Friday, July 30, 2010

Build America 2010 - The Fight for Good Jobs Spreads

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Build America 2010
 

Build America 2010 – the Fight for Good Jobs Spreads from Colorado to Connecticut, Indiana, Maryland and Kentucky
Build America 2010 - the member-driven, media-driven fight to create good jobs by investing the basics of our states and country – has spread from Colorado to Connecticut, Indiana, Maryland and Kentucky. Through Build America 2010, LIUNA members are joining with community, elected and business leaders to fight for their jobs, their families and their union and to encourage their U.S. Senators to champion transportation and other investment in the fundamental, critical infrastructure of America. Find out more at www.LiunaBuildsAmerica.org and by viewing these news media reports:

  • Indianapolis Star - Union: Let's bridge the jobs gap. Read.
  • Indianapolis Star (Photo Gallery) – Laborers’ International Rally. View.
  • WTHR - A new push to add jobs, fix bridges. Read. Watch.
  • WISH-TV - "Build Indiana." Watch.
  • Terre Haute Tribune Star - Indiana’s bad bridges focus of a new public campaign. Read.
  • WRTV – Workers Push State To Address Bridge Concerns. Read. Watch.
  • Fox Connecticut Now – Build America 2010. Watch.
  • Eyewitness News at 5pm WFSB-TV – Build America. Watch.
  • Denver Post – Bringing jobs back to Colorado. Read.
  • KDVR FOX 31 – Union Workers lobby for more road work funding. Watch.

Look for Build America 2010 activity in your area, and join the fight now by writing a letter to the editor with your personal story about the need for good jobs so that members of Congress are reading the stories of working families struggling in this tough economy every day.

LIUNA Members Rally for Good Jobs in Bellevue
LIUNA members in Bellevue, Wash. sent letters and rallied at Puget Sound Energy’s offices when the company bypassed the local community with plans to construct a new hydropower plant without putting local workers on the job. The new Snoqualmie Hydropower station - a $100 million project – could employ more than 100 skilled Puget Sound-area construction workers but the contractor selected turned down job applications from local skilled labor.

New LIUNA Members in Concrete Industry Fight for Justice
In a new LIUNA Local in Washington, DC, members working in the concrete industry are struggling for employer recognition at worksites across the metro-area. Workers in this industry typically have no job security and little to no benefits. In a recent effort, 50 workers participated in a new door-to-door program to recruit more workers to the campaign and then met with local politicians to talk about challenges on the job and the need to reform employer practices. 

Good Green Jobs for LIUNA Members in Portland
The city of Portland, Wash., received a grant from the Department of Energy for a pilot program to do energy efficiency retrofits on 100 homes. LIUNA members were selected to do the work because of LIUNA's role in the industry as a leading provider of a skilled and well-trained workforce.

One More Second...LIUNA called for investment in America in a statement on the July jobs report which showed that 22,000 construction jobs were lost in June...Chicago construction members came to an agreement with employers after a strike that lasted nearly three weeks when employers refused to budge on a fair wage package for the next three years. See coverage.

 

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UNION CITY! 07/30/2010

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 TODAY'S LABOR NEWS 

ON THE LINE
Today, July 30 8A:
Walk The Line With
Striking Daycon Workers!

Today, July 30 9:45A:
Labor On The Air: Latest Local
Labor News Updates With Metro
Council President Joslyn Williams

Today, July 30 12P:
Leaflet The Reserve Restaurant

Friday, July 30, 2010

WHC NURSES MAY STAGE 1-DAY STRIKE OVER FIRINGS: Washington Hospital Center nurses are voting on staging a one-day strike to mark the six-month anniversary of firings in the wake of the February blizzards. If approved by members, the one-day Unfair Labor Practice strike would take place in August, six months after 18 nurses were retroactively fired and disciplined for being unable to show up to work during the historic blizzards (Nurses Prepared For Battle At Washington Hospital Center 3/4/2010 Union City). "Enough is enough" said Stephen Frum, a nurse at the hospital, and chief shop steward of Nurses United, which represents over 1,600 WHC nurses. "It is far past time for the hospital to do the right thing." In February, following the snow storms, Washington Hospital Center management unilaterally made it a disciplinary offense not to show up to work during a snow emergency. “They then retroactively and selectively applied this policy to fire certain nurses – including longtime nurse and union leader Geri Lee -- who did not make it to work during the blizzards,” says Frum. “Adding insult to injury, they then prevented nurses from wearing black ribbons in solidarity with those who were unjustly disciplined.” Despite the union’s efforts to resolve this issue, management continues to keep nine of the original eighteen fired nurses out of work and has refused to remove the discipline from the nurses’ records.” The possible one-day strike comes in the context of ongoing contract negotiations; nurses have been without a contract since June (Washington Hospital Nurses Reject Contract 6/29/2010 Union City). - photo: almost 2000 nurses rallied in May for a fair contract outside the Washington Hospital Center; photo by Adam Wright

