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Pride Month Profiles: Jeanne Laberge and Ruth Jacobsen

Tue, 06/18/2019 - 10:30
Pride Month Profiles: Jeanne Laberge and Ruth Jacobsen

For Pride Month, the AFL-CIO is spotlighting various LGBTQ Americans who have worked and continue to work at the intersection of civil and labor rights. Our next profile is Jeanne Laberge and Ruth Jacobsen.

In the early 1970s, Steve D'Inzillo was the business agent for New York City's Motion Picture Projectionists Local 306, an affiliate of the Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE). He had built a reputation as a maverick and had a particular passion for expanding civil rights. He wanted  women to gain equal footing in the local, but the prospect was daunting. 

For women to win respect and acceptance in the union, they would need both the skills to do the job well and the toughness to deal with the small-minded men that opposed women's inclusion. D'Inzillo found the right women to challenge the system with Jeanne Laberge and Ruth Jacobsen, a lesbian couple who were willing to fight for their rights. Laberge had a union background and loved the idea of taking on the status quo. Jacobsen had been a "hidden child" during the Nazi occupation of Holland. 

In 1972, D'Inzillo sponsored Jacobsen's apprenticeship and she got her license a year later, making her New York City's first female "booth man." Laberge also applied and was admitted to the trade in 1974. D'Inzillo watched the women on the job and in the union hall and was impressed at how well they supported each other. Jacobsen and Laberge soon proposed that Local 306 sponsor a pre-apprenticeship program for women. D'Inzillo eagerly agreed. Many of those who signed up for the program were the sisters, wives and daughters of booth men, and they were paid less to work in lower-skilled jobs.

Laberge spoke about the success of the program: 

We got several licenses out of that first class. It was the first crack of having not just fathers and sons in the trade. We were into the feminist thing. We had the union change how they addressed the letters, to get rid of 'Dear Sir and Brother.' The men could be pretty derisive at meetings, so our women's group dealt with their disruptions.

Laberge and Jacobsen were the proximate cause for Local 306 adding sexual orientation to its anti-discrimination policies in the late 1970s. After working with the women for years, the local's membership had no interest in excluding them. The local also began to regularly make contributions to lesbian and gay charities, and supported three gay members who were sick from AIDS.

This early success led D'Inzillo to ask Jacobsen to join the local's executive board, but she wasn't interested in board politics. Laberge, on the other hand, was enthusiastic about it and joined the board herself. Soon after she started a local newsletter, writing most of the articles. She became D'Inzillo's right-hand woman as he rose up the ranks of IATSE. He twice ran for the national presidency and was elected to be an IATSE vice president, with Laberge by his side the whole time. During his time as a leader in IATSE, Laberge said D'Inzillo was the only person at national conventions who pushed proposals that dealt with larger social and political issues, and she was a key part of those efforts.

Kenneth Quinnell Tue, 06/18/2019 - 11:30

Tags: LGBTQ Rights

Get to Know AFL-CIO's Affiliates: Heat and Frost Insulators

Mon, 06/17/2019 - 08:35
Get to Know AFL-CIO's Affiliates: Heat and Frost Insulators

Next up in our series that takes a deeper look at each of our affiliates is the Heat and Frost Insulators (HFIU).

Name of Union: International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators and Allied Workers

Mission: Assisting members in securing employment, defending their rights and advancing their interests and through education and cooperation, raising them to that position in society to which they are justly entitled.

Current Leadership of Union: James P. McCourt serves as general president, first having been elected in 2015. McCourt is a second-generation pipe coverer who began his career with Asbestos Workers Local 6 in Boston in 1976. He received his mechanic's card in 1980 and served on the executive board of the local from 1982-1984. McCourt was president of the local from 1985-1987. In 1997, he was elected international vice president of the New York-New England States Conference. In 2001, he was elected by the General Executive Board to serve as general secretary-treasurer and was elected by the general convention to serve in that position three subsequent times. 

Gregory T. Revard serves as general secretary-treasurer.

Current Number of Members: 30,000

Members Work As: Experts in mechanical insulation, fire stopping, infectious disease control, asbestos and lead mitigation, sound attenuation, and specialty fabrication.

Industries Represented: The construction and maintenance of commercial, industrial, medical, bio-technical, governmental and educational facilities, among others.

