We publish to restore the U.S. Constitutional and Labor Law rights to FREE SPEECH AND PROVIDE THE JOBS, PENSIONS AND BENEFITS DENIED US BY A CORRUPT UNION UNDER CORRUPT BUSINESS AGENTS AND DEPARTMENT HEADS. LINCOLN CENTER MANAGEMENT FAILS TO PROVIDE THE RANK AND FILE OVERSIGHT AND HONEST MANAGEMENT ALLOWING LOCAL ONE CORRUPTION TO FLOURISH. THIS PREVENTS HONEST UNIONISM FROM FLOWERING HERE.
OUR FRIENDS: WWW.BROADWAYSTAGEHANDSDEMOCRACYANVIL.BLOGSPOT.COM
137,456,892 Page Reads!
137,000,000 Plus Page Reads! Twenty Four Million. We have doubled our page reads since the Fiasco at the Met began. We represent the Rank and File Membership discriminated against and Rico scammed by the Union.
RIP Leah Schneider member of Local One who struggled to make tier and carry twins and fight Cancer.
Leah Schneider, a remarkable woman and stage technician who struggled for years as a woman and non family member in Local One IATSE, struggling to make tiered medical benefits designed to most benefit, the officers and department heads of Local One IATSE. Family members of the inner circle of Local One, in violation of US Constitutional Law and US Labor Law, had the best jobs and guaranteed benefits year after year. The editorial staff of BSD had numerous talks with Leah where she outlined how difficult it was to make medical benefits prior to and during her pregnancy, and during her battle with Cancer, while the illegally favored relatives and friends of the Department heads and officers skated into the best jobs and benefits year after year, with quite a few making pay and benefits while working under age, doing multiple jobs at the same time (impossible without corruption.), and even without actually showing up. Leah's struggle was typical of many Local One members, literally treated as non members in Local One's corruption scam against the rank and file of Local ONE IATSE. Rest in Peace Leah. We will not forget you.
THE STAGEHANDS REVIEW of LINCOLN CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS
BACKSTAGE AT THE METROPOLITAN OPERA AND ALL LINCOLN CENTER STAGES.
The Stagehands Review from The Rank and File Stagehands Sight Line.
Are the jobs at Lincoln Center going to the RANK AND FILE union members Lincoln Center Management and if not why are they not going to the rank and file?
Doesn't nepotism violate UNITED STATES CONSTITUTIONAL LAW AND LABOR LAW?
Why are the Lincoln Center Department heads hiring their relatives instead of RANK AND FILE MEMBERS?
DOESN'T THIS MAKE LINCOLN CENTER AND IT'S VENUES AN ACCOMPLICE TO FRAUD AND THE VIOLATION OF MEMBERS OF LOCAL ONES RIGHTS TO JOBS, PENSIONS AND BENEFITS?
THE REVIEW SUPPORTS THE RIGHT OF THE RANK AND FILE STAGEHANDS TO JOBS, PENSIONS AND BENEFITS ENTITLED BY UNITED STATES CONSTITUTIONAL AND LABOR LAW.
ANN ZIFF CAN YOU HELP THE MEN AND WOMEN OF LOCAL ONE OBTAIN THE JOBS THEY DESERVE?
Please use some of that money to up the rank and file contracts.
PETER GELB AND THE DIAZ FAMILY ARE MAKING MORE THAN ENOUGH NOW.
Peter Gelb, the Met's general manager, and Ann Ziff. Photo from The New York Times.
Comes the news today that Ann Ziff has given the Metropolitan Opera here in New York a gift of $30 million.
The New York Times reports that this is the largest single gift from an individual in the history of the Met, and that Ms. Ziff made it unrestricted, so that the Met can spend it any way it wishes. General Manager Peter Gelb says, "It came at a time when the Met is sorely in need of cash."
Ann Ziff grew up in New York City, and her mother was Harriet Henders, a soprano who performed with conductor Arturo Toscanini, reports The Times. Ann married William B Ziff, Jr., the impresario behind Ziff-Davis Publishing, and they had three sons. William Ziff died in 2006, and now Ann is secretary of the Met's board and will become chairwoman next year.
She is also a gifted jewelry designer who sells her work to a private clientele. She told me that she will be opening a story on Madison Avenue this spring; I want to find out how that is progressing. Her specialty is combining unexpected colors and materials together for striking creations which were exciting to me. Here is a shot of her designs.
THE LINCOLN CENTER STAGEHANDS REVIEW SALUTES THE GENEROSITY OF ANN ZIFF AND FAMILY.
David Koch — who donated $100 million for the refurbishment of the old New York State Theater in Lincoln Center (now the David H. Koch Theater) — has no interest in helping pay for the renovations on the David Geffen Hall across the plaza.
Geffen donated $100 million to get his name on the former Avery Fisher Hall in March, but Lincoln Center wants to raise another $400 million to redo the acoustically inferior space.
“I don’t think it’s going to be easy,” Koch told fellow dance fans at the 75th anniversary of the American Ballet Theatre.
“If they think I’m going to give them a big chunk of that money, they are asking the wrong guy.”
Koch also told my sources that the Geffen Hall could be adequately fixed for a more modest $200 million.
The very generous Koch, who is worth $43 billion, just gave $150 million to Memorial Sloan Kettering.
Meanwhile, ballet lovers are so annoyed at how long the performances on Tuesday dragged on, there are whispers that ABT artistic director Kevin McKenzie is in trouble. The dinner after the ballet didn’t start until 10:30 p.m. even though the curtain went up at 6:30 p.m.
“There were too many dances, too many speeches, too many videos. It was endless,” said one ballet lover. Lots of guests left before the second intermission.
One big donor groused, “If he [McKenzie] doesn’t understand people have to get up in the morning and want to go home, we need a new artistic director.”
Levy Fiddeled While Lincoln Center Burned!
Levy and the Local 1 Business Agents Fiddled while Lincoln Center Burned:How Reynold Levy (Says He) Saved Lincoln Center
With its white stone façades and noble arcades, Lincoln Center looks as though it’s always been there and always will be, a 1960s Acropolis that glows afresh each night, constantly rejuvenated by daily infusions of the performing arts. But in 2002, when Reynold Levy took over as president of an entity that’s really more a collection of principalities than a unified organization, the campus looked older, sadder, and lonelier. The travertine was streaked, the pavers pocked, and the air conditioners grumbled. On rainy nights, audiences exiting the halls picked their way around lagoons that leaked into the garage below the plaza. West 65th Street looked like the back end of a big-box store. In a new memoir, They Told Me Not to Take That Job: Tumult, Betrayal, Heroics, and the Transformation of Lincoln Center (PublicAffairs), Levy describes what it took to turn a beloved relic into an artistic engine. His answer, of course, is: him. Well … him, plus $1.2 billion.
For those of us whose philanthropic donations generally hover around the high two figures, the concept of raising that much money in multi-million-dollar chunks is hard to reckon. Indeed, the task had already stumped several chief executives, especially since it required wrangling an amoeboid mess of an institution. Some parts, like the Film Society and the Chamber Music Society, barely recognized each other. Others competed for resources, audiences, and glory. But Levy, with his persuasive handshake and owlish mien, proved to be the administrative virtuoso that Lincoln Center had been waiting for. No need to take his word for it: Just walk around. The campus today is exactly what he and the architect Elizabeth Diller (a founding partner at Diller Scofidio + Renfro) said it would be: the same, only busier, more open, more glamorous, more comfortable, and more fun. If the renovation were a movie, its credit roll would run for 20 minutes, but it would be fair to call it a Reynold Levy production.
It’s not surprising, then, that he subscribes to the "great men" theory of history: In apportioning the components of the book’s subtitle, he’s allotted himself the heroics and assigned the betrayal part to others. And if his account of the gentle squeeze that he applied to various moguls isn’t exactly the stuff of Napoleonic exploits, his results, unlike Napoleon’s, were unambiguously good. If a book-length paean to balanced budgets sounds like a snooze, consider this: New York City Opera, which was decimated by AIDS but survived it, succumbed in the end to preventable fiscal wounds.
Every great leader needs a passel of weak ones to make him shine. Levy is gleefully ruthless in his portrayals of City Opera’s board president Susan Baker and its last executive director, George Steel, whom he essentially accuses of chasing the company over the edge of a financial precipice. Steel’s predecessor Paul Kellogg gets hammered for trying to blaze a dead-end road out of Lincoln Center: The company was moving to ground zero! No, wait, it was building a new opera house on Amsterdam Avenue, a few blocks away! No, actually it wasn’t, but Kellogg projected such profound unhappiness with the State (now David H. Koch) Theater that audiences took his advice and stayed away. Levy also strafes New York Philharmonic ex-chairman Paul Guenther, who tried to force the orchestra into a nonsensical merger with Carnegie Hall. That misadventure was abetted by then–executive director Zarin Mehta, desperate to avoid the misery and expense of renovating the orchestra’s eternally so-so Avery Fisher Hall, and music director Lorin Maazel, who wanted nothing more than to show up, conduct a concert (preferably with minimal rehearsal), and then retreat to his farm in Virginia.