STATE FED ENDORSEMENTS RELEASED: U.S. Senator Barbara Mikulski and Maryland Governor Martin O'Malley top the list of candidates endorsed by the Maryland State and District of Columbia AFL-CIO, released yesterday. Click here for the complete list of endorsements, which includes candidates for election in the U.S. House of Representatives, the District of Columbia and the Maryland General Assembly. Minutes from July’s Metropolitan Washington Council, AFL-CIO Executive Board and Delegate meetings – which include the complete list of MWC endorsed candidates in state and local races – are also now available for download on the MWC’s website.

TRAINING STEWARDS TO BATTLE OVER WHAT'S NOT COVERED: Many workers think their union's there to negotiate and enforce their contract, but in the federal sector, it's changes in working conditions and personnel policies that are not covered by a contract where a union also proves useful. AFSCME Council 26 held a training session Wednesday for 45 local union leaders on just this kind of bargaining, which Council 26 says "goes on all the time, and is the union's best chance to organize new members by showing them what the union is all about." The daylong training session also prepared local leaders to successfully handle contract negotiations as well. Council 26 holds such sessions monthly to train and equip local union leaders with the skills needed to handle the array of issues that arise in workplaces around DC.
– report/photo by Boaz Young-El, AFL-CIO Union Summer Intern


NANCY TREJOS’ BOOK SIGNING KICKS OFF GUILD’S NEW OUTREACH PROGRAM: Guild member Nancy Trejos (below) kicked off the Washington Post Newspaper Guild’s new Outreach program with a book signing at Caribou Coffee just down the street from the paper on July 21. The program has been created to promote the talents of Guild members and to raise the profile of the Guild. Future events will include more book signings and shows for Guild members to display paintings or photographs. At the July 21st event, Trejos, a long-standing Guild member, talked about her book “Hot (broke) Messes: How to Have Your Latte and Drink It, Too” and what prompted her to write on the subject — personal finance — at a time she was struggling with her own personal finances. Click here for more photos.
- report/photo courtesy The Washington-Baltimore Newspaper Guild 32035 website


WEEKEND LABOR HISTORY: President Lyndon Johnson signs the Medicare Act, providing federally-funded health insurance for senior citizens (7/30/1964); Former Teamsters President Jimmy Hoffa (right) disappears. Presumed to be dead, his body has never been found (7/30/1975); United Airlines agrees to offer domestic-partner benefits to employees and retirees worldwide (7/30/1999); Members of the National Football League Players Association begin what is to be a two-day strike, their first. The issues: pay, pensions, the right to arbitration and the right to have agents (7/31/1970); Fifty-day baseball strike ends (7/31/1981); The Great Shipyard Strike of 1999 ends after Steelworkers at Newport News Shipbuilding ratify a breakthrough agreement which nearly doubles pensions, increases security, ends inequality, and provides the highest wage increases in company and industry history to nearly 10,000 workers at the yard. The strike lasted 15 weeks (7/31/1999); After organizing a strike of metal miners against the Anaconda Company, Wobblie organizer Frank Little is dragged by six masked men from his Butte, Mont. hotel room and hung from the Milwaukee Railroad trestle. Years later writer Dashiell Hammett would recall his early days as a Pinkerton detective agency operative and recount how a mine company representative offered him $5,000 to kill Little. Hammett says he quit the business that night (8/1/1917); Sid Hatfield (below), police chief of Matewan, W. Va., a longtime supporter of the United Mine Workers union, is murdered by company goons. This soon led to the Battle of Blair Mountain, a labor uprising also referred to as the Red Neck War (8/1/1921); Police in Hilo, Hawaii open fire on 200 demonstrators supporting striking waterfront workers. The attack became known as "the Hilo massacre" (8/1/1938); A 17-day, company-instigated wildcat strike in Philadelphia tries to bar eight African-American trolley operators from working. Transport Workers Union members stay on the job in support of the men (8/1/1944); Government & Civic Employees Organizing Committee merges into State, County & Municipal Employees (8/1/1956); Window Glass Cutters League of America merges with Glass Bottle Blowers (8/1/1975); Ten-month strike against Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel wins agreement guaranteeing defined-benefit pensions for 4,500 Steelworkers (8/1/1997); California School Employees Association affiliates with AFL-CIO (8/1/2001); More info & ammo for unionists is available online from Union Communication Services.


