The
New
York
Times
Tech
Guild
went
on
strike
at
12:01AM
ET
today,
reports
The
Washington
Post.
The
guild
represents
over
600
software
engineers,
product
managers,
data
analysts,
and
designers
for
the
media
company.
Its
strike
leaves
the
company
bereft
of
crucial
technical
expertise
just
one
day
before
Election
Day,
when
the
Times’
crucial
backend
systems
will
be
under
very
heavy
stress.
The
guild
has
been
bargaining
since
2022
for
its
first
union
contract
with
the
company.
Negotiations
between
it
and
the
Times
hit
logjams
over
things
like
a
“just
cause”
provision
that
prevents
the
company
from
firing
workers
unless
it’s
for
something
like
misconduct,
as
well
as
pay
increases,
pay
equity,
and
return-to-office
policies,
reports
the
Times.
The
guild
says
on
a
GoFundMe
page
for
the
workers
that
it’s
working
to
address
racial
differences
in
pay
and
discipline
that
disproportionately
targets
women
and
people
of
color.
Times
services
—
including
games
like
Wordle
and
the
NYT
Cooking
app
—
are
still
functional.
(The
guild,
which
will
be
picketing
in
front
of
the
paper’s
Times
Square
office
every
day,
asks
that
readers
honor
its
picket
line
by
not
using
any
of
those
services,
according
to
The
Washington
Post.)
But
the
Times’
election
coverage
is
heavily
tech-driven
and
could
suffer
without
union
worker
support.
A
pledge
signed
by
over
750
of
its
journalists
said
they
can’t
do
their
jobs
without
the
workers,
whose
efforts
are
crucial
when
things
go
wrong
with
key
coverage
features
like
the
Times
election
needle.
Times
spokesperson
Danielle
Rhoades
Ha
told
the
Post
last
month
that
it
has
“robust
plans
in
place
to
ensure
that
we
are
able
to
fulfill
our
mission
and
serve
our
readers.”
(Originally posted by Wes Davis)
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