The best and most useful parts of Levy’s book are blunt: He no longer cares who’s mad at him. But his diplomatic instincts wash over him again when he turns to Peter Gelb, the one potential target who’s still on the job. The Metropolitan Opera’s general manager could stand to delegate more, Levy says, leaving the clear impression that Gelb should consider delegating to someone more prudent and capable than he is. The problem is not that Gelb is overworked, but that he has penchant for irrationally exuberant spending. Levy repeats the stark facts that bubbled up in the course of last summer’s labor drama: The budget had become obese, the endowment had withered, and the sense of purpose common to singers, players, stagehands, electricians, and administrators had soured into mutual distrust. Gelb told the world that if the unions didn’t buckle and accept substantial pay cuts, the company would go bankrupt — which hardly seemed to matter, really, since he was also pointing out to opera lovers everywhere that they were getting old and dying off, taking the art form with them. (Thanks, Peter. We’ll work on that.) Most leaders leave it to their critics to point out that the institution they’re running is already halfway down a sheer ravine, but Gelb seemed almost giddy in his pessimism. If Levy thought Kellogg was unwise to tell his audiences that the State Theater was acoustically unsatisfactory, what can he really have thought of Gelb telling everyone to give up all hope?
Much of this feels like old news, some pages read like score-settling, a few as an objective recitation of the record. Still, Levy provides three plausible takeaways. The first is that Lincoln Center as a whole is a thriving, dynamic, multiplicitous presence, tending to the past and nourishing new creation; Levy rightly praises the programming guru Jane. The other two conclusions are more frightening: that juggernaut prestige organizations that have been in existence for a century or more are fantastically vulnerable, always a few bad mistakes away from catastrophe; and that good judgment, professionalism, and fiscal prudence in the performing arts are in painfully short supply. That sounds to me like the cry of a fund-raising warrior eager to be summoned out of retirement.
MultiMillion Payout for Lincoln Center President Levy
The long-serving head of Lincoln Center retired last year, but not without a huge payday.
Reynold Levy collected a $600,000 bonus on top of his $1.3 million salary.
His total compensation package for 2013 came to $2,417,680, including nearly $500,000 in retirement money, according to recent tax filings. He had collected nearly $600,000 in retirement payouts over the previous three years.
“His bonus was based on annual reviews of his performance as president as well as project performance,” said Eileen McMahon, a Lincoln Center rep. It was based on 18 months of work, she said.
Lincoln Center took in $165 million in 2013 and reported expenses of $147 million, its newly released tax return shows.
Levy took the helm of the performing-arts center in 2002. He left in January 2014 after overseeing a $1.2 billion redevelopment of the Manhattan cultural complex.
In his recent memoir, “They Told Me Not to Take That Job: Tumult, Betrayal, Heroics, and the Transformation of Lincoln Center,” Levy called some other arts leaders incompetent.
Metropolitan Opera Talks Restart as Lockout Looms
Metropolitan Opera Talks Continue as Lockout Looms, Unions Allow Federal Mediator
Union Officials hold little hope of reaching deal before deadline.
Members of the singers union meet before contract negotiations with the Metropolitan Opera resumed Monday after a two-month hiatus. Ramsay de Give for The Wall Street Journal
The Metropolitan Opera singers union resumed contract talks on Monday after a two-month hiatus, but union officials said they had little hope of reaching an agreement before a threatened lockout.
Intense negotiations are expected this week as contracts expire for 15 of the Met's 16 unions on Thursday. Last week, the opera company's general manager, Peter Gelb, advised union members to prepare for a lockout starting Friday.
Mr. Gelb has said he is seeking labor-cost savings of 16% to 17%, as the company grapples with faltering ticket sales, a depleted endowment and rising operating costs.
Union leaders have countered that the Met should curb what they have described as out-of-control spending by Mr. Gelb. They say his proposed work-rule and benefit changes would result in losses for their members of more than 17%.
Before the talks began Monday, emotions ran high among members of the singers union.
"He doesn't want to help us maintain our instruments," said chorus member Jean Braham, commenting on the effect Mr. Gelb's proposed high-deductible health plan could have on singers' voices and bodies.
"We are the artists," Ms. Braham said, her voice cracking. "We are the product. The fact that he accepts no responsibility and no accountability is just incredible to me."
Met spokesman Sam Neuman said the chorus members "are among the highest-compensated artists in their field—a status that will not change as a result of the current contract negotiations. We hope that they will recognize the need to share in our institutionwide plan of cost controls to secure the future of our company."
Full-time chorus members earned an average of $200,000 for the 2012-2013 season, including revenue sharing from high-definition broadcasts and overtime from several four-hour-plus operas. Orchestra members that year had median earnings of about $191,000.
During the talks, the American Guild of Musical Artists, which represents singers, dancers and stage managers, presented a proposal for a series of 2% raises over each of the next three years.
Union officials also said they had asked the New York attorney general to examine the Met's heavy draws from its endowment.
The endowment stood at $267 million as of July 11, down from $305.8 million in July 2006, according to the Met.
Mr. Neuman said the company's endowment "has been in full compliance with all applicable laws and best practices."
A spokesman from the attorney general's office declined to comment.
The tone of discussions remains acrimonious as the parties enter the final stretch before Thursday's deadline.
On Friday, the orchestra union presented an 84-page proposal to Met officials, blaming the box-office drop on Mr. Gelb's artistic choices and proposing $31 million in alternative cost savings.
The proposals included lowering ticket prices, shortening rehearsals and decreasing the number of new productions.
The orchestra also presented an analysis of music critics' reviews, concluding that Mr. Gelb's new productions have received more negative coverage than positive.
On Saturday, the Met responded with a 53-page rebuttal. It called the orchestra's analysis "erroneous" and its proposals "ill-advised" and "not realistic."
Lowering ticket prices would likely decrease, not increase, revenue, the Met said. It added that its productions have always received a mix of positive and negative reviews.
Of the three biggest unions, the stagehands have adopted the most moderate tone, suggesting that they would be willing to consider concessions—with a caveat.
"We're willing to tighten our belts, but Peter Gelb has to cut up his credit cards," said Joe Hartnett, who is coordinating negotiations for six units of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees.
In a letter dated July 18 and posted online Monday, union president Matthew Loeb asked board members to encourage Mr. Gelb to bargain with "a more collaborative spirit," arguing that management had shown "blindness" to potential savings.
Mr. Neuman said the Met intends to work collaboratively to reach an agreement, and noted that administrative staff would take cuts on par with negotiated union reductions.
ANN ZIFF: DIAZ FAMILY LOCAL ONE DISGRACE: FEMALE Met stagehand: Abuse was tragic opera
STEVE DIAZ/ JOHN DIAZ CLAN NEPOTISM LEADS TO REPRESSION AT THE METROPOLITAN OPERA: Met stagehand: Abuse was tragic opera
A former Met stage carpenter is suing the Metropolitan Opera for sexual harassment, claiming that her male colleagues constantly abused her with unwanted come-ons and crude, dangerous pranks.
Teri Orsburn, 53, worked for almost three years at the Met, where she was the company’s only female stagehand.
Orsburn says in a Manhattan federal lawsuit that from the outset, her immediate supervisor refused to call her anything else but “girl,” setting a tone for others to follow.
She said colleagues put glue on her tools, locked her out of the company lounge, and intentionally put her in physical danger.
TERI ORSBURN Suing over “harassment.”
“They started heckling me immediately, day in, day out, and we worked very long days,” said Orsburn, an Arizona native and self-described cowgirl. “They acted like badly-behaved 8-year-old boys.”
Lawyers for the Metropolitan Opera did not immediately return a call for comment.
Orsburn said the curtain came down on her career after a stagehand shoved her to the ground and fell on her in a stage area where there were no witnesses.
She said the incident left her with physical injuries that made her unable to continue performing the job she had dreamed about since childhood.
WSJ Reports: Mismanagement and Corruption Implode New York City Opera at Lincoln Center
The New York City Opera has suspended plans for next season as it takes a hard look at its business model, including exploring cheaper alternatives to its current home at the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts. BILLIONAIRE KOCH CAN YOU HELP THE OPERA AND SCAMMED RANK AND FILE MEMBERS OF LOCAL ONE?
Kara Shay Thomson in a rehearsal of New York City Opera's 'Monodramas,' last month. The opera is considering a move from Lincoln Center.
Charles Wall, the opera's new chairman, said he and the board have embarked on an exhaustive review of its finances and won't schedule future programming until reaching a balanced budget. "There is no line item that's sacrosanct," he said in an interview Thursday with The Wall Street Journal.
The opera had been expected in recent weeks to announce its fall season, and its silence had created some "scuttlebutt," acknowledged Mr. Wall, a former vice chairman of Philip Morris International in Switzerland.
In contrast to the Metropolitan Opera, City Opera focuses on more experimental and affordable productions featuring, as Mr. Wall put it, "nonestablished future stars."
The review of its business model, which it expects to complete by mid-May, comes in response to several tumultuous years at the opera. Between late 2008 and early 2009, the company raided its endowment for a total of $23.5 million after getting approval from the New York state attorney general's office, which oversees nonprofits. The endowment currently stands at just $9 million. During the same period, it went dark for a season during the renovation of its Lincoln Center home, the David H. Koch Theater.
It also suffered an embarrassing episode in 2008 in which the Belgian director Gerard Mortier quit even before assuming his appointed post as the company's general manager.