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Material published in UNION CITY may be freely reproduced by any recipient; please credit the Council as the source.
 
Published by the Metropolitan Washington Council, an AFL-CIO "Union City" Central Labor Council whose 200 affiliated union locals represent 150,000 area union members. JOSLYN N. WILLIAMS, PRESIDENT. 
 
Story suggestions, event announcements, campaign reports, Letters to the Editor and other material are welcome, subject to editing for clarity and space, and should be directed to: 
 
Editor: Chris Garlock
Assistant Editor: Adam Wright
streetheat@dclabor.org
Voice: 202-974-8153
Fax: 202-974-8152


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Thursday, July 29, 2010

UNION CITY! 07/29/2010

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 TODAY'S LABOR NEWS 

ON THE LINE
Today, July 29 8A:
Walk The Line With
Striking Daycon Workers!


Thursday, July 29, 2010

WARD 1 CANDIDATE FORUM TO FOCUS ON LABOR ISSUES, AFFORDABLE HOUSING: With the DC primaries less than two months away, Ward 1 City Council candidates will appear before labor and community groups tonight for a candidate forum. Sponsored by DC Jobs with Justice, Defeat Poverty DC, Empower DC, Jews United for Justice and the Metropolitan Washington Council AFL-CIO --among others -- the forum will feature incumbent Jim Graham, and challengers Jeff Smith, Bryan Weaver and Marc Morgan. “This is an important opportunity for labor to join community groups, pose questions to the candidates and hold elected officials accountable,” says Alya Solomon of the Metro Washington Council AFL-CIO. Questions will address the role of Project Labor Agreements in ensuring local hiring and apprenticeships, the need for responsible contracting language to prohibit the city from doing business with contractors who have violated workers’ rights, and next steps to expand employment and job readiness services.The forum will run from 6-8:30p at True Reformer Building, 1200 U Street. The forum is free and open to the public, and there will be an open floor for questions. For more information contact Ruth Castel-Branco at 202-974-8281. photo: at the August 2009 Take Back DC rally; photo by Adam Wright

INCREASED WORKER SAFETY DEMANDED AT TOWN HALL: “My son fell to his death at the MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas,” testified Mary (right), of United Support and Memorial for Workplace Fatalities (USMWF). “I will live forever with a dagger in my heart because there is no deeper pain, no deeper despair. All of us are here because we’ve suffered a loss that could have been prevented and the pain is that all of these deaths were senseless.“ The angry mother joined workers who spoke at Tuesday’s town hall meeting on the need for stronger worker safety legislation. The Miner Safety and Health Act of 2010 (H.R. 5663) would strengthen OSHA’s and MSHA’s oversight and enforcement in mines as well as other dangerous workplaces, provide tougher penalties for negligent employers and increase whistleblower protections. “The best protection is prevention,” said Bricklayer Local 1’s Eric Parks. “This new law will give workers a chance to avoid being a statistic like my brother, like myself and so many others.” Tom O’Connor, Executive Director of National Council for Occupational Safety and Health, urged those concerned to call Democratic House members at 202-225-3121 to demand support for immediate passage of H.R. 5663 and oppose any efforts to strip Title 7 (the OSHA language) from the bill when it gets to the floor. Other speakers included Dr. David Michaels, Assistant Secretary of Labor for Occupational Safety and Health, OSHA , Dr. Darius Sivin of the United Auto Workers, Dr. Celeste Monforton, George Washington University, Dept. of Environmental and Occupational Health, as well as area workers with UNITE HERE Local 25, SEIU 32BJ, BAC Local 1 and CWA Local 2222 who have been injured on the job. Click here for hearing photos.
- report/photo by Julie Hunter


