fbpx Bus strike averted as OCTA, Teamsters reach tentative agreement
The Votes Are In!
2024 Readers' Choice is back, bigger and better than ever!
View Winners →
Vote for your favorite business!
2024 Readers' Choice is back, bigger and better than ever!
Start voting →
Subscribeto our newsletter to stay informed
  • Enter your phone number to be notified if you win
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Home / News / Business / Bus strike averted as OCTA, Teamsters reach tentative agreement

Bus strike averted as OCTA, Teamsters reach tentative agreement

Orange County Transportation Authority OC Bus
by
share with

Orange County Transportation Authority officials Tuesday reached a tentative agreement with its bus drivers that will avoid a threatened strike.

The tentative agreement was reached following 22 hours of negotiations through the night and into Tuesday morning, said OCTA spokesman Joel Zlotnik.

“The next steps are the union membership is expected to vote this week on the contract to ratify it,” Zlotnik said. “And then we are planning to call a special meeting of the board of directors for early next week.”

The transportation agency spokesman said, “We’re very happy we were able to come to a tentative agreement to avoid impacting service to people who depend on it.”

Teamster Local 952 Secretary-Treasurer Eric Jimenez said he was “so proud of our negotiating team. They weren’t going to budge on fair and humane issues that have been overwhelmingly important to our members.”

The agreement was reached about 11 a.m. Negotiations with help from mediators started about 1 p.m. Monday and continued through the night.

“We know how important the service is for people with no alternative, and we did not want to see anyone stranded,” Zlotnik said. “This tentative agreement is a very good one for our coach operators, is competitive in the region and it is good for the taxpayers.”

Details of the agreement were not immediately released.

The Teamsters Local 952 threatened to hit picket lines early Tuesday, but as negotiations continued, so did bus service.

Jimenez said Friday the main hangup in the negotiations has been lunches and breaks for drivers. He said union members believe the law requires the agency to provide times for drivers to take a lunch or other breaks.

“They (the OCTA) feel they’re exempt from that law,” Jimenez said.

Zlotnik said “under no circumstances do we prevent drivers from using the restroom.”

The drivers have always been allowed to pull over if they need to and push a button on the bus to alert the agency they are taking a bathroom break, Zlotnik said.

“And they’re never penalized for doing that,” Zlotnik said. “We build into the schedule those breaks, and those are paid breaks.”

It is “challenging” to structure the breaks into the schedule because each route has varying lengths and times to complete, Zlotnik said.

Jimenez said another issue has been pay increases and whether they would be applied retroactively.

More from Business

Skip to content