Philadelphia city workers end strike
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The city of Philadelphia says regular trash pickup will resume next week after a deal was reached to end the DC 33 labor strike.
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Philadelphia faces mounting trash and tension as a strike by many of the city's blue-collar workers enters its eighth day.
AFSCME District Council 33, representing more than 9,000 city employees from dispatchers to sanitation, was on strike for eight days.
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Pungent odors permeate the City of Brotherly Love as a contract impasse between the city and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees continues.
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AFSCME District Council 33 went on strike at midnight June 30. The strike ended with promises of pay raises for the city's blue collar workers.
Philadelphia streets overflowed with trash as a city worker strike entered its second week, with negotiations with the city set to resume.
Trash continues to pile up along Philadelphia’s streets as a union strike by sanitation workers and other municipal employees enters its eighth day, following failed negotiations with the city for higher wages.
Mayor Cherelle L. Parker and Greg Boulware, president of AFSCME District Council 33, reached an agreement early Wednesday, ending an eight-day strike. Here's what it looked like.