A couple weeks back, I found a folded sheet of paper lodged in my apartment door with some chilling news: The powerful union representing apartment building employees across New York City—doormen, porters, maintenance staff, and more—would soon go on strike if they could not come to an agreement with the real estate powers that be.
This might seem like a minor inconvenience for folks who, as Elise Taylor writes today for Vanity Fair, have “made it” in “a city of hustlers and strivers”—that is, “reached a socioeconomic status that finally allows for urban life to be a little bit easier.” But there is precedent for this kind of work stoppage in New York’s tony precincts, and the effects can ripple out far and wide. The last time, in 1991, Department of Sanitation workers stood in solidarity with apartment building staff and refused to collect garbage from the buildings in question, forcing then mayor David Dinkins to declare a citywide health emergency.
As we may soon find out once again, these workers are not in the “convenience” business. They’re essential to the city’s proper functioning.
There are reports today that a tentative agreement has been reached between the two parties. If it falls apart, we may soon find out once again that these workers are not in the “convenience” business. They’re essential to the city’s proper functioning.
Read on to learn more about what might happen if New York’s doormen go on strike—and for a detailed look at The Pitt’s new clinical heartthrob.
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JACK HOLMES,
SENIOR EDITOR
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Mountains of garbage, history says.
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In celebration of the museum’s brand-new galleries, artists, actors, musicians, models, and more showed their support for the new expansion, including Heidi Klum, Sharon Stone, Rich Paul, and more.
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Zayn gets real and personal with VF as he creates a sculpture of himself. From the first time he realized he wanted to be a musician to how much he’s changed since the One Direction days, the singer breaks down all the things that make him who he is now.
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