Into Mr. Mortier's void came the current artistic director and general manager, George Steel, who said in an interview that the board's "top-to-bottom review" is "great news." He said Mr. Wall told him that "the company has had tremendous artistic success over the last couple of years, and this is building a plan for financial success to match the artistic success."
The company's recent programming, especially "Monodramas," a triple bill of one-act operas, has received enthusiastic critical reception.
But its books paint a bleaker picture. Its projected deficit for the current season is $5 million. Last season's revenue rebounded to $26.2 million from a low of $6 million during the period in which it went dark.
Still, revenue hasn't recovered to fiscal year 2008 levels, when it reached $33 million.
The opera may encounter serious hurdles as it tries to save money, particularly with regard to labor costs, a notoriously crippling expense for performing-arts organizations.
City Opera's contract with the American Guild of Musical Artists, the union that represents the choristers and singers, expires April 29. The union intends to notify the opera Monday that it will initiate a strike beginning April 30 if the parties cannot agree on the terms of a new contract, National Executive Director Alan Gordon said Thursday.
But none of that appears to faze Mr. Wall, who in recent weeks personally contributed $2.5 million to help plug the current-year deficit and initiated a campaign to raise the balance.
"Nothing's off the table," Mr. Wall said of the overhaul of the opera's financial model.
Regarding the possibility of exploring alternative performance spaces, for example, he described Lincoln Center as a "wonderful location," but added: "But there are a lot of terrific venues around the city, and I don't think Lincoln Center has a lock." Asked about the prospect of switching venues, Mr. Steel said, "I'm really focused on producing operas here next season. That's not a big part of my thinking right now."
The opera needs fundamental changes to keep its doors open, Mr. Wall said. "For years, arts organizations didn't look at the bottom line, is my sense," he said. "But you've got to bring a business outlook to these organizations, or they start dipping into the endowment—they start doing all sorts of things that they shouldn't be doing."
Old News as City Opera Disappears from Lincoln Center. Will the Met Follow? The Disaster continues under Gelb and the Corrupt Diaz Clan and Corrupt Local One Business Agents!?
City Opera Director Defends New Season
Sara Krulwich/The New York Times
Catherine Malfitano, center, and Tino Gagliardi, left, the Local 802 president, at the protest.
The latest on the arts, coverage of live events, critical reviews, multimedia extravaganzas and much more. Join the discussion.
After months of pummeling by unions, luminaries of the opera world and company members, Mr. Steel, the general manager and artistic director of New York City Opera, presented his plan for a peripatetic company uncoupled from its Lincoln Center home.
Most of next year’s four-opera season was already known — a “Traviata” and Rufus Wainwright’s “Prima Donna” at the Brooklyn Academy of Music; a “Così Fan Tutte” at John Jay College; a Telemann opera at El Museo del Barrio.
But Mr. Steel also disclosed that a City Opera partnership with the Public Theater would bring a Shakespeare-based opera to the Delacorte Theater in Central Park in the fall, part of what is expected to be a continuing joint venture. Tickets will be free, he said.
Along with presenting the details, Mr. Steel used the news conference to make the case for his vision and to rebut criticism, which has become increasingly personal, of the decision to leave Lincoln Center.
He appeared in the cool confines of the theater at the Guggenheim Museum just minutes after a lively demonstration in the broiling sun outside on Fifth Avenue by some 50 people, including members of the opera’s chorus and orchestra and three Democratic elected representatives from the Upper West Side: New York State Senator Tom Duane, Assemblywoman Linda B. Rosenthal and City Councilwoman Gale A. Brewer.
The rally, organized by the orchestra and chorus unions, was intended to denounce the move and efforts to turn the orchestra and chorus into essentially freelance outfits. A flier accused Mr. Steel of “utter incompetence, ineptitude and a skewed artistic vision that sells no tickets.”
Inside, Mr. Steel came out from the wings with Mark Newhouse, a prominent City Opera board member. Mr. Newhouse described the company’s mission as presenting traditional and rarely heard operas and introducing new talent, which he said would continue under Mr. Steel, whom he called “endlessly creative, energetic and intrepid.” The chairman, Charles Wall, was out of town, a spokeswoman said.
Mr. Steel said City Opera was “open for business” but had to leave its Lincoln Center home, the David H. Koch Theater, “because we can’t afford it any longer.” He said that 14 staff jobs had been eliminated and that the company could not survive without major changes to the union contracts, which he said were created for a scale of performance that City Opera can no longer sustain.
The company next season plans 16 staged opera performances, all with supertitles, far fewer than in past years. “We’re trying to pay people for the work that they do,” Mr. Steel said of the chorus and orchestra, which would give up guaranteed minimum work weeks and minimum membership numbers under the company’s contract offer.
Mr. Steel suggested that the union protests were “political theater which can obscure more than uncover.” When asked about the personal attacks, he said, “I guess it’s a strategy some people think is effective.”
He said that the future of the annual Vox showcase of new opera, a major resource for composers and contemporary-music lovers, was up in the air. Noting that it was a way to keep the orchestra working during idle weeks, he said, “We’re trying to find a way to continue it.”
Mr. Steel cast the company’s move out of Lincoln Center as an opportunity to bring opera to the people, likening New York to a “glittering theater with eight million seats.”
“We are coming out to meet the people of New York,” Mr. Steel said. He said the company could always return for performances at the Koch Theater and was considering appearances at the Rose Theater, City Center and Broadway houses, as well as in Staten Island, the Bronx and Queens.
He argued that leaving Lincoln Center would not discourage subscribers, who would be signing up for tickets at three separate theaters next season. “People in New York go to see what they want to see,” he said, not to the nearest opera house.
Recent Article by President Claffey regarding Anti Union Activities by David Koch
President Claffey IATSE Local One President Discusses Recent Wisconsin Events: 'A Wake-Up Call'. Takes David Koch and other Anti Union Activists to task.
Monday, March 14, 2011; Posted: 05:03 PM - by BWW News Desk
Statement of James J. Claffey, Jr. President of Local One IATSE Regarding Recent Events in Wisconsin:
"The events in Madison, Wisconsin must serve as a wake-up call to us in the great state of New York. The attacks on Union workers in Wisconsin matters to us in more ways than most can imagine. If you wear a Union pin on your lapel, there are powerful forces in this country who are putting a bulls-eye on your back as part of a larger campaign whose target is all working families and everything we hold dear.
As the 125th Anniversary of Local One approaches and I consider what the last century and a quarter has meant, I take a closer look at our local's many struggles for achievement as well as the history of working people in America.
In the last century, unionizing in America meant working people joining the middle class: a decent roof over our heads, food on the table, respect in the workplace and a better life for our children. But ever since unions secured all of these things, these powerful forces have been attempting to take them back.
The Governor of Wisconsin wants to simply roll back two centuries of working people's progress and it should be clear; he's not talking about taking away the right to join a Union. The Governor of Wisconsin is talking about taking away the right for a Union to behave and perform like a Union whose objectives are to protect and negotiate wages, terms, conditions, benefits, jobs and jurisdiction. The Governor is attempting to challenge our mere existence by eliminating a union's right to collective bargaining.
All working families and labor organizations throughout this country must stand together because Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker is not alone. When a corporation like Fox News can have five potential Republican presidential candidates on its payroll or billionaires like David H. Koch (yes, that David H. Koch whose name is on The New York State Theater) can throw tens of millions into "grass root" Tea Party campaigns to elect anti-union activists like the governor of Wisconsin, then union families should not forget that the same thing can happen in their state and in Washington, D.C.
The campaign to take away the rights of unionized Wisconsin state workers is just the start. The so-called "heartland of America" is rapidly becoming the "heartLESS-land of America." There's similar talk in Ohio, and Tea Party governors and legislatures all over the country are starting to sing the same phrases written by the billionaires who wrote the tune. And the big lie they're all harmonizing on is that unionized state, county or city workers are better paid than the equivalent private sector worker.
Brothers and Sisters of Local One and union people all over America must exercise their legal rights collectively and take action to fight this battle as if it were in their own backyards. We must acknowledge these union busting campaigns as a wake-up call to support our Brothers and Sisters in Wisconsin, because if we don't, we will all one day wake up in Wisconsin."
James J. Claffey, Jr. began his career as a stagehand in 1982 in venues including Radio City Music Hall, the City Center 55th Street Dance Theatre, Madison Square Garden, CBS-TV, ABC-TV and various Broadway theatres. Mr. Claffey began his career as an Officer of Local One in 1996, serving as the Chairman of the Board of Trustees until 1998 at which time the membership elected him to the full time position of Theatrical Business Manager, an office he was then re-elected to in 2001. Since May 2004, he has served as President of Local One. He is a graduate of both the Cornell University Labor Studies Certificate Program and the Program on Negotiation at Harvard Law School. Mr. Claffey was recently elected to the Board of Trustees of The Actors' Fund and serves on the NYC Opera Board of Directors as well as a Vice President on the NYC Central Labor Council.
Sarah Jessica Parker, a.k.a. Carrie Bradshaw, met up withSex and the City author Candace Bushnell on the red carpet last night at New York City Ballet 2010 fall gala at Lincoln Center.
The Daily Mail reports SJP was attending the event not just as a lover of the dance, but as a newly elected member of the board of directors for the NYC Ballet company.
