News

The strike in Philadelphia involving the city's largest municipal workers' union is over. Here's what to know about the ...
AFSCME District Council 33, representing more than 9,000 city employees from dispatchers to sanitation, was on strike for ...
Director of Clean and Green Initiatives Carlton Williams joined Good Day Philadelphia to discuss the end of the District ...
Sorry, rats. The “Parker piles” are about to disappear. Philadelphia’s first major city workers strike since 1986 lasted ...
In the wee hours of Wednesday, District Council 33 officials and the City of Philadelphia reached a tentative contract agreement. The union has yet to vote on it.
While Mayor Cherelle Parker and city leaders celebrated the end of the District Council 33 strike on Wednesday, union bosses remained dejected about the outcome.
Philadelphia City services are gradually returning now that District Council 33 tentatively agreed to a new contract ...
Members of DC 33 still have to approve a tentative agreement. If they don't ratify it, union president Greg Boulware warns that a strike could resume.
A tentative agreement has put a stop to the piles of trash left by striking sanitation workers, but whether union members ...
The contract, if ratified by DC 33's membership, is retroactive to July 1. After more than a week on strike and several ...
Regular trash pickup will resume in the City of Philadelphia on Monday. Trash pickup was just one of several city services ...