CVC UNION WELCOMES FIRING OF CEO: The union organizing workers at the Capitol Visitor Center welcomed the news yesterday th
at the Center’s CEO has been fired (“Head of Capitol Visitors Center gets fired, The Hill 7/27). “You have taken the first steps towards correcting an untenable situation at the CVC,” AFSCME Council 26 Executive Director Carl Goldman wrote to Architect of the Capitol Stephen Ayers. “Management has put the visiting public and employees in potentially dangerous situations through the mishandling of suspicious substances. It has endangered employees’ health by limiting Visitor Assistants’ access to water when working outside on hot days, and has only provided them with light weight jackets when working outside during the winter.” Noting that “the Capitol Visitor Center needs not only a change in personality, but also a change in management philosophy,” Goldman urged Ayers to recognize the CVC workers “as an asset to be valued and consulted,” adding that “CVC employees believe in the mission of the agency. With a CEO and management team that values their work, you will find them and AFSCME to be important partners in serving Congress and the visiting public.”

LABOR FOR GRAY RECEPTION PHOTOS POSTED: Photos from Tuesday night’s Labor for Gray fundraiser have now been posted online. The photos are available for downloading and may be freely used; please credit Chris Garlock/Union City.

TODAY'S LABOR HISTORY
: The Coast Seamen's Union merges with the Steamship Sailor's Union to form the Sailors’ Union of the Pacific (1891); A preliminary delegation from Mother Jones' March of the Mill Children from Philadelphia to Pres. Theodore Roosevelt's summer home in Oyster Bay, Long Island, publicizing the harsh conditions of child labor, arrives today. They are not allowed through the gates (1903); Following a five-year table grape boycott (r), Delano-area growers file into
the United Farm Workers union hall in Delano, Calif. to sign their first union contracts (1970). More info & ammo for unionists is available online from Union Communication Services. photo courtesy historylink.org


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Material published in UNION CITY may be freely reproduced by any recipient; please credit the Council as the source.
 
Published by the Metropolitan Washington Council, an AFL-CIO "Union City" Central Labor Council whose 200 affiliated union locals represent 150,000 area union members. JOSLYN N. WILLIAMS, PRESIDENT. 
 
Story suggestions, event announcements, campaign reports, Letters to the Editor and other material are welcome, subject to editing for clarity and space, and should be directed to: 
 
Editor: Chris Garlock
Assistant Editor: Adam Wright
streetheat@dclabor.org
Voice: 202-974-8153
Fax: 202-974-8152


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Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Fight for 9/11 Heroes

LIUNA Action Network
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Dear Liuna,

After nearly 10 years of struggle, the U.S. House is on the verge of voting for a bill to help the heroes who worked in the aftermath of 9/11 to save lives and clean up New York City - many of whom are suffering from severe health problems as a result of their efforts.

Tell Congress to honor our 9/11 heroes by passing the 9/11 Health and Compensation Act.

The 9/11 Health and Compensation Act will provide funding for healthcare and medical monitoring for all of those who responded to help at Ground Zero including 4,000 LIUNA members. 

Please send a message to your Member of Congress and ask that they vote for the 9/11 Health and Compensation Act.

Our 9/11 heroes have waited long enough. 

Sincerely,


LIUNA Action Network

 

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UNION CITY! Hiring Hall 07/28/2010

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 TODAY'S LABOR NEWS

ON THE LINE
Today, July 28
8A:
Walk The Line With
Striking Daycon Workers

12p: Leaflet The Reserve Restaurant

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

LABOR RISES TO SUPPORT GRAY MAYORAL EFFORT: "This mayor has been a divider," said Vince Gray, "but tonight he's united us to throw him out of here!" Cheers erupted from the crowd of labor supporters gathered atop the downtown DC IBEW headquarters at last night's Labor for Gray fundraiser and reception. "I don't even think we've had a mayor in the District of Columbia," said IBEW Local 26 Business Manager Chuck Graham, welcoming the crowd on behalf of IBEW President Ed Hill. "Just 49 days until we liberate the nation's capital," vowed Metro Council President Jos Williams. ""Labor and its allies are on the march!" Gray excoriated Mayor Fenty for his "disrespect for the city's working people" and promised "not just an open door for labor but I'll come to you if it's more convenient." Added Councilman Phil Mendelson, "We desperately need a change and I support Vince because he gets it." Gray also pledged that "my first act will be to re-establish the Labor Management Partnership Council," the innovative and nationally-recognized forum that hasn't met since Fenty took office and was a way for public sector labor and management to come together to perform more efficiently, save taxpayer dollars, and boost morale of public sector workers. The Metro Council organized the fundraiser, which was hosted by the IBEW and catered by Avalon, an HERE 25-represented fully unionized top-flight catering firm. An album of downloadable reception photos will be available online later today and the full schedule of labor-to-labor Gray activities will be posted on the Council's calendar.
- story/photos by Chris Garlock


