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EXHIBIT 99
NEWS RELEASE [VERIZON LOGO]
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact:
August 21, 2000 Eric Rabe
212 395-0500
[email protected]
Steve Marcus
202-646-4413
[email protected]
Verizon Announces Details of Agreement with IBEW and
CWA in New York and New England; Negotiations
Continue with CWA in Mid-Atlantic States
Pact Enables Company to Raise Service Standards;
Employee Concerns Addressed
WASHINGTON - Verizon Communications, the International Brotherhood of
Electrical Workers (IBEW) and the Communications Workers of America (CWA) in New
York and New England announced late yesterday a tentative agreement on new
contracts that will enable the company to raise its standards of service while
addressing issues of concern to union-represented employees.
Meanwhile, negotiations continued with the CWA in the Mid-Atlantic States,
and the company said it hopes to reach an agreement shortly.
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Verizon News Release, page 2
"The proposed agreement gives Verizon the flexibility we need to thrive in
a highly-competitive, national marketplace," said Lawrence T. Babbio Jr., vice
chairman and president-Verizon Communications. "We will be able to raise our
standards and productivity so that we can meet the increasingly sophisticated
demands of our customers and provide them with the most technologically-advanced
products and services."
The proposed three-year contracts will enable employees to participate in
high-tech growth areas of the company, such as high-speed data. In addition, it
provides a competitive package of pay and benefits, including wage increases
totaling 12 percent over the life of the contracts.
"We believe this agreement is affordable and prudent and will not affect
Verizon's financial targets," Babbio said. "We apologize to any customers who
have been inconvenienced by the strike, and we look forward to having all our
employees back on the job."
The proposed contracts cover more than 50,000 union-represented employees
in New York and New England. These employees will return to work today, ending a
15-day strike. More than 35,000 employees represented by the CWA in the
Mid-Atlantic States remained on strike.
Provisions of the contracts include:
o A series of measures designed to reduce workplace stress while improving
customer service and operating efficiency. For example, the company will
have more flexibility to balance the high volume of calls across its call
centers. Procedures for customer service representatives will be modified
to improve the ability of representatives to meet customer requirements.
These actions will reduce pressure and stress on individual workers. In
addition, the company and the union will establish a Stress Relief
Committee to be headed by the company's group president for retail markets
and CWA International staff representatives.
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Verizon News Release, page 3
The committee will continue to address stress issues and work to develop
further improvements in workplace conditions.
o To improve service and efficiency, the company will consolidate customer
premises work on Verizon On-Line DSL, the company's high-speed data
service. As a result, union-represented employees in the Telecom Group will
be given greater access to this work. The company will be able to select
employees who are specifically trained and qualified to do DSL
installations and repairs. This will improve customer service quality and
operating efficiency since the company will now be able to dispatch a
single, qualified technician to complete a DSL service order. Previously,
two different technicians often had to be dispatched to a customer's home
or business on two separate occasions.
o The company increased the number of jobs that can be transferred from one
region to another. At the same time, the agreement will continue the
employee job-security provisions regarding layoffs, downgrades and
relocations that previously existed.
o A team-based incentive plan that rewards employees for meeting higher
service, performance and other standards will be implemented to cover teams
across the New York-New England region. Under this program,
union-represented employees in various business units can earn bonuses of
up to 10 percent of their base pay if their team meets the objectives
established by the business unit.
o Wages will increase by 4 percent in August 2000; 3 percent in August 2001,
and 5 percent in August 2002 for an increase of 12.5 percent on a
compounded basis over the life of the contracts. Pension benefits for
active employees will increase by 5 percent on July 1, 2001; 5 percent on
July 1, 2002, and 4 percent on July 1, 2003 for a compounded increase of
14.7 percent.
o Customer service representatives will receive an additional wage increase
of 4 percent, effective immediately, to recognize their importance to the
success of customer sales and service. This will help the company retain
skilled, motivated customer service representatives, which in turn should
reduce turnover in the company's call centers, stress and the need for
overtime.
o In a further commitment to help employees balance their job requirements
and personal lives, the company will increase funding for various work and
family programs by 10 percent, for a total of $18.6 million over the life
of the agreement.
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Verizon News Release, page 4
o To improve the company's ability to recruit, the waiting period for new
employees to qualify for company-paid health benefits will be reduced to
three months from six months.
o To increase employee ownership in - and commitment to - the business, each
union-represented employee will receive options for 100 shares of Verizon
common stock prior to the end of the year. Separately, the Board of
Directors has approved a company-wide stock option grant for all management
employees. The date and details of that grant will be announced shortly.
Also, the reimbursement for adoption expenses will be doubled to $10,000;
the age limit for dependent medical coverage will be extended to 25 years from
23 years for full-time students; survivor benefits will be improved, and
improvements will be made in dental and medical benefit plans.
Verizon Communications (NYSE:VZ), formed by the merger of Bell Atlantic and GTE,
is one of the world's leading providers of communications services. Verizon
companies are the largest providers of wireline and wireless communications in
the United States, with more than 100 million access line equivalents and 25.6
million wireless customers. A Fortune 10 company with more than 260,000
employees and approximately $60 billion in 1999 revenues, Verizon's global
presence extends to 40 countries in the Americas, Europe, Asia and the Pacific.
For more information on Verizon, visit www.verizon.com.
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