Today, Parker was back in her role as mom, spotted on the street taking son James Wilkie to school.
WE ARE GRATEFULL FOR THE 100 MILLION DOLLAR DONATION BUT WHAT IS GOING ON BACKSTAGE MR. KOCH?
CLAN DIAZ, GELB BUSINESS AGENTS CONTINUE TO HIDE FROM RANK AND FILE
The Metropolitan Opera could find itself the unexpected beneficiary of a multimillion-dollar gift under the unusual terms of a Washington, D.C., heiress's donation, according to several people familiar with the matter.
Betty Brown Casey's donations to the Washington National Opera's endowment came with a stipulation: Should that company fail to remain independent, the funds would be rescinded—and transferred to the Met.
That day could be on the horizon: The National Opera is in merger talks with the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, The Wall Street Journal reported last week.
According to a person familiar with the matter, donations made by Mrs. Casey, the National Opera's life chairman, constitute between one-half and two-thirds of the National Opera's total endowment, which was $30.5 million at the end of its 2009 fiscal year. That would make the amount of the Met's potential windfall between $15 million and $20 million.
A lawyer for Mrs. Casey, Brendan V. Sullivan Jr., referring to the opera, said: "I'm confident that they will abide by their written agreements."
In a statement, a spokeswoman for the National Opera reiterated the sentiment. "Washington National Opera is grateful for the generosity of all of its donors, and abides by all terms related to all gifts," said Michelle Pendoley.
Kennedy Center spokesman John Dow said he was unaware of any stipulations, and declined to comment further.
Through a spokesman, the general manager of the Met, Peter Gelb, declined to comment. The Met's endowment at the end of fiscal year 2009 totaled $247 million, and the gift—if transferred—would represent a much-needed injection of funding for the company, which has been hammered by the recession. Its net assets declined 38% in the 2009 fiscal year.
Mrs. Casey, 83 years old, is the widow of Eugene B. Casey, a Maryland real-estate developer who served as a farm adviser to President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Mrs. Casey's motivation for the terms on her donations is unclear.
Metropolitan Opera general manager Peter GelbFormer Kennedy Center President Larry Wilker said he was not aware of Mrs. Casey's decision and did not have any information about why she would have taken such a step. But he speculated that the stipulation could have been made in response to disappointment over scuttled plans to build an independent home for the Washington National Opera, which has performed at the Kennedy Center since 1971. In 1996, Mrs. Casey gave the opera company $18 million to purchase a building for development as an opera house. After construction costs became prohibitive, the company sold the building for $28.2 million, and the net proceeds were added to company's existing endowment, which was then named for Mrs. Casey's late husband.
Merger talks between the National Opera and the Kennedy Center began in March as an effort to address the opera's financial challenges, including a debt of $11 million and assets that declined by 16%, or more than $7 million, in fiscal year 2009. The plan under consideration would mimic the center's relationship with the National Symphony Orchestra. The center would assume the opera's assets and liabilities, and the opera would cede to the center approval on artistic and budgetary matters.
Both the opera and the center say they are engaged in talks concerning their future relationship as a result of the 2013 expiration of their rental contract.
Write to Erica Orden at
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50 YEARS OF CORRUPTION, NEPOTISM, DISCRIMINATION AND VIOLATION OF UNITED STATES CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
MAY 11: CELEBRATING 50 YEARS OF LINCOLN CENTER. BACKSTAGE NEPOTISM, CORRUPTION AND DISCRIMINATION UNDER LOCAL ONE DEPARTMENT HEADS.
In celebration of the 50th Anniversary of Lincoln Center, a photo shoot was held to bring together a variety of individuals. Joining David and Wu Han for a group photo were Governor Patterson and David Rockefeller, plus fellow Lincoln Center artistic and executive directors Peter Gelb, George Steel, Zarin Mehta and Jackie Davis.
A LOTTA WHITE BREAD IN ADMINISTRATION AND BEHIND THE SCENES.
If there never was a story that explains how unions are really little else but a criminal extortion racket, the story by James Ahearn in the New Jersey Began Record helps explain it for us. Ahearn’s piece headlined “For Backstage Labor, Rich Rewards,” informs us that some stagehands in New York theater make upwards to $422,000 a year in salary — and that doesn’t include benefits.
These positions are not as highly skilled as brain surgeons, to be sure, yet these guys make hundreds of thousands a year to move chairs, rearrange scenery, raise curtains, and what have you. Why the absurdly outsized pay scale? Threats of strikes shutting down Broadway and its multi-million dollar industry is why.
Ahearn reveals that one mere stagehand makes $422,599 a year, plus $107,445 in benefits and deferred compensation, another makes $290,000, and two carpenters and two electricians made about $400,000 a year with benefits to work the theaters of New York.
These guys are skilled laborers, of course. Not every guy off the street can just start being an electrician or a stagehand without training. But should these manual labor positions be making hundreds of thousands a year for their efforts? What accounts for this absurdity?
How to account for all this munificence? The power of a union, Local 1 of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees. “Power,” as in the capacity and willingness to close most Broadway theaters for 19 days two years ago when agreement on a new contract could not be reached.
In fact Ahearn quotes another journalist that tried to investigate these outlandish salaries and found that folks in the theater industry were reticent to even talk to him about it because they feared the power of the union to disrupt their businesses.
Please look up the difference between reticent and reluctant and then inform the mainstream media where the same error is made en masse. It's actually easier to get it right than get it wrong, but wrong it is, so frequently that it has become self-propagating.
About a year ago, I had a post about “excessive pay” for the unionized stagehands at Carnegie Hall, some of whom made more during the 2007-2008 season by pushing the 9-foot Steinway Model D concert grand piano out onto the stage for a concert than the artist makes for playing the piano. Financial data about many nonprofit organizations, including salary data for the “highest paid employees and their compensation,” are available at the website GuideStar. Here’s the link to The Carnegie Hall Corporation listing at GuideStar.
For the fiscal year ending June 30, 2009, the top five highest paid Carnegie employees were all stagehands making an average of $359,000 in base compensation (see chart above). A more detailed analysis of Carnegie Hall’s 2008 tax return reveals that each of the five stagehands earned an additional $100,000 in deferred compensation for 2008, bringing their total yearly compensation amounts to:
Dennis O’Connell (properties manager): $524,332 James Csollany (carpenter): $461,174 John Cardinale (electrician): $438,828 Kenneth Beltrone (carpenter): $432,655 John Goodson (electrician): $425,105
That’s a total annual compensation for the five Carnegie stagehands of $2,280,000, or $456,000 each. How to explain these excessive above-market wages? Easy, the stagehands are members of one of the oldest and most powerful NYC labor unions – The International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees – which exercised its union muscle in 2007 by striking and shutting down 26 Broadway shows for almost three weeks, at an estimated cost to NYC of about $40 million.
There’s a lot of outrage and attention directed towards “excessive CEO pay,” judging by the 153,000 Google hits for that phrase, which is 270 times more than the 567 Google hits for the phrase “excessive union pay.” As I mentioned in the previous post, musicians and promoters frequently blame “ticket scalpers” for raising ticket prices, but maybe “stagehand scalping” deserves some of the blame for high concert ticket prices?!
Sherman Frederick is a columnist for Stephens Media. His column appears Sunday in the Opinion section of the Review-Journal. In between Sundays, you can find out what's on his mind here.
Average stagehand at Lincoln Center in NYC makes $290K a year?
Posted by Sherman Frederick Monday, Dec. 27, 2010 at 08:46 AM
I looked at this blog banter this morning, plus the original reporting on it, and still find it hard to believe -- the average stagehand at Lincoln Center in NYC makes $290k a year.
The top stagehand at Carnegie Hall makes $422,599 a year in salary, plus $107,445 in benefits and deferred compensation.
Is that out of balance, or what? You can start reading about it here. Las Vegas has a lot of stagehands, but I'll bet none of them make even a quarter of the top guy at Carnegie.
This entry was posted on Monday, Dec. 27, 2010 at 08:46 AM and is filed under The Complete Las Vegan. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can
NEGATIVE PRESS ON LOCAL ONE CORRUPTION AT LINCOLN CENTER
If Broadway shows have gotten unusually expensive, one major reason is the dominant presence of International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE) Local One. Not too many people are aware of the power of this 3,000-member stagehands' union. But its leaders have managed to exact enormous concessions from arts management along the Great White Way, and at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center and elsewhere. For the bosses, at least, it's been a sweet deal. An article in the Winter 2010 issue of City Journal, a quarterly periodical of the Manhattan Institute, summarizes just how sweet - and why the situation isn't likely to change anytime soon.
The short piece, written by New Criterion Managing Editor James Panero and titled "Strike the Set," notes that this union of carpenters, electricians and prop masters has amassed almost unchecked power. This has served to drive up production costs and force theater owners to raise ticket prices. Local One top brass aren't complaining. For the fiscal year ending June 2008, Dennis O'Connell, a union member who serves as property manager for Carnegie Hall, received more than $530,000 in compensation; that was second only to Carnegie Hall Executive Director Clive Gillinson. Four other stagehands - James Csollany, Kenneth Beltrone, John Goodson and John Cardinale - each made over $400,000. Nice work if you can get it. Other members can make out well, too, so long as they play by the rules of the union-controlled promotion system. It's an unwritten rule that first preference goes to family members and relatives.
