PHILADELPHIA — Rapper LL Cool J and R&B singer Jazmine Sullivan say they will not perform at a Fourth of July festival in Philadelphia in support of a strike by nearly 10,000 city workers in Philadelphia.
LL Cool J had been scheduled to appear at the Wawa Welcome America Festival on Friday, along with Sullivan and other performers.
LL Cool J said in a video posted on social media that ''there's absolutely no way that I can perform, cross a picket line and pick up money when I know that people are out there fighting for a living wage.''
''I hope, I hope, I hope that, you know, the mayor and the city can make a deal. I hope it works out,'' he said.
LL Cool J also said that he never wants to disappoint his fans and that he plans to be in Philadelphia in case an agreement is reached.
The festival comes as the strike moved into a fourth day Friday. Trash has been piling up in some areas, and more than 30 Medical Examiner's Office staffers have been ordered back to work because of a growing backlog of bodies in storage.
Sullivan, a Philadelphia native and Grammy award-winning artist, said in a post on Instagram on Friday that she would stand with the striking workers ''until the city and the union find a way to bring fair living wages to our working class. I love my city and I believe in you,'' she wrote. ''Hopefully we will get to celebrate when things are better.''
The latest talks between the city and leaders of District Council 33 — the largest of four major unions representing city workers — ended late Wednesday. Both sides have said they were willing to continue negotiations. The union represents many of the city's blue-collar workers, from trash collectors to clerks to security guards. Police and firefighters are not on strike.