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Raul Garcia had a smile on his face as he drove through the streets of
Huntington in a big blue truck this week.
After five days of carrying picket signs, Rainbow Disposal workers are
back to work and moving double time.
Garcia emptied the dumpsters his partner pulled out then hopped down
from the drivers seat to help pick up the trash that had overflowed.
“This is a major cleanup week for us and catching up and we’re off to
a flying start,” said Ron Shenkman, senior vice president of Rainbow
Disposal, which serves Huntington Beach and several surrounding cities.
“By the end of the week we’ll be all caught up.”
Although residents may still see piles of trash in dumpsters and on
curbs, workers are back on schedule and cleaning up the mess left behind,
Shenkman said.
Despite sanitation workers assertions as late as Friday morning that
they wanted 50 cents more a month from each resident, they signed an
agreement Friday afternoon that was virtually identical to the one they
rejected a week before.
“All we’re asking for is residents to help us out,” said Gil Ortiz,
spokesman for the workers Friday morning. “Fifty cents more from
residents so we can have good pay.”But Shenkman said he feels it was, in
part, residents support of the company’s offer of 33.5% that helped sway
the workers to accept the offer.
“It is the same package as prior to the one week strike,” he said. “I
think possibly a better understanding of the benefits offered and the
public support for our position was staggering.”
There are only minor changes to the package that offers workers
complete medical, dental and vision coverage for their families and $16
and hour at the end of five years.
When asked if he was happy with the raise Garcia said “so-so” but said
he was very happy to be back to work.
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