Such arrangements, the author notes, are stifling even during good times. But as theater revenues have suffered during the latest recession, union compensation packages "should receive the same scrutiny as the pay rates of top management." While it's true executive directors and maestros can command high salaries, sometimes in excess of $1 million, such income is determined by market negotiation, not strike threat. Panero asks, "Could another prop master do O'Connell's job just as well, and for less pay?" It's a question more New Yorkers in the arts community should be asking, and not just of prop masters, lest more positions be eliminated or salaries be cut. "Arts leaders, who need to start controlling costs at all levels, also need the backbone to stare down the threat of a Local One strike," the author concludes. "And if negotiations break down in the future, the arts community must overcome its willingness to cross picket lines for a justified cause that will help all workers." That sounds like a plan.
The newly renovated Koch Theater at Lincoln Center is facing $51,000 in fines for workplace safety violations. The theatre is home to the New York City Ballet and the New York City Opera.
Among the violations, an inspection by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) cited the theater for the presence of asbestos, or material that might contain asbestos in the theater’s promenade area and in nearby electrical closets. The materials had not been labeled and asbestos warning signs had not been posted.
Inspectors also found that theater's movable stage posed a risk to employees. When it's raised, inspectors found there weren't sufficient guardrails to prevent employees from falling into the orchestra pit. Then when the stage is lowered, the inspection found that employees could potentially be crushed by it. Other violations included a jammed exit door and a portable fire extinguisher that was not mounted.
These conditions were similar to those cited by OSHA during a 2009 inspection of the theater. Those citations resulted in $45,000 in fines.
The theater has 15 business days respond to the citations. A meeting between OSHA and the theater is scheduled for next week.
The Review urges all to consider a donation to insure ... AND END THE DISCRIMINATION.
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Questions for Peter Martins, Ballet Master in Chief of New York City Ballet: Not the questions we would ask him! Whats really going on backstage Peter?
Under Martins' leadership, the NYCB this season presented seven new ballets, and four newly commissioned musical scores, and a customed-designed stage by renowned architect Santiago Calatrava. He talks about leaving the Royal Danish Ballet, where he was a principal dancer, to come to America — all because of West Side Story.
In the video below, Martins talks about his interests off the stage for a behind-the-scenes moment at the WNYC studios.
He explains why "this is [his] moment" and tells us what he'd do with his last day on earth.
NUTCRACKER SNOW JOB FROM CITY BALLET HOLIDAY BANDIT LOOP CONTINUES
NUTCRACKER SNOW JOB FROM CITY BALLET HOLIDAY BANDIT LOOP CONTINUES
Dance
Depths to Plumb, Sugarplum
RANK AND FILE SCAM CONTINUES AGAINST US AS THE SUGAR PLUM FAIRIES OUR OFFICERS INSURE NOTHING CHANGES AT THE NEW KOCH (NY STATE THEATER) RECONSTRUCTION OF EVERYTHING BUT THE UNION CARD. 25 G DONATION OF OUR FUNDS TO CITY BALLET FROM UNION GOVERNMENT INSURES THE R AND F ARE SCREWED AGAIN. WHO EVER HEARD OF A UNION DONATING TO A COMPANY? MORE OF OUR CASH WASTED.
Paul Kolnik for The New York Times
Performers in New York City Ballet's “Nutcracker,” swirling in sugarplum fairy dust. Some dancegoers decry America's annual affinity for Tchaikovsky's ballet.
Wendy White, the veteran Metropolitan Opera mezzo-soprano who fell from a
platform during a performance nearly a year ago, has still not
recovered from her injuries and feels abandoned by the company she once
considered family, her lawyer said on Monday.
Ms. White broke no bones in the fall but suffered nerve and muscle
damage that has prevented her from singing professionally, said the
lawyer, Martin W. Edelman, a specialist in personal injury cases. She is
undergoing physical therapy, he said, but progress is slow.
And now the Met has refused to honor her contract, Mr. Edelman charged.
“The Met, instead of treating her, let’s say, as a member of the family,
has treated her in an adversarial way,” he said. “They cut her off from
paying her the rest of the contract and have basically turned their
back on her.”
The Met confirmed on Monday that Ms. White, who has made more than 500
appearances at the house since 1989, would be replaced for her scheduled
performances as Marthe in Gounod’s “Faust” and Marcellina in “The
Marriage of Figaro” this season because of health problems.
The Met declined on Monday to address any of the lawyer’s comments.
“We deeply regret that Wendy White will not be returning to the Met
roster this season,” a spokesman said. “However, since this is a legal
matter, we’re not prepared to comment further.”
The American Guild of Musical Artists, which represents singers at the
Met, has sought to recover pay for the remainder of Ms. White’s
contract, which runs into next year, on her behalf, Mr. Edelman said.
The guild’s national executive director, Alan S. Gordon, declined to
comment.
A Met spokesman later said that a hinge connecting the platform to the
stairway broke. Ms. White was taken to the hospital, and Met officials
said then that her injuries did not initially appear to be serious.
Mr. Edelman said the Met was negligent, adding, “The set wasn’t properly designed or put together.”
“It’s pretty inevitable,” he said, that Ms. White will sue the company after long hoping to avoid taking that step.
Ms. White won the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions in 1978,
at 25, and made her debut at the company in 1989 as Flora in Verdi’s
“Traviata.” She has since appeared in some 40 productions at the Met and
has sung in opera houses around the world.
It's been a long re-construction ride up at Lincoln Center, where the creative team at Diller Scofidio and Renfro has led a total transformation of the cultural campus.
Lincoln Center
is to mark the completion of its six-year, $1.2 billion redevelopment
project on Monday with the dedication of a new West 65th Street bridge,
the project's final element.
It
connects the upper level plaza of the Rose Building and the adjacent
Walter Reade Theater and The Juilliard School to the public spaces,
concert halls, theaters and restaurants on the south side of Lincoln Center's campus. Over the last decade, new ...
NEW YORK - The Metropolitan Opera's
revival of its 2½-year-old production of Bizet's “Carmen” was memorable
for the debut of conductor Michele Mariotti and for performances by
Anita Rachvelishvili and Yonghoon Lee that never quite came together.
Published: September 25, 2012. Another Metropolitan Opera opening night, another new production of a Donizetti opera starring the charismatic soprano Anna Netrebko.
October 2, 2012, 2:56 p.m.. NEW YORK--In a quarter-century at the helm of the Film Society of Lincoln Center and the New York Film Festival, Richard Pena has become more associated with a U.S.
Supporters
say part of Mr. Levy's legacy will be the collaborative spirit he
built, using diligence and diplomacy, among the complex's 11
historically contentious constituent groups, including the New York
Philharmonic, the Metropolitan Opera and New ...
It
will be named in Mr. Levy's honor for spearheading the project on the
16-acre campus, which is home to many of the city's most important
cultural groups including The Metropolitan Opera, New York City Ballet and New York Philharmonic. Mr. Levy said ...
NEW
YORK - Jazz harmonica virtuoso Toots Thielemans quipped that his legs
don't work but his mouth does after he was pushed onstage in a
wheelchair to a standing ovation during the first of two Jazz at Lincoln Center concerts this weekend celebrating ...
There is also a certain allure to Franco Zeffirelli's 25-year-old production of “Turandot” at the Metropolitan Opera,
flamboyant and over the top though it may be. The lavish sets attracted
enthusiastic applause when the production returned to the Met ...
Fifth-grader Pierson Hall, a Warwick native, will appear George BalanchineÃs "The Nutcracker" this holiday season at Lincoln Center in New York City. WARWICK - The New York Post calls George Balanchine's “The Nutcracker” the “Christmas show of all ...
The Big Apple Circus presents LEGENDARIUM, a Journey into Circus Past, in its annual engagement at Lincoln Center's Damrosch Park in NYC from Saturday, October 20, 2012 through Sunday, January 13, 2013.
Wendy White, the veteran Metropolitan Opera
mezzo-soprano who fell from a platform during a performance nearly a
year ago, has still not recovered from her injuries and feels abandoned
by the company she once considered family, her lawyer said on ...
Metropolitan Opera, Lincoln Center;
212-362-6000. Next performance of “Carmen” tonight, other performances
through March 1. “Il Trovatore” repeats Thursday and other nights
through Jan. 24.
The season premiere of Verdi's “Trovatore” at the Metropolitan Opera
on Saturday afternoon was such an occasion. Despite a cast made up
largely of singers unknown even to regular operagoers, a conductor who
has done little in New York, and a production ...
Placido Domingo
is taking time out of his operatic schedule this week to appear on
ABC's "Dancing with the Stars." But fans hoping to see the tenor
demonstrate some fancy footwork will be disappointed.
New York City Opera, which has been seeking to forge a new identity since casting off from Lincoln Center
two seasons ago, now appears ready to shed some of the tangible - and
expensive - vestiges of its venerable past: the sets and costumes of
many ...
It's been a long re-construction ride up at Lincoln Center, where the creative team at Diller Scofidio and Renfro has led a total transformation of the cultural campus.
Lincoln Center
is to mark the completion of its six-year, $1.2 billion redevelopment
project on Monday with the dedication of a new West 65th Street bridge,
the project's final element.