History: In 1903, the Pipe Coverers Union Local No. 1 called for a national convention, which would establish what, the following year, would be named the National Association of Heat, Frost and General Insulators and Asbestos Workers of America. At the convention, the delegates adopted a constitution and A.J. Kennedy was elected the organization's first president. In 1910, American Federation of Labor President Samuel Gompers signed the charter of affiliation for the Insulators across the United States and Canada.

Joseph A. Mullaney was the second, and longest-serving, president of the international union, holding the position from 1912-1954. In 1938, the Insulators became formally affiliated with the Building and Construction Trades Department of the AFL. Both World Wars boosted the need for workers with the skills of the Insulators and Asbestos Workers, the latter of whom were crucial in the reconstruction of the U.S. naval forces after the attack on Pearl Harbor.

After World War 2, membership in the Insulators boomed as locals opened apprenticeship programs. The industry was driven by the unprecedented expansion of national infrastructure in the 1950s and beyond. In the 1980s, as the link between asbestos and cancer was confirmed, the Insulators fought to gain acceptance of the facts and to enact and enforce regulations to minimize exposure to carcinogens.

Current Campaigns: The Professional Craftsman Code of Conduct promotes job site excellence and customer satisfaction. The Labor Management Cooperative Trust promotes the heat and frost insulation industry, particularly mechanical insulation, fire stopping and hazardous waste remediation.

Community Efforts: The Insulation Industry International Apprentice and Training Fund specializes in providing the highest-skilled and best-trained workers in the industry. The Insulators Tissue Bank seeks to improve diagnosis, treatment and prevention of asbestos-related conditions, including mesothelioma. The annual Master Apprentice Competition has tested the skills and rewarded the best of the best HFIU apprentices for 18 years.

Learn More: WebsiteFacebookTwitter, YouTube

Kenneth Quinnell Mon, 06/17/2019 - 09:35

Passaic County Central Labor Council Encourages Education with Awards for High Schoolers

Thu, 06/13/2019 - 13:22
Passaic County Central Labor Council Encourages Education with Awards for High Schoolers Passaic County CLC

Last night I was a part of something so truly amazing I am still having a hard time putting it into words. And for those of you that know me, words are usually my thing. There is so much that I am grateful for and want to share. It was an incredible night and to me, it was more than 100 years in the making.

Last week, the Passaic County Central Labor Council paved the way financially for four high school seniors to enter into the trades through an apprenticeship program with the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM). These four students from Paterson and Passaic were honored and recognized for their choice to enter into the union workforce. They were given education awards to pay for the books for their apprenticeship program to become unionized auto mechanics. Where our world usually celebrates going to college and gives all sorts of college scholarships, our Labor Council wanted to help make a difference for the future of unions.

We have (unfortunately) seen college scholarships given at breakfasts where the recipients don’t even show up to receive their money. Thousands of dollars not even appreciated or understood. And we, the Passaic County CLC, were determined to make sure that our awards would go to not only those who need it, who it would greatly impact, but also those who would appreciate the opportunity and want to be a part of a union.

These four 2019 high school graduates and their families were part of something special. It was the first-ever award ceremony in our county (and maybe even New Jersey) of its kind. Seeing the smiles on their faces was truly priceless.

These students received an earful (and a heart full) of advice and wisdom from union leaders who were once in their shoes, embarking on a new career path. They were welcomed into a greater union family and provided with an understanding of what this opportunity is all about.

The event was hosted at the Botto House/American Labor Museum, which is not only a historical landmark but was also the home of an immigrant family, silk mill worker Pietro Botto, who held gatherings of more than 20,000 silk mill workers who were on strike for some of the basic working rights we have today⁠—the eight-hour work day, child labor laws and workers' rights. Labor union organizers from the Industrial Workers of the World held rallies at this landmark and by the power of unions, and people coming together, their voices were eventually heard.

The Botto House is also a special place for me personally, as my great-grandparents, who were immigrant silk mill and factory workers in Paterson in the early 1900s, attended these rallies and strikes. My dad volunteered at the Botto House for more than 25 years and always made sure we understood that the roots of our family coming to America, that all we had, could have possibly started right here in the crowd.

There were things I knew about my dad when he passed away. Creating union opportunities within our community was something he was passionate about. Being able to hold your head high knowing that you gave your best was one of the only and most valuable things we have in life. It’s not about the cars you drive or how big your house is. It’s not about what college you went to. There are more important things in life that money will never buy. Or as he would say, “dirty hands make clean money.” He even had me write letters to the bishop of the Paterson diocese about his poor choices to support nonunion work when there were hundreds of union members/parishioners who were unemployed.

