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Philadelphia's trash workers reached a deal to end their nine-day strike, during which trash piled up around the city.
The Trump administration announced Wednesday it has designated more than 20 entities as complicit in the facilitation of ...
Philadelphia’s sanitation workers strike ended early Wednesday after more than a week with the announcement of a tentative ...
The Parker administration won a series of court injunctions requiring striking 911 dispatchers, airport dispatchers, and ...
Republican members of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee balk at the refusal. Democrats say Congress should ...
Dozens of temporary drop-off sites will close immediately to allow cleanup, but residents can take garbage to six sanitation ...
Trash piled up across Northeast Philadelphia as AFSCME District Council 33’s citywide strike stretched into its eighth day, ...
Sorry, rats. The "Parker piles" of trash found around the city are about to disappear. Philadelphia's first major city worker ...
Philadelphia’s sanitation workers shouldn’t have power to trash the city in pursuit of a labor deal. Dominic Pino is the Thomas L. Rhodes journalism fellow at National Review Institute and host of the ...
AFSCME District Council 33, representing more than 9,000 city employees from dispatchers to sanitation, was on strike for ...
Despite a deal to end the strike by members of DC33 in Philadelphia, regular trash collection will not begin right away.
Mayor Cherelle Parker celebrated the end of a strike with District Council 33, a work stoppage with Philly's largest union that resulted in a trash nightmare.
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