It
connects the upper level plaza of the Rose Building and the adjacent
Walter Reade Theater and The Juilliard School to the public spaces,
concert halls, theaters and restaurants on the south side of Lincoln Center's campus. Over the last decade, new ...
NEW YORK - The Metropolitan Opera's
revival of its 2½-year-old production of Bizet's “Carmen” was memorable
for the debut of conductor Michele Mariotti and for performances by
Anita Rachvelishvili and Yonghoon Lee that never quite came together.
In
the 2012-13 season, he will add two new baritone roles to his
repertoire, Francesco Foscari in "I Due Foscari" in Los Angeles, and
Germont in "La Traviata" during his 45th season at the Metropolitan Opera. He is also preparing to release his first ...
October 2, 2012, 2:56 p.m.. NEW YORK--In a quarter-century at the helm of the Film Society of Lincoln Center and the New York Film Festival, Richard Pena has become more associated with a U.S.
Supporters
say part of Mr. Levy's legacy will be the collaborative spirit he
built, using diligence and diplomacy, among the complex's 11
historically contentious constituent groups, including the New York
Philharmonic, the Metropolitan Opera and New ...
Lincoln Center
will mark the official end of its six-year, $1.2 billion redevelopment
on Monday evening with a ceremony that will open the President's Bridge
and dedicate a wall to acknowledge the leading benefactors of the
massive project.
Placido Domingo
of the former super group "The Three Tenors," will sing tonight
Tuesday, October 2 on the popular ABC broadcast "Dancing with the Stars.
NEW
YORK - Jazz harmonica virtuoso Toots Thielemans quipped that his legs
don't work but his mouth does after he was pushed onstage in a
wheelchair to a standing ovation during the first of two Jazz at Lincoln Center concerts this weekend celebrating ...
There is also a certain allure to Franco Zeffirelli's 25-year-old production of “Turandot” at the Metropolitan Opera,
flamboyant and over the top though it may be. The lavish sets attracted
enthusiastic applause when the production returned to the Met ...
But at Julliard,
where her body, her schedule and her training were scrutinized, she no
longer felt that way, she said. So she transferred to the dance program
at famously liberal Sarah Lawrence College, where she studied theory,
history and ...
Violinist Sara Parkin also met Sant'Ambrogio during high school music camp, and later, Nickrenz while attending Julliard Pre-College. After playing together informally, the Eroica Trio formed in 1986 at the Julliard School of Music with original ...
About this section
metropolitan opera, koch theater, mitzi newhouse theater, new york city opera, lincoln center, placido domingo, ny city ballet, city center for music and drama, new york st...
Threat of federal court appeal forces National Labor Relations Board to reverse itself
Las Vegas, NV (February 5, 2008) — Under threat of a federal court appeal, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) this week reversed itself and authorized a local worker to claim over $100,000 in damages after International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE) Local 720 union officials illegally discriminated against him.
Union brass had unlawfully expelled the employee from an exclusive union hiring hall, denied him the ability to obtain work, and offered him no means of reinstatement.
The ruling comes in a case brought by Las Vegas-area worker Steven Lucas, with free legal help from National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation attorneys. Lucas is an audio-visual equipment technician employed in the Las Vegas trade show and convention industry.
In June 2007, the NLRB in Washington, DC, upheld a preliminary ruling by NLRB Region 28 in Las Vegas allowing Lucas to reclaim only about $16,000 in lost wages from one job due to the unlawful union discrimination. In reality, union officials’ illegal blackballing of Lucas from getting work from more than a dozen employers during 1995 and 1996 had cost him many times that amount.
The Lucas case has been a major source of embarrassment for the NLRB since the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals several years ago reprimanded the agency and forced it to pay attorneys’ fees under the Equal Access to Justice Act (EAJA) because its position in an earlier phase of the case was “not substantially justified.”
“The prospect of even more embarrassment for the NLRB in enabling this outrageous union discrimination forced the agency’s hand,” said Stefan Gleason, vice president of the National Right to Work Foundation. “Even in a Right to Work state where payment of union dues is voluntary, union officials use their monopoly bargaining power to punish workers that don’t toe the union line.”
Lucas was a union member from 1981-1992 and used the hiring hall until 1994, when union officials illegally and arbitrarily expelled him from the hiring hall. By not allowing Lucas to be reinstated in the hiring hall, IATSE union officials denied him work opportunities for a period of roughly 18 months.
Even though Nevada has a highly popular and effective Right to Work law that frees nonunion employees from paying membership dues to an unwanted union, IATSE union officials use their monopoly bargaining privileges to set up “exclusive hiring halls.” In such halls, union officials decide which employees to refer for work at conventions and trade shows, and workers are forced to pay money to the union to be eligible for work.
The National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation is a nonprofit, charitable organization providing free legal aid to employees whose human or civil rights have been violated by compulsory unionism abuses. The Foundation, which can be contacted toll-free at 1-800-336-3600, is assisting thousands of employees in over 200 cases nationwide.UNION DEMOCRACY DEAD AT LINCOLN CENTER IN VIOLATION OF LAW
CLAN DIAZ AND CLAN IRISH, GILOON, NIMMO, WESKELBLATT, MCGARTY, GELB, ANN ZIFF, JOE VOLPE, GILLINSON ETC:
DIAZ CLAN PUPPETS AT THE MET.MET BREAKS SALES RECORDS 2007 AND 2009 YET THIS UNION PUTS A HOLD ON PAY INCREASE FOR RANK AND FILE STAGEHANDS AT THE MET!!!???
WHILE THE BUSINESS AGENTS AND OTHER OFFICERS RECEIVED A PAY AND ANNUITY INCREASE!
New York City stagehands forgo salary hike at Metropolitan Opera
by Associated Press
Thursday July 02, 2009, 11:46 AM
Stagehands at the Metropolitan Opera in New York City have agreed to give up a 3 percent salary hike for the 2009-2010 season -- the last year of their current contract. The move will help the Met to deal with a looming deficit.The Met has agreed to extend the stagehands' contract for another year when the full raise will go into effect.The Met's general manager, Peter Gelb, had originally asked the union for a 10 percent salary cut. That cut has been imposed on Gelb and most other top administrators and nonunion staff. The stagehands are represented by Local 1 of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees.
SOMEONE COMMENTED, "HAS JOHN DIAZ LEARNED ANYTHING"?,A VERY GOOD QUESTION!YES, TO CASH HIS CHECKS AND SLEEP WITH MANAGEMENT AT THE EXPENSE OF THE RANK AND FILE STAGEHANDS.
JOHN DIAZ GET SOME SLEEP YOU ARE DOPEY FROM LACK OF SLEEP. THE REST OF YOU ARE OVER PAID UNDER WORKED LAZY SLOB CROOKS, SLEEPING WITH MANAGEMENT AND SCREWING THE REST OF US. Met Stagehands Agree to Postpone Raise/WEKSELBLATT AND McGARTY WHY IS THIS SO? THE RICH GIVE THEM MILLIONS. WHO IS BULLSHITTING US NOW? By Daniel J. Wakin
The Metropolitan Opera, struggling to make headway against large and looming deficits, has won a cost saving from its stagehands. The stagehands union, Local 1 of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, said on Tuesday the workers agreed to forgo a 3 percent increase in salary and benefit expenses for the 2009-2010 season, the last in its contract. The union and the Met agreed to extend the contract for another year, when the full raise will go into effect. THE REAL DEAL: MET HAULS IN FIRST DAY SALES RECORD Box office takes in TAKES IN 2.5 MILLION (BLAME THE DIAZ CLAN! AND McGARTY AND WEKSELBLATT) for 2009-10 season. ALSO:
PREVIOUS RECORD SET IN 2007 AT 2.1 MILLION WHO ARE WEKSELBLATT AND McMGARTY AND DIAZ BULLSHITTING NOW THE THREE OF THEM TOGETHER IN PAY AND BENEFITS MAKE 2 MILLION A YEAR! CUT THEIR PAY NOT OUR PAY.
THEY HAVE GIVEN VOLPE IN RETIREMENT AND MANAGEMENT MORE TO LAUGH AT BUT BOYS THEY ARE LAUGHING AT YOU NOT US. WE HAVE THE BALLS TO GET THE JOB DONE! By GORDON COX
The Metropolitan Opera is trumpeting record first-day sales for its upcoming season, with the Met box office taking in $2.5 million for the 2009-10 season.
The previous record of $2.1 million from a season's first day on sale was set in 2007. This year's tally accounts for purchases made by Internet, by phone and at the box office.
Season opens Sept. 21 with a new production of "Tosca."
Union Leaders/reps always communicate in generalizations. The workers are not allowed to speak ad hoc on camera - so we need to ask them one-on-one what is really happening. Broadway is not magic. It is hard work, high skill, and serious money. AND CORRUPTION AGAINST THE RANK AND FILE!
On the Right of this Photo possibly the highest paid stagehand in America. AND YET NOT THE BRIGHTEST OR MOST AWAKE.
Sara Krulwich/The New York Times
DIAZ Puppets backstage at the Metropolitan Opera House.