I can go on and on about my how proud my dad was to be a union member. He joined the Plumbers union after he served in the Marine Corps, not only to making a good living and provide for a family, but to be a part of something greater than himself. His path was not always easy. There were times when he was out of work and had a family to provide for, but to him, his chosen path was always worth it.

He often dragged us to events, to Labor Day parades and union rallies. He was a plumber, but one time we even hopped on a bus with IBEW Local 102 to head to a workers' rights rally in Philadelphia, because it mattered to him. He made sure our family knew why Labor Day isn’t just a Monday off, but it’s dedicated to the achievements of the backbone of America⁠—the honorable working class. If a store or a restaurant were built nonunion, he did not approve of us going there.

When my dad passed away, I wrote to the Passaic County Central Labor Council and asked if they needed any volunteers. After all, I wrote so many letters for my dad over the years, that I felt like I was already a part of it in a way. It was also a way for me to share my understanding of unions, how appreciative I was of all that I ever had in my life…and most of all, I felt like it was a way for me to stay close with my dad. To do something in his spirit. Something that he truly cared about.

Over the last few years, I have been blessed to work with some truly remarkable leaders. We have brainstormed and debated, and have been able to put some of our ideas into action. We’ve cared about the community⁠—brought Santa and hundreds of gifts to Martin De Porres village in Paterson. We’ve gathered hundreds of union members for labor walks and barbecues to help support politicians who care about union rights, workers’ rights and our communities. And now, we’ve provided a foundation and understanding for new union workers.

Last week, when I arrived at the ceremony for these students, my friends and colleagues on the Labor Council totally surprised me. They asked me to be a part of the ceremony. If I would hand the plaques to the students. Of course, I agreed. I was so excited. But, there’s more. When they uncovered the plaques, they unveiled to me that this would be “The Robert Ehrentraut Labor Education Award.”

I was shocked! I’m still crying, just thinking about it. What an honor!

I’m sure it’s something my dad wouldn’t believe if he was here today. To him, he simply did his job. It wasn’t about recognition, it was about doing your best, caring for your family and contributing to your community. The bar was set with expectations of integrity, hard work and care for others. Nothing less was even an option.

So, even almost five years after his passing, my dad is still teaching me to lead from the crowd. That it can be extraordinary to be ordinary. That there is honor in doing what you know in your heart is right.

More than 100 years ago my great-grandparents stood in the crowd for union rights. Last night, four students received an award in their grandson’s honor. Values come full circle in life and I couldn’t be more grateful to be my father’s daughter AND a member of the Passaic County Central Labor Council.

Kenneth Quinnell Thu, 06/13/2019 - 14:22

Save Our VA!: What Working People Are Doing This Week

Thu, 06/13/2019 - 09:56
Save Our VA!: What Working People Are Doing This Week AFL-CIO

Welcome to our regular feature, a look at what the various AFL-CIO unions and other working family organizations are doing across the country and beyond. The labor movement is big and active—here's a look at the broad range of activities we're engaged in this week.

Actors' Equity Association:

The National Equal Employment Opportunity Committee invites you to make a nomination for the 2019 LeNoire Award.

Visit https://t.co/wY7Mw5oQ3X for complete details and access to the nomination form.

All submissions are due by June 30, 2019. pic.twitter.com/4j5qwt8L5P

— Actors' Equity (@ActorsEquity) June 13, 2019

AFGE:

“There is no way private doctors and hospitals understand the special needs of veterans." -- a Vietnam veteran and @VFPNational member #SaveOurVA https://t.co/0LlpMWcpKh

— AFGE (@AFGENational) June 13, 2019

AFSCME:

Where can you find an AFSCME member? The answer is everywhere our communities need us. More than 1 million AFSCME members bring their passion for public service to the work they do every day. We’re the union that never quits. #1u #NeverQuit pic.twitter.com/Za160Y7aPg

— AFSCME (@AFSCME) June 3, 2019

AFT:

Public employees in Alaska are bracing themselves for a wave of pink slips, and the University of Alaska is beginning to plan for at least a $5 million cut in funding: This budget crisis is real #FundOurFuture https://t.co/rQBI4P1Jpz pic.twitter.com/WtVGKomxD5

— AFT (@AFTunion) June 13, 2019

Air Line Pilots:

ALPA's 65th Air Safety Forum will discuss the latest advances in aviation safety and security. Join us! Register here: https://t.co/LXKinf78lN #ASF2019 #trainedforlife pic.twitter.com/4xEQpUzCKZ

