph Griffin, a lawyer for the National Labor Relations Board,
began submitting evidence to support the board's complaints concerning
several instances of unilateral changes in working conditions. Griffin's
evidence was frequently challenged as hearsay by the Journal's other
lawyer, Lincoln D. Almond, the governor's son.
The judge frequently agreed with Almond.
Under questioning
by Perras, Guild Administrator Tim Schick this morning testified
that the Guild had begun planning a consumer boycott to put economic
pressure on the company. But he said the Guild has not yet started
the boycott and thus it had had no economic impact.
Perras's questioning
pertained to two of the major charges that the company faces: that
the Journal threatened to reduce its wage offer if the Guild persisted
in the boycott, and that it later did reduce the offer when the
Guild's boycott preparations continued. The NLRB alleges that the
company's actions, communicated in letters to Guild members, constituted
"regressive bargaining," which is illegal.
Perras sought
to enter into evidence a letter that the Guild received from the
International Longshoreman's Union last summer. The union, which
had been asked to sign cards pledging to boycott the Journal if
the Guild called a boycott, took it a step further and said its
members would stop buying the paper right away.
NLRB lawyer
Elizabeth Vorro objected, arguing that the letter was irrelevant
to the case, because the Guild received it several months after
the company withdrew its wage offer.
Perras said
he was trying to establish that the Guild's boycott efforts had
an economic impact on the Journal.
"Even
if you establish what you want to establish,'' Judge Kocol said,
``what difference does that make?"
"We believe
that actions to bring economic pressure could be responded to by
the other side,'' Perras said.
Kocol sustained
Vorro's objection, and further ruled that any evidence from any
day after the wage offer was withdrawn would not be admitted.
The trial will
resume tomorrow at 9 a.m. in Pawtucket City Hall. Tomorrow's session
is to end at 1 p.m. Brian Jones, a former Guild Executive Committee
member, is expected to testify.
03.04.02
Clarification: On this page, journalontrial.org originally
referred to a company attorney as "Lincoln Almond Jr., the
governor's son." The younger Mr. Almond is Lincoln D. Almond.
His father, Rhode Island's governor, is Lincoln C. Almond.
Daily
reports on the trial will be posted here on www.journalontrial.org.
The Web site also has directions and a map to Pawtucket City Hall,
137 Roosevelt Ave. The trial starts at 11 a.m. on Monday and at
9 a.m. on the other days. Here's how to get there:
From Providence
and points south: Take Rte. 95 north to School Street exit.
Turn left at bottom of ramp onto School Street. Pass Apex on the
left and go through one light (one-way right) to next light, bearing
left. Go to light at Slater Mill and Visitors Center, making a right
onto Roosevelt Avenue. City Hall will be on your right, with parking
on left. Trial is on third floor.
From
Boston and points north: Take Rte. 95 south into Rhode Island.
Take exit 29, Downtown Pawtucket. At end of ramp, merge onto Broadway.
Go about two-tenths of a mile and turn right onto Exchange Street.
Turn left on Roosevelt Avenue. City Hall will be on your left, with
parking on the right. Trial is on the third floor.
Felice
J. Freyer is the Providence Journal's award-winning medical
writer. She joined the paper in 1982 and was assigned to the medical
beat in 1989. A member of the Guild's Executive Committee since
1994, she has taken a leave from the newspaper to cover the trial.
There is
much more information about the dispute at the Guild's main website,
www.riguild.org. E-mail the
Guild at png@riguild.org. The
union's mailing address is: The Providence Newspaper Guild, 270
Westminster St., Providence, RI 02903. Telephone: (401) 421-9466.
FAX: (401) 421-9495.
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