As IATSE Workers Go Public, Pressure Mounts on Studios Amid Looming Strike
Makeup artist Kristina Frisch learned quickly that COVID-19 hadnt slowed the pace of work in film and television production. After accepting her first full-time job following pandemic-related shutdowns, she discovered the gig would entail working six-day weeks for the entire shoot and never being able to break for lunch (she could eat while working). Then, during the shoot, I went five days without seeing my children, Frisch says, a new record for her. Overall, after quarantine, It was like, we got shut down, so we now have to work longer and harder.
For months, crewmembers have shared stories like this one on social media, detailing long hours, low wages and grueling work conditions in todays production environment, against the backdrop of new contract negotiations. Since May, the major crew union, the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE), has been hammering out details for a new Basic Agreement with the Association of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP).
Union leaders have been advocating for more substantial rest periods, higher minimum rates for the lowest-paid crafts, and more streaming compensation and resources for their health and pension plan. Those talks broke down in mid-September, and this weekend, tens of thousands of IATSE members are voting on whether to authorize their international president, Matthew Loeb, to potentially call a strike against the film and television industry. For their part, the AMPTP has said that the union walked away from a deal-closing comprehensive proposal that addressed its top concerns. A strong vote in favor of authorization could give union negotiators more leverage in talks, while an overall no vote could jeopardize their position.
However the vote pans out, this negotiation period has inspired crewmembers to get increasingly candid about work conditions. As a result, I think [the larger industry is] finally paying attention, says script coordinator and Local 871 member Colby Bachiller. Even before the pandemic, we knew how the rates and the hours were unlivable, unsustainable and unhealthy but now theyre just cruel. IATSE members are getting more specific about their concerns, too, raising the alarm about skipped meal breaks, extensive workdays, short rest periods and living standards on their unions minimum rates. (The AMPTPs proposal to IATSE included improved rest periods for certain postproduction workers and crewmembers working on first-season TV shows, and a 10-19 percent increase in minimum rates for low-paid crafts, it has said.)
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/business/business-news/iatse-workers-studios-strike-plans-1235023970/
Sedona
(3,821 posts)Mr Sedona is an IATSE brother who worked these inhumane hours for 22 years in the motion picture industry.
This documentary is 15 years old and still nothing has changed. In fact it's gotten worse.