Doorman Strike Still Set For Mid-April

CRISTIAN SALAZAR   04/ 5/10 06:49 AM ET   AP

Doorman

NEW YORK — They collect the laundry and the mail, baby-sit, call 911 and, of course, open doors.

As ubiquitous on New York City sidewalks as yellow taxicabs on the streets, doormen are security guards, bellhops, personal assistants and neighbors to the thousands of New Yorkers who brush past them on their way to upscale high-rise homes.

"We rely on them for everything," said Donna Saunders of Midtown Manhattan. "They make life easier."

But the groceries and packages may pile up on Saunders' door later this month when an April 21 deadline passes for some 30,000 doormen and other building workers. Their union authorized a walkout last week if a four-year contract agreement can't be reached by then.

Willie Hawkins, a 30-year doorman who has worked for seven years at a residential tower of Wall Street professionals, says he'll miss the families he feels he's an honorary member of, especially the 40 kids who run through the halls.

"I know them from birth," said Hawkins, 53, of the South Bronx. "It's more than just a job. It's a relationship."

Tenants have come to rely on Hawkins as they would a friend or relative for much more than opening doors: Hawkins and others have chipped in to take care of child care problems, handle 911 emergencies, tote groceries and take out the trash.

Despite the Christmas bonuses that tenants dole out each year, Hawkins says he can barely make ends meet.

Apartment workers earn an average of about $40,000 a year, according to the Service Employees International Union, whose members authorized the city strike. The Realty Advisory Board, representing owners, say doormen make closer to $68,000 including health insurance, pensions, sick days and holidays.

Doormen haven't been on strike since 1991, a walkout that lasted nearly two weeks where residents volunteered to man their own lobbies and open the door for arrivals. A deal was reached in 2006 during the last strike threat.

The two sides are debating wages, health benefits, sick days and overtime rules. The industry association cites the failing real estate market and declining property values as reasons the owners can't pay as much as the union wants. The union says the industry is fundamentally strong and the recession is over.

Todd Saunders, 48, who runs his own printing business from his Midtown apartment a few days a week, said he relies on building workers for his livelihood, getting him packages that messengers deliver every day. Without the workers, "anything that comes through the front door" wouldn't get to him, he said.

But other doormen say relations are less rosy between tenants and those who toil in their lobbies.

Edgar Correa, a bulldog of a doorman who has worked for more than 12 years at a building on Manhattan's Upper West Side, said residents "talk down" to him and hardly ever thank him.

"The people don't appreciate what you do for them," said Correa, 52. "They want things their way."

But many speak of their role as so important their presence could mean life or death to their building's residents.

Carlos Pellecier Jr., 50, has been a doorman at a building on Riverside Drive for 28 years. He said he once helped an elderly tenant who had suffered a stroke.

Pellecier said the man buzzed him in the lobby, and he ran upstairs to the man's apartment, managing to get inside with an extra key.

"If I wasn't on duty, it wouldn't have been a good outcome for him," he said.

___

Associated Press writer Ula Ilnytzky contributed to this story.

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NEW YORK — They collect the laundry and the mail, baby-sit, call 911 and, of course, open doors. As ubiquitous on New York City sidewalks as yellow taxicabs on the streets, doormen are security...
NEW YORK — They collect the laundry and the mail, baby-sit, call 911 and, of course, open doors. As ubiquitous on New York City sidewalks as yellow taxicabs on the streets, doormen are security...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ssfahrer
05:14 PM on 04/05/2010
BTW, I should point out that the "other building workers" who would be going out on strike are janitorial and custodial staff; without them to regather the trash in larger bags so that the Sanitation Department (who'd probably NOT CROSS a Union picket line anyway) MIGHT cart them away, we'll eventually have a sanitation crisis in NYC. Folks might be able to survive without their doorman; try surviving with piles of garbage everywhere that no Union employee will cart away because another Union is on strike. Another crisis caused by Unionization....
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sph272
08:06 AM on 04/06/2010
There's always at least two sides of a story. What about unethical owner practices?
04:47 PM on 04/05/2010
I remember visiting someone who lived in a "doorman building" and the shocked look on the face of the doorman when I asked, as I was going to a deli, if he'd like a cup of coffee

He'd worked there for YEARS, without once being offered a cup of coffee!
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erincnyc
04:30 PM on 04/05/2010
Oh dear, what will all those poor tenants do? Maybe they should ask their doormen how to buzz people in, open their mailboxes, and take out their trash, because I'm pretty sure that the doormen do not live in doorman buildings. In addition to more money, I would also suggest they include a provision in their contracts that doormen are not babysitters.
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04:20 PM on 04/05/2010
Rich Manhattanites are the most useless class of humans that ever lived. They spend their whole lives in an environment where everything is done for them, and they never learn basic life skills like cooking food, operating a washing machine, or sweeping a floor. Their survival depends on an army of underpaid workers from the outer boroughs and Jersey. If those workers would take just a couple weeks off, half the rich would starve, and the rest would flee to their vacation homes.
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erincnyc
09:23 PM on 04/05/2010
Agreed! As a NYC real estate broker, I never advertise doorman buildings because I cannot stand to spend one minute with the people who want to live in them. I've even had people ask for doorman buildings in Washington Heights and Inwood. While there are a few, which boggles my mind, I still laugh heartily right into the phone. Like, dude, if you want a doorman, you are not cool enough to live in Inwood.

Also, who wants someone checking out your one night stand as he does the walk of shame? Then eyes you up and down as you leave for work an hour later?
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hubbahubba77
04:09 PM on 04/05/2010
If I ever hit the lottery big I'm going to move into one of those posh buildings with sexy Latin doormen. That would be like heaven.
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sheaintsayin
My micro bio is winking at me... ;-)
02:23 PM on 04/05/2010
'They' really do need to learn to wipe their own ashes
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hubbahubba77
04:09 PM on 04/05/2010
And pick up after Fifi and Fluffy, after they "make doo-doo."
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crablover
02:06 PM on 04/05/2010
This entire society would come to a complete halt without the labor of "the little people" who are looked down on and disrespected by the wealthy. It really raises my hackles to see an "entitled" upper-class twit mistreat the people that they consider to be "inferior."

As a kid, I was taught to treat everyone I encountered with respect and kindness. I was raised in a working class family. Neither of my parents finished high school, but thanks to the hard work and sacrifices of my family, I was able to get a good education and rise into the middle class.

People who are handed everything can never appreciate the hard-work of ordinary people.

Eat the rich!
01:26 PM on 04/05/2010
Wealthy people never appreciate all the little things service people do for them. To the wealthy, the little people are indeed there to wait on them hand and foot and too bad if you can't make a decent living from it.
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hubbahubba77
04:14 PM on 04/05/2010
Mm hm. And this is brutally obvious in a place like Manhattan, where you'll see wealthy society matrons--generally wearing ginormous dark sunglasses and hair helmets--walk all over the people who serve them.