My name is John Diaz I am among other things an Officer (WHY IS THIS CLOWN AN OFFICER?) in Local One IATSE, and I am the Assistant Stagehand at the Metropolitan Opera at New York's Lincoln Center for the Performing And Con Arts. I am the second Highest Stagehand at the Metropolitan Opera. My Brother was the Head Stagehand, he hired me and has retired now his son, my nephew inherited the position of Head Stagehand.(WHY!?) IN VIOLATION OF U.S. LABOR LAW AND CONSTITUTIONAL LAW. HIRING RELATIVE OVER RANK AND FILE IS DISCRIMINATION AND ILLEGAL. I am the Head of the Night Gang. With pay and benefits including pension and multiple annuities I am possibly the Highest paid stagehand in America.(???) I make close to $600,000 yearly with these two jobs. Plus, I have a pension and millions in my annuities!! My other nephew is the Stage Right Boss or Carpenter. Our family pulls literally millions out of the Metropolitan Opera yearly. I can't say how many of my relatives work there. I will say here like all the other venues Family Heads discriminate illegally in violation of U.S. Constitutional and Labor Law against Rank and file members. I know the law, because like the other officers I study Labor Law at Cornell. We don't use labor law for the benefit of the Rank and File, like officers are supposed to, we use labor law as a tool to discriminate and retaliate against those who are not in our families.(THE RANK AND FILE). I use labor law to (ILLEGALLY) manage my family's hold on the Stage Jobs at the Metropolitan Opera, and I see to it that all the other families around the business, especially Broadway Theaters keep hold of jobs for their families even though the father and son union violates U.S. Constitutional and Labor Law. We all manage a Rico and Ponzi Scam against the Rank and File members and hold illegal trials against members choosing to exercise their Constitutional Right to Free Speech guaranteed by U.S. Constitutional and Labor law. We do so Willfully, Deliberately, and in Conspiracy To put an end to Free Speech and stifle the re unionization efforts from the Rank And File membership. The Metropolitan Opera is the Largest Employer of Stagehands in NYC. My job as an officer is provided to me so that I will guarantee the vote of those members by making their jobs dependent on how they vote. This provides the government of Local One with continuous opportunity to manage the various families illegal control of the theaters and studios. Nice work if you can get it. And we want to make sure that the jobs and control go to our families even if we violate U.S. Constitutional Law and Labor LAW. I never stood up for the Cohen Brothers. They are a minority in this union. They have no power. It would have been correct of me to do so under Labor Law, but I overlooked my responsibility to free speech and free union and members rights just like the other officers. I am a patsy just like the other officers. I am Portuguese not Irish. I cannot work on Broadway and my family can't work on Broadway. No one on Broadway wants to work at the Met. The work is too hard and the hours too long and we don't have as good a contract as at the Broadway Theaters. I never looked out for the minorities in this union like I could have. I do the dirty work of the Majority group at the expense of the Minority groups. I am not a union Democrat. I am a union Oligarch. I am unions gone undemocratic and corrupt. Former GM (and Local One member) Joe Volpe closed the Book on us. He knew we break scenery going into and out of the truck, and break scenery on stage so we can make overtime. There has never been a piece of scenery gone unbroken by the Diaz family at the Met. The Cohen and the Rank and File are not guilty. Broadway Stagehands Democracy is not guilty.We and the other families are guilty. AT THE MET AND AT LINCOLN CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING AND CON ARTS DEMOCRACY IS DEAD ON STAGE TO THE RANK AND FILE FROM THE UNDEMOCRATIC OFFICERS AND HEADS AND THE ILLEGAL FAMILY CONTRACTS VIOLATING U.S. CONSTITUTIONAL AND LABOR LAW! Many have asked when do I sleep working all night at the Met and all day at the Union? Well, I do not think of sleep or union democracy. I think about all the cash me and my family are making and all the theater families are making at the expense of the Rank and File members. IF IT IS NOT A CLUB FOR ALL MEMBERS, THEN IT IS A DISCRIMINATORY AND RETALIATORY SYSTEM. IF CALLED TO TESTIFY IN CIVIL OR FEDERAL COURT I WILL NOT TAKE THE RAP FOR THEM!
THE REAL DEAL:
MET HAULS IN FIRST DAY SALES RECORD Box office takes in TAKES IN 2.5 MILLION YET CUTS PAY FOR RANK AND FILE STAGEHANDS (BLAME THE DIAZ CLAN! AND McGARTY AND WEKSELBLATT) for 2009-10 season. DEMOCRACY AND PROGRESS ON STAGE AT THE MET ARE DEAD TO THE RANK AND FILE DUE TO CORRUPT, LAZY AND INCOMPETENT LEADERSHIP. "DIZZY DADDY DIAZ"Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Anonymous said...
What's the deal? Did Diaz finally see the light. It appears that he and Claffey no longer exchange Christmas cards. Is there any truth to the rumor that Diaz will run against "The Rug" in the next election? BSD SAYS YES TOCLAFFEYNO TO DIAZ. WHERE ARE OUR REAL JOBS AT THE MET AND ALL OF LINCOLN CENTER DIAZ AND THE BUSINESS MANAGERS!
DIAZ PUPPETS AT THE MET
BSD SAYS NO TO DIAZ YES TO CLAFFEY. WHERE ARE OUR JOBS DIAZ AND THE BUSINESS MANAGERS???
WOMEN AND LOCAL ONE
WOMEN AND LOCAL ONE
MBA FROM JESUIT FORDHAM BROADWAY BOB NIMMO
WHAT DO YOU HAVE TO SAY TO THIS? IS THIS WHAT THEY TEACH AT JESUIT FORDHAM?
WE THINK NOT. YOU AND THE OTHERS AND THE HEADS AND MANAGEMENT HAVE A FIDUCIARY RESPONSIBILITY TO ALL THE MEMBERSHIP OF LOCAL ONE IATSE.
We found this quote from the New York Times by a FEMALE LOCAL ONE IATSE STAGE HAND (WE WILL NOT NAME HER), AND WE QUOTE,
" breaking into Local One presented a challenge, not only because of its all-male history but also because of its traditional character as a tightly knit group with strong family ties. ''It's been a father-son union since the beginning of time,'' said Ms. ____. ''You get work if you know somebody who gives you work.... Families are very important in this union,"
The "father and son union" violates United States Constitutional and Labor law. We have to ask why isn't our membership in the union enabling us to get the jobs on Broadway and all Theatrical venues, not just for women, but also for non Irish males, Blacks, Spanish and others?
ADDITIONALLY WE FOUND A CASE IN THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK, (WE ARE NOT NAMING THE PLAINTIFF (THE WOMAN WHO FILED THE COMPLAINT) ON THE INTERNET AND WE QUOTE,
"PLAINTIFF IS A FORMER EMPLOYEE OF DEFENDANT THE SCHUBERT ORGANIZATION AND WAS FORMERLY REPRESENTED BY HER UNION, THEATRICAL STAGE EMPLOYEES LOCAL ONE IATSE, AFLCIO, (LOCAL ONE) ANOTHER DEFENDANT. PLAINTIFF ALLEGES HER UNION BREACHED IT'S DUTY OF FAIR REPRESENTATION, AND THAT SHE WAS SUBJECT TO GENDER DISCRIMINATION."
We are not naming the woman because the officers and heads have a history of discrimination and retaliation against the membership in violation of law.
More women and men are not coming forward to complain because of this DISCRIMINATION and RETALIATION, AND because of the illegal and retaliatory trial of 2 brothers who were illegally brought to trial and illegally convicted and illegally fined $3,000 each and each illegally banned from union meetings for a significant period of time.
We have to ask the officers why is this so and why does the Union Pledge illegally mandate that all members agree to not sue the union in violation of United States Law under the Landrum-Griffin Act?
Trustee-Attorney Dashman and Attorney Spivak why is this so?
This represents an additional illegal intimidation against the membership.
This is only a sample of the law suits against Local One under the mismanagement of this corrupt government!
stage hand daughter
Bruce Cohen, a Local One spokesman, declined to comment
THE MET SUMMONS JOE VOLPE
THE REAL DEAL:VOLPE'S IN NEGOTIATIONS WITH LOCAL ONE ONCE AGAIN.
JOE VOLPE CAN YOU BRING DEMOCRACY TO THE METROPOLITAN OPERA?
WHY SO MANY DIAZ BOYS AND HOW IS THE WORK GETTING DONE JOE WHEN DIAZ HAS BOTH A DAY AND A NIGHT JOB?
WHEN DOES HE SLEEP?
MET HAULS IN FIRST DAY SALES RECORD Box office takes in TAKES IN 2.5 MILLION (BLAME THE DIAZ CLAN! AND McGARTY AND WEKSELBLATT) for 2009-10 season.
ALSO:
PREVIOUS RECORD SET IN 2007 AT 2.1 MILLION WHO ARE WEKSELBLATT AND McMGARTY AND DIAZ BULLSHITTING NOW
THE THREE OF THEM TOGETHER IN PAY AND BENEFITS MAKE 2 MILLION A YEAR!
New York's Metropolitan Opera is bringing back Joseph Volpe, who left three years ago after 16 years as the company's general manager, ...
jOHN DIAZ CONFESSES
CLAN DIAZ AND CLAN IRISH, GILOON, NIMMO, WESKELBLATT, MCGARTY, GELB, ANN ZIFF, JOE VOLPE, GILLINSON ETC:
DIAZ CLAN PUPPETS AT THE MET.MET BREAKS SALES RECORDS 2007 AND 2009 YET THIS UNION PUTS A HOLD ON PAY INCREASE FOR RANK AND FILE STAGEHANDS AT THE MET!!!???
