Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: THURSDAY, May 10, 1990 TAG: 9005100489 SECTION: EDITORIAL PAGE: A14 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: DATELINE: LENGTH: Medium
(That was highlighted by my own personal last-minute decision on June 2, to fly down to Washington to emphasize personally from the highest level of the company our total commitment to that negotiating process, our confidence in the negotiators, and our plea to move ahead.)
Unfortunately, what we had already feared might be under way turned out to be reality. On the following June 7, the union's international executive board met in Washington all day long, and late that evening, Trumka announced the UMW was withdrawing unilaterally and completely from the federal mediation efforts and from further negotiations.
Our only possible response to this brutal breakoff from talks was to exercise our right to implement our last best offer under federal labor law. The subsequent June 11 march on Charleston and the "wildcat" actions to which you did refer had obviously been planned for some weeks, as had been the walkout from the negotiations and the "wildcat" actions. Whatever the motives behind this saga, its impacts on the duration of the strike should not be so completely overlooked.
In this respect, therefore, I think your chronology is unfair both to Gov. Baliles and to Pittston. Since those events were very widely reported at the time, it does seem to me strange that such a crucial element was missing entirely from your story.
\ PAUL W. DOUGLAS\ Chairman and Chief Executive Officer The Pittston Company\ GREENWICH, CONN.
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