FORMER BALTIMORE SUN WORKERS GET NEW OUTLET: “Looking for work is more dispiriting even than dating,” writes John E. McIntyre. “You put yourself forward to be judged, and you are not only found wanting but often simply ignored.” McIntyre, former chief copy editor at the Baltimore Sun, was one of 60 people – including a third of the newsroom staff – abruptly laid off in the spring of 2009. Now the stories and memories of McIntyre and his former colleagues at the Sun – members of Newspaper Guild Local 32035 -- are available online at Telling Our Stories: The Days of the Baltimore Sun. The website grew from a fellowship project conceived and funded by the Writers Guild of America, East Foundation, which has a mission of perpetuating the art and craft of storytelling. “Like other WGAE Foundation projects, this one gave the laid-off Sun employees an opportunity to process a difficult experience through creative work,” says the website. The Sun workers' creativity is on view in sections that mirror a traditional newspaper’s format, including Metro – where Tyeesha Dixon writes about “My dream job cut short” – and Business, where Charles Weiss describes “Death by a thousand cuts.” There’s also an arts section with photos, comics and even a sports section. The site has attracted the support and interest of notables like director Barry Levinson, a Baltimore native, The Wire producer David Simon (a former Sun reporter) and television critic David Bianculli. “For years we had a wonderful community of writers on The Sun’s pages and managed to host a lively and diverse paper that really did, I think, play a meaningful role in the public life of the region” writes Franz Schneiderman a former editor. Now, through this site, they still can.
- Lizet Ramirez, Union Summer intern

TODAY'S LABOR HISTORY: Women shoemakers in Lynn, Mass. create Daughters of St. Crispin, demand pay equal to that of men (1869); Harry Bridges is born in Australia. He came to America as a sailor at age 19 and went on to help form and lead the militant International Longshore and Warehouse Union for more than 40 years (1901); A strike by Paterson, N.J. silk workers for an eight-hour day, improved working conditions ends after six months, with the workers’ demands unmet. During the course of the strike, approximately 1,800 strikers were arrested, including Wobblie leaders Big Bill Haywood and Elizabeth Gurley Flynn (1913); Federal troops burn the shantytown (l) built near the U.S. Capitol by thousands of unemployed WWI veterans, camping there to demand a bonus they had been promised but never received (1932); Nine miners are rescued in Sommerset, Pa. after being trapped for 77 hours 240 feet underground in the flooded Quecreek Mine (2002) ; More info & ammo for unionists is available online from Union Communication Services.

HIRING HALL WEEKLY ROUND UP
Click here for full details on all the jobs below & complete union jobs postings from the past month. Email streetheat@dclabor.org to post an opening!  

ACCOUNTING & LEGAL
Payroll Administrator/Accountant (7/23)
Working America, AFL-CIO

MISC
Project Researcher (7/23)
Working America, AFL-CIO

Senior Specialist - Gender Equity (7/23)
Solidarity Center, AFL-CIO

Socially Responsible Business Internship [Fall 2010] (7/23)
American Rights at Work

ORGANIZERS
Internal Organizer/Strategic Campaigner (7/23)
Amalgamated Transit Union


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Material published in UNION CITY may be freely reproduced by any recipient; please credit the Council as the source.

Published by the Metropolitan Washington Council, an AFL-CIO "Union City" Central Labor Council whose 200 affiliated union locals represent 150,000 area union members. JOSLYN N. WILLIAMS, PRESIDENT.

Story suggestions, event announcements, campaign reports, Letters to the Editor and other material are welcome, subject to editing for clarity and space, and should be directed to:

Editor: Chris Garlock
Assistant Editor: Adam Wright
streetheat@dclabor.org
Voice: 202-974-8153
Fax: 202-974-8152


Forward UNION CITY! to all your friends and colleagues or click here to spread the word!
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