PECO Strike by 1,600 IBEW Workers Drags On as 57,000 Storm Outages Test Utility
Updated
Updated · WHYY · Jul 6
PECO Strike by 1,600 IBEW Workers Drags On as 57,000 Storm Outages Test Utility
3 articles · Updated · WHYY · Jul 6
Summary
Contract talks at Philadelphia’s Penns Landing made little headway Monday, with IBEW Local 614 saying PECO offered no counterproposals after workers walked out July 4.
1,600 union members have been working without a contract since April 1 and say some jobs pay 30% below prevailing wage, while PECO calls its offer generous—nearly 22% raises for field workers and 16% for care-center staff over five years.
57,000 customers lost power in weekend storms during the strike; PECO said non-union crews and out-of-state contractors cut outages to about 2,000 by Monday and expected full restoration by Tuesday morning.
Both sides accuse the other of bad-faith conduct: unfair labor practice complaints have been filed, a federal mediator has been assigned, and PECO and the union are also disputing security incidents and outage-map access.
The standoff has widened scrutiny of the utility’s finances, with the union pointing to PECO profit growth of 50% last year after a 2025 rate increase and CEO Calvin Butler’s $24.6 million 2025 pay.