WHILE THE BUSINESS AGENTS AND OTHER OFFICERS RECEIVED A PAY AND ANNUITY INCREASE!
New York City stagehands forgo salary hike at Metropolitan Opera
by Associated Press
Thursday July 02, 2009, 11:46 AM
Stagehands at the Metropolitan Opera in New York City have agreed to give up a 3 percent salary hike for the 2009-2010 season -- the last year of their current contract. The move will help the Met to deal with a looming deficit.The Met has agreed to extend the stagehands' contract for another year when the full raise will go into effect.The Met's general manager, Peter Gelb, had originally asked the union for a 10 percent salary cut. That cut has been imposed on Gelb and most other top administrators and nonunion staff. The stagehands are represented by Local 1 of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees.
SOMEONE COMMENTED, "HAS JOHN DIAZ LEARNED ANYTHING"?,A VERY GOOD QUESTION!YES, TO CASH HIS CHECKS AND SLEEP WITH MANAGEMENT AT THE EXPENSE OF THE RANK AND FILE STAGEHANDS.
JOHN DIAZ GET SOME SLEEP YOU ARE DOPEY FROM LACK OF SLEEP. THE REST OF YOU ARE OVER PAID UNDER WORKED LAZY SLOB CROOKS, SLEEPING WITH MANAGEMENT AND SCREWING THE REST OF US. Met Stagehands Agree to Postpone Raise/WEKSELBLATT AND McGARTY WHY IS THIS SO? THE RICH GIVE THEM MILLIONS. WHO IS BULLSHITTING US NOW? By Daniel J. Wakin
The Metropolitan Opera, struggling to make headway against large and looming deficits, has won a cost saving from its stagehands. The stagehands union, Local 1 of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, said on Tuesday the workers agreed to forgo a 3 percent increase in salary and benefit expenses for the 2009-2010 season, the last in its contract. The union and the Met agreed to extend the contract for another year, when the full raise will go into effect. THE REAL DEAL: MET HAULS IN FIRST DAY SALES RECORD Box office takes in TAKES IN 2.5 MILLION (BLAME THE DIAZ CLAN! AND McGARTY AND WEKSELBLATT) for 2009-10 season. ALSO:
PREVIOUS RECORD SET IN 2007 AT 2.1 MILLION WHO ARE WEKSELBLATT AND McMGARTY AND DIAZ BULLSHITTING NOW THE THREE OF THEM TOGETHER IN PAY AND BENEFITS MAKE 2 MILLION A YEAR! CUT THEIR PAY NOT OUR PAY.
THEY HAVE GIVEN VOLPE IN RETIREMENT AND MANAGEMENT MORE TO LAUGH AT BUT BOYS THEY ARE LAUGHING AT YOU NOT US. WE HAVE THE BALLS TO GET THE JOB DONE! By GORDON COX
The Metropolitan Opera is trumpeting record first-day sales for its upcoming season, with the Met box office taking in $2.5 million for the 2009-10 season.
The previous record of $2.1 million from a season's first day on sale was set in 2007. This year's tally accounts for purchases made by Internet, by phone and at the box office.
Season opens Sept. 21 with a new production of "Tosca."
Union Leaders/reps always communicate in generalizations. The workers are not allowed to speak ad hoc on camera - so we need to ask them one-on-one what is really happening. Broadway is not magic. It is hard work, high skill, and serious money. AND CORRUPTION AGAINST THE RANK AND FILE!
On the Right of this Photo possibly the highest paid stagehand in America. AND YET NOT THE BRIGHTEST OR MOST AWAKE.
Sara Krulwich/The New York Times
DIAZ Puppets backstage at the Metropolitan Opera House.
My name is John Diaz I am among other things an Officer (WHY IS THIS CLOWN AN OFFICER?) in Local One IATSE, and I am the Assistant Stagehand at the Metropolitan Opera at New York's Lincoln Center for the Performing And Con Arts. I am the second Highest Stagehand at the Metropolitan Opera. My Brother was the Head Stagehand, he hired me and has retired now his son, my nephew inherited the position of Head Stagehand.(WHY!?) IN VIOLATION OF U.S. LABOR LAW AND CONSTITUTIONAL LAW. HIRING RELATIVE OVER RANK AND FILE IS DISCRIMINATION AND ILLEGAL. I am the Head of the Night Gang. With pay and benefits including pension and multiple annuities I am possibly the Highest paid stagehand in America.(???) I make close to $600,000 yearly with these two jobs. Plus, I have a pension and millions in my annuities!! My other nephew is the Stage Right Boss or Carpenter. Our family pulls literally millions out of the Metropolitan Opera yearly. I can't say how many of my relatives work there. I will say here like all the other venues Family Heads discriminate illegally in violation of U.S. Constitutional and Labor Law against Rank and file members. I know the law, because like the other officers I study Labor Law at Cornell. We don't use labor law for the benefit of the Rank and File, like officers are supposed to, we use labor law as a tool to discriminate and retaliate against those who are not in our families.(THE RANK AND FILE). I use labor law to (ILLEGALLY) manage my family's hold on the Stage Jobs at the Metropolitan Opera, and I see to it that all the other families around the business, especially Broadway Theaters keep hold of jobs for their families even though the father and son union violates U.S. Constitutional and Labor Law. We all manage a Rico and Ponzi Scam against the Rank and File members and hold illegal trials against members choosing to exercise their Constitutional Right to Free Speech guaranteed by U.S. Constitutional and Labor law. We do so Willfully, Deliberately, and in Conspiracy To put an end to Free Speech and stifle the re unionization efforts from the Rank And File membership. The Metropolitan Opera is the Largest Employer of Stagehands in NYC. My job as an officer is provided to me so that I will guarantee the vote of those members by making their jobs dependent on how they vote. This provides the government of Local One with continuous opportunity to manage the various families illegal control of the theaters and studios. Nice work if you can get it. And we want to make sure that the jobs and control go to our families even if we violate U.S. Constitutional Law and Labor LAW. I never stood up for the Cohen Brothers. They are a minority in this union. They have no power. It would have been correct of me to do so under Labor Law, but I overlooked my responsibility to free speech and free union and members rights just like the other officers. I am a patsy just like the other officers. I am Portuguese not Irish. I cannot work on Broadway and my family can't work on Broadway. No one on Broadway wants to work at the Met. The work is too hard and the hours too long and we don't have as good a contract as at the Broadway Theaters. I never looked out for the minorities in this union like I could have. I do the dirty work of the Majority group at the expense of the Minority groups. I am not a union Democrat. I am a union Oligarch. I am unions gone undemocratic and corrupt. Former GM (and Local One member) Joe Volpe closed the Book on us. He knew we break scenery going into and out of the truck, and break scenery on stage so we can make overtime. There has never been a piece of scenery gone unbroken by the Diaz family at the Met. The Cohen and the Rank and File are not guilty. Broadway Stagehands Democracy is not guilty.We and the other families are guilty. AT THE MET AND AT LINCOLN CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING AND CON ARTS DEMOCRACY IS DEAD ON STAGE TO THE RANK AND FILE FROM THE UNDEMOCRATIC OFFICERS AND HEADS AND THE ILLEGAL FAMILY CONTRACTS VIOLATING U.S. CONSTITUTIONAL AND LABOR LAW! Many have asked when do I sleep working all night at the Met and all day at the Union? Well, I do not think of sleep or union democracy. I think about all the cash me and my family are making and all the theater families are making at the expense of the Rank and File members. IF IT IS NOT A CLUB FOR ALL MEMBERS, THEN IT IS A DISCRIMINATORY AND RETALIATORY SYSTEM. IF CALLED TO TESTIFY IN CIVIL OR FEDERAL COURT I WILL NOT TAKE THE RAP FOR THEM!
THE REAL DEAL:
MET HAULS IN FIRST DAY SALES RECORD Box office takes in TAKES IN 2.5 MILLION YET CUTS PAY FOR RANK AND FILE STAGEHANDS (BLAME THE DIAZ CLAN! AND McGARTY AND WEKSELBLATT) for 2009-10 season. DEMOCRACY AND PROGRESS ON STAGE AT THE MET ARE DEAD TO THE RANK AND FILE DUE TO CORRUPT, LAZY AND INCOMPETENT LEADERSHIP. "DIZZY DADDY DIAZ"Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Anonymous said...
What's the deal? Did Diaz finally see the light. It appears that he and Claffey no longer exchange Christmas cards. Is there any truth to the rumor that Diaz will run against "The Rug" in the next election? BSD SAYS YES TOCLAFFEYNO TO DIAZ. WHERE ARE OUR REAL JOBS AT THE MET AND ALL OF LINCOLN CENTER DIAZ AND THE BUSINESS MANAGERS!
DIAZ PUPPETS AT THE MET
BSD SAYS NO TO DIAZ YES TO CLAFFEY. WHERE ARE OUR JOBS DIAZ AND THE BUSINESS MANAGERS???
midnighteye23p· 1 week ago