CWA Local 1104

CWA Local 1104 We are the Communications Workers of America Local 1104. We fight tirelessly to ensure that our members get their fair share.

With over 5,000 members in New York State, we represent the highest trained and most diligent workers in the telecommunications and healthcare industry, and the most dedicated educators in New York. With over 10,000 members in New York State and Long Island, we represent the highest trained, professional and hardest working telecommunications technicians in the region. We are on the front lines of

battling corporate greed, and we are the first to donate our labor to benefit those who need us most. We believe in workplace safety, so that our members make it home to their families at the end of each day. We responded with diligence after Hurricane Sandy, and work tirelessly through unfriendly weather to ensure that you are plugged into the rest of the world. We are CWA Local 1104, and we care about our community. History

Founded in 1938, CWA got its start representing telephone workers as the National Federation of Telephone Workers. It was renamed the Communications Workers of America in 1947. Today CWA represents workers in all areas of communications, customer contact, high technology, and manufacturing professions in both the private and public sectors, including health care, public service, education, customer service, airlines, and many other fields.

06/04/2026
We stand shoulder to shoulder with our brothers and sisters on strike at the Long Island Railroad, who are fighting for ...
05/18/2026

We stand shoulder to shoulder with our brothers and sisters on strike at the Long Island Railroad, who are fighting for a fair contract!!

One day longer, One day stronger!!!

05/10/2026

The Local 1104 Executive Board, Business Agents, and Staff extend heartfelt wishes to all our hardworking CWA moms on this special day. Happy Mother's Day!

May your day be filled with joy, laughter, and love. We appreciate all that you do, and may God bless you today and always.

04/29/2026
Members of Local 1104 and Local 1111 met with Minority Leader Assemblyman Ed Ra to discuss issues that affect our member...
04/29/2026

Members of Local 1104 and Local 1111 met with Minority Leader Assemblyman Ed Ra to discuss issues that affect our members.

Make your voice be heard!Please click the link and fill out this short survey
04/13/2026

Make your voice be heard!

Please click the link and fill out this short survey

As CWA members, we fight to make our workplaces and communities better every day. Let us know what issues are most important to you! Taking this survey will ensure you are on the list to receive important email and text updates in the future. Please also let us know if you'd like to volunteer to ele...

Brothers and Sisters,Our strength is in our numbers and our unity.  Please read…
03/20/2026

Brothers and Sisters,

Our strength is in our numbers and our unity. Please read…

03/17/2026
CWA District 2-13 Mid-Atlantic Bargaining Teams unanimously supports Yes on TAPennsylvania, Virginia, Maryland, Delaware...
03/17/2026

CWA District 2-13 Mid-Atlantic Bargaining Teams unanimously supports Yes on TA

Pennsylvania, Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey and District of Columbia (DC) Yes on TA.

03/16/2026

We support Local 1103’s explanation of their recommendation for a YES vote to our agreement with Verizon.

Brothers and Sisters,

This will be the final email you receive before you start to vote on the ratification of the tentative agreement. As you know, the CWA Local 1103 Executive Board supports a YES VOTE.

One question that keeps coming up as we visit different locations is: why accept the first deal?

It’s a fair question, but it is misleading.

So, let’s use this opportunity to clarify something important. This is not the first deal.

The tentative agreement before you is the result of a ten-month process, long hours, and tough negotiations that evolved over time into what is now on the table. In fact, the union rejected at least twelve early company “deals” because they simply were not good enough.

The company’s initial proposals included drastically higher premiums, co-pays, deductibles, and out-of-pocket maximums that would cost members and their families thousands more per year than what exists in the current tentative agreement. The company’s initial proposals also included very low wage increases, no COLA, no CPS awards, no pension band increases, no new jobs, and no additional bargaining unit work.

So, to be clear, the union did not simply accept the first offer. We bargained hard and pushed back repeatedly for months until we reached a deal that reflects real improvements for our members.

By now, many of you are aware that there is a coordinated effort by some urging members to vote NO on this tentative agreement.

Let’s be clear about something.

A NO vote is not symbolic.
It is not a protest vote.

It is a decision that makes a strike far more likely.

That is not rhetoric. That is reality.

Let’s also be clear about something else.

We are not afraid of going on strike. We have done it before. Many times. But a strike must be for the right reasons.

In 2015, the company came to the table with aggressive and openly hostile demands. They sought retrogressive changes that would have taken us far backward. After more than a year of mobilizing, bargaining, and pushing the company to move off those positions — without success — we reached a point where there were no real alternatives left.

At that time, standing up and going on strike was necessary. It was a response to serious concessions and an unwillingness by the company to bargain fairly.

A strike is a powerful tool. But it should be used when there is no other viable path forward — not when progress has been made and no concessions are being demanded.

If this tentative agreement is not ratified, that will change.

Concessions will be demanded — making a strike far more likely.

Some of those urging a NO vote know this full well.

So, let’s look at what is in front of us:

• No concessions. No givebacks.
• Work From Home agreements continue
• Real wage growth
• Wages that outpace medical premium increases by overwhelming margins
• Pension band increases every year
• Guaranteed CPS minimums
• Additional retirement contributions for newer members
• 1,180 hiring commitments
• Contracted work brought back in-house
• Tearing down the wall at Wireless
• Jurisdiction strengthened — not weakened

Is it perfect? No contract is.

But it protects what we have.
It grows our wages.
It brings work back.
It strengthens retirement security.

And it does so without a single concession.

Let’s talk about jobs.

As you know, Verizon has a new CEO, and there have been 16,000 layoffs across the company.

You know who didn’t get laid off?

Us.

You know who got new jobs?

Us.

In 2016, when we came back from the strike, we hugged each other, gave high-fives, and celebrated. We were shouting Victory at Verizon.

Yet today, in a kind of bizarro world, we are being forced to defend a tentative agreement that is better in every measurable metric than the 2016 contract.

If someone believes we can win more, that is their right, but they also have a responsibility to be honest about the risks of walking away from what is already on the table.

There is another critical factor that cannot be ignored.

District 2/13 of the CWA and the IBEW locals across New York and New England are expected to ratify their tentative agreements.

If that happens, and we alone reject ours, the reality is that we would be returning to the bargaining table from scratch and without the same coordinated timing and leverage that existed during this round of negotiations.

Without this framework in place, the conversation will look very different. We won’t be debating improvements. We will be fighting to claw back what we already have today.

Members deserve to understand that reality before making a decision.

Union democracy requires informed decisions — not emotional ones.

At the end of the day, this vote belongs to YOU.

Not to outside voices.
Not to social media campaigns.
Not to anyone trying to shape the outcome for their own positioning.

It belongs to the members who work under this contract every day.

Study the agreement.
Ask questions.
Look at the math.
Consider the risks.
Consider the gains.

Then vote based on facts — not noise.

We urge you to Vote Yes.

In solidarity,

CWA’s Local 1103 Executive Board

Address

1 Florgate Road
Farmingdale, NY
11735

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 8am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 8am - 5pm

Telephone

(516) 420-1104

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