— ALPA (@WeAreALPA) June 11, 2019

Alliance for Retired Americans:

New research shows that elder abuse cases severe enough to require medical attention are often under-reported by health care workers: https://t.co/9yaz4fNJTU pic.twitter.com/XquZ80iMJb

— Alliance Retirees (@ActiveRetirees) June 12, 2019

Amalgamated Transit Union:

#Winnipeg Transit union brings in international president to help contract negotiations https://t.co/z7xmDrtoFJ #labour #transit #publictransit

— ATU, Transit Union (@ATUComm) June 12, 2019

American Federation of Musicians:

Musicians are standing in solidarity with #BAMUnion ✊?✊✊?#ABetterBAM #1u https://t.co/LChVfHE50z

— AFM (@The_AFM) June 12, 2019

American Postal Workers Union:

“A workplace free of harassment is beneficial to everyone. The environment in the postal workplace, however, can be difficult if not miserable.” -DIR Zimmerman#APWUnited https://t.co/Q3Fnzkw9M9

— APWU National (@APWUnational) June 6, 2019

Asian Pacific American Labor Alliance:

"This proposed #PublicCharge rule would bar law-abiding immigrants from accessing benefits we are all entitled to.

In NYC - this rule could impact half a million immigrant families and their US citizen children." - @RepGraceMeng pic.twitter.com/K7jfel86tP

— APALA (@APALAnational) June 12, 2019

Association of Flight Attendants-CWA:

Many Air Wisconsin Flight Attendants have to choose between paying rent or paying for groceries. First year Flight Attendant salaries at Air Wisconsin can be as low as $15K a year and all Flight Attendants wages are working from 2007 wage rates. The message is clear: #ContractNow pic.twitter.com/YnH1Bsudr8

— AFA-CWA (@afa_cwa) June 12, 2019

BCTGM:

I stand with thousands of airline food workers organizing strike votes to show the airlines they'll be ready to strike when released by the Gov't. #1Job should be enough in the airline industry! #airportstrikealert #unitehere pic.twitter.com/8CwSPWQMWd https://t.co/qG8zHRYy6N

— BCTGM International (@BCTGM) June 10, 2019

Boilermakers:

Congratulations, Bank of Labor, for receiving the @UnionSportsmen Diamond Life Corporate Achievement Award! https://t.co/9IAbgXeRIJ

— Boilermakers Union (@boilermakernews) June 7, 2019

Bricklayers:

A true story about why #ApprenticeshipWorks. “This career and the relationships I’ve built have molded me into a man, taught me patience, and have impacted me so much. It’s a brotherhood.” - BAC Local 1 MN/ND #bricklayer Andre McHenry #SkilledTrade #1u #buildfortomorrow https://t.co/VJvf6ZgiP1

— Bricklayers Union (@IUBAC) June 12, 2019

California School Employees Association:

Congratulations Anne Thatcher the CSEA 2019 RISE Award Winner. Thank you for all you have done to enrich the lives of your students and families. pic.twitter.com/TpuMo98vcs

— CSEA (@CSEA_Now) June 12, 2019

Coalition of Labor Union Women:

Nationwide, there are more than 5,000 outdoor statues of people of all sorts. But estimates show fewer than 400 of them (or 8%) are of women. https://t.co/NJQRFyK0UM

— CLUW National (@CLUWNational) May 26, 2019

Communications Workers of America:

Thank you @SenBobCasey, @RepMcKinley, and @RepMarkPocan for cosponsoring the U.S. Call Center Worker and Consumer Protection Act and standing up to corporations who are shipping jobs overseas.https://t.co/FfejGLHlIv

— CWA (@CWAUnion) June 12, 2019

Department for Professional Employees:

"Only 21% of workers have ever taken parental leave offered by their employer." #paidleave #1u https://t.co/lyoA3DUk2J

— Department for Professional Employees (@DPEaflcio) June 12, 2019

Electrical Workers:

Good news for retirement security. Butch Lewis Act passed by the @EdLaborCmte https://t.co/rbaHnFTE8O

— IBEW (@IBEW) June 12, 2019

Farm Labor Organizing Committee:

What is social justice? We are going to be talking about that tonight with our @FLOCHomies. Staff members Chibuzo and Jacovy talk about their civil rights icons...Jesus and Malcolm X. Click to see the video: https://t.co/2SpnnnDtxp

— Farm Labor Organizing Committee (@SupportFLOC) June 11, 2019

Fire Fighters:

#Firefighters are dying of cancers at alarming rate due to toxins found in flame retardants in household furniture says @chris_parsons74 #IAFF pic.twitter.com/Ny56nnPtFf

— IAFF (@IAFFNewsDesk) June 13, 2019

Heat and Frost Insulators:

Interested in a career as a firestopping expert? Begin with a registered apprenticeship program to gain all of the skills and knowledge needed to take on any job. To learn more about the job and opportunities, visit here: https://t.co/w4fQgT2dxT

— Insulators Union (@InsulatorsUnion) June 13, 2019

International Labor Communications Association:

Announcing our 2019 convention! #1u https://t.co/t7jJTuETuk

— Labor Communications (@ILCAonline) June 4, 2019

Ironworkers:

Ironworker Paul Pursley spent 10 weeks at “Ground Zero” following attack. His major complaint in the years following concerned his inability to get affordable treatment. #september11 #911https://t.co/ZaOp9CFjVP

— Ironworkers. (@TheIronworkers) June 13, 2019

IUE-CWA:

pic.twitter.com/WwVkx2C6nS

— IUE-CWA (@IUE_CWAUnion) June 12, 2019

Jobs with Justice:

#GigEconomy companies are so desperate to avoid paying benefits and treating rideshare drivers like employees, they *swear* they'll raise wages if California doesn't reclassify #Uber and #Lyft drivers as employees. https://t.co/cpJMJKI0n0

— Jobs With Justice (@jwjnational) June 13, 2019

Laborers:

#Union members are SAFER on the job and are empowered with the ability to speak out about workplace hazards. #SafetyFirst https://t.co/3832DqyQN4

— LIUNA (@LIUNA) June 12, 2019

LCLAA:

On this World Against Child Labor Day: There are an estimated 218 million kids, between the ages of 5 and 17 who go to work every day. Children are meant to dream, not work! #ChildLabourDay https://t.co/u37le5Uusi

— LCLAA (@LCLAA) June 12, 2019

Machinists:

UNION-BUSTING BOEING: A year after voting to join the IAM, flight-line employees at @Boeing's S.C. campus describe a workplace filled with paranoia and punishment. #BeBetterBoeing https://t.co/epjeehUbQH

— Machinists Union (@MachinistsUnion) June 8, 2019

Metal Trades:

The House Committee on Education and Labor just passed the Butch Lewis Act, which would secure the pensions of hundreds of thousands of workers and retirees. But this is just the first step. Call your member of Congress and tell them to get behind it. https://t.co/S8RoHB2g1Z

— Metal Trades Dept. (@metaltradesafl) June 12, 2019

Mine Workers:

Today marks William Davis Miners' Memorial Day. This day of remembrance is observed every June 11 in coal mining communities in Canada to recognize all miners killed in the coal mines.

Int' Secretary-Treasurer @LeviAllenUMWA is shown here placing a wreath on the memorial site. pic.twitter.com/NV2aWw2l0g

— United Mine Workers (@MineWorkers) June 11, 2019

National Air Traffic Controllers Association:

NATCA recently hosted a Advanced Legislative Activism Training (ALAT) class, which is taught in the nation’s capital so that participants can learn from legislative subject matter experts. Register for NATCA Academy training courses: https://t.co/aagVHUE7zh pic.twitter.com/hhGlOPj85b

— NATCA (@NATCA) June 13, 2019

National Association of Letter Carriers:

Great article about #VoteByMail and the status of increased voter access! https://t.co/ReFMAXRLfk

— Letter Carriers (@NALC_National) June 11, 2019

National Day Laborer Organizing Network:

“There is nothing temporary about our families.” - @TPS_Alliance Coordinator Jose Palma#TPSJustice #ResidencyNow pic.twitter.com/aoUmJcUWED

— NDLON (@NDLON) March 6, 2019

National Domestic Workers Alliance:

“Domestic workers are the invisible scaffolding holding up our economy.”

Read more to find out why, and how, NDWA Labs, led by @palaknshah, is using tech to achieve equity. https://t.co/B8MfeEPXm3

— Domestic Workers (@domesticworkers) June 12, 2019

National Nurses United:

From coast to coast #nurses are fighting to protect patients and win #SafeStaffing.

NNU stands in strong solidarity with @nynurses RNs who rallied today for funding and quality patient care at New York City hospitals. Our struggle is one! ? #1u https://t.co/sEx6OJhO6I

— NationalNursesUnited (@NationalNurses) June 12, 2019

National Taxi Workers Alliance:

As Uber sues