Hollywood writers call Monday strike
By Steve Gorman and Jill Serjeant
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The union representing U.S. screenwriters called for a strike against film and TV studios starting on Monday in a move giving negotiators one last weekend to reach a contract deal or shatter 20 years of Hollywood labor peace.
The strike deadline was issued on Friday, a day after a three-year contract covering the 12,000-member Writers Guild of America expired. It follows months of talks that deadlocked over the union's demands for a greater share of DVD and Internet revenues.
Each side has accused the other of stonewalling and refusing to budge from unreasonable proposals.
Union negotiators unanimously urged a walkout during a boisterous membership meeting on Thursday night and the Writers Guild's governing board voted to ratify that recommendation.
No further contract talks were immediately scheduled but union leaders said at a news conference there was still time to avoid a confrontation that, if prolonged, could cost hundreds of millions of dollars in lost revenues and wages.
"We have 48 hours, and what we really want to do is negotiate," said John Bowman, chairman of the union's negotiating committee. He said that while reluctant to go on strike, the Writers Guild felt it had to act decisively.
"We have to inflict as much damage as quickly as possible in order to get this thing over," Bowman said.
The Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, the bargaining arm of the studios, offered a statement by the group's president, Nick Counter, calling the Writers Guild's move toward a strike "precipitous and irresponsible." Continued...







