Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: THURSDAY, April 5, 1990 TAG: 9004041112 SECTION: VIRGINIA PAGE: B1 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: By LAURENCE HAMMACK STAFF WRITER DATELINE: LENGTH: Medium
In a lawsuit filed Wednesday in Roanoke Circuit Court, Greyhound accused the Amalgamated Transit Union of manning picket lines in which strikers have blocked buses, threatened replacement drivers and "created public disorder."
The lawsuit asks for a preliminary injunction prohibiting "wrongful and illegal acts." A hearing was scheduled for today.
Joe Wilson, an executive board member of the local union, said the union plans to fight the suit.
"We've got a constitutional right to call a scab a scab," Wilson said. "And we don't have to use parlor language to do it. They want us sitting over there like little choir boys."
Wilson denied allegations that strikers have blocked traffic, although he said some union members have walked in front of buses in an attempt to "slow them down."
"I don't think we're doing anything unlawful," he said.
By seeking an injunction, Greyhound officials are not trying to keep union members from picketing. Instead, the company only wants to ensure that picket lines do not become violent and disruptive, Greyhound spokeswoman Teresa Clancy said.
Clancy, who works in the company's Dallas headquarters, said she was not familiar with details of the Roanoke suit. But she said the company had filed 19 similar suits in cities across the nation where strike-related violence has been the worst.
Most of the suits have resulted in injunctions that limit the number of pickets at a single location and place restrictions on their actions, Clancy said.
"It seems like as soon as we obtain an injunction, the violence has decreased," she said. Richmond is the only Virginia city in which an injunction has been obtained.
The lawsuit filed in Roanoke accuses the strikers of using "insulting and threatening language" toward replacement drivers.
Wilson admitted that the strikers use less than flattering language, but he denied the threats.
"We call them names, there's no doubt about that, and we use some very good adjectives to describe them, if you know what I mean," Wilson said.
At the hearing today, Greyhound is expected to show videotapes of strikers. Wilson said he has seen photographers at the Salem Avenue terminal since the strike began March 2.
by CNB