Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: WEDNESDAY, March 28, 1990 TAG: 9003280063 SECTION: BUSINESS PAGE: B6 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: Associated Press DATELINE: WASHINGTON LENGTH: Medium
"They're using that as a smoke screen to avoid coming back to the bargaining table," Edward M. Strait, president of the Amalgamated Council of Greyhound Local Unions, said as he and a handful of other union members picketed outside the building where the rewards were announced.
P. Anthony Lannie, vice president and chief negotiator for Greyhound Lines Inc., said $100,000 would be paid for information leading to convictions for shooting at buses and terminals.
Since the strike started March 2, there have been attacks on 21 Greyhound buses and two attacks on terminals, Lannie said. The latest violence occurred Monday, when a shotgun was fired into a terminal in Amarillo, Texas, and a bus was hit by gunfire near Orlando, Fla. Numerous other buses have been pelted with bricks and rocks and there have been several bomb threats, the company said.
"The terrorism must stop," Lannie said. "It's inevitable that somebody is going to be hurt."
No one has been seriously injured in any of the shootings on buses or terminals. But on the second day of the walkout, a striking driver in Redding, Calif., was crushed to death by a bus driven by a replacement driver. No one was charged.
Negotiators for the union are willing to return to the bargaining table at any time, Strait said. Lannie said the company would not resume talks, which broke down Sunday in Tucson, Ariz., until management had "hard assurances" from the union that the violence would stop.
Federal mediators are trying to meet separately with both sides but no immediate sessions were scheduled, Lannie and Strait said.
Lannie said there were 2,100 drivers, including 400 union members, driving Greyhound's routes and enabling the Dallas-based company to provide half of its normal service. Union officials contend Greyhound is providing only 10 percent to 15 percent of its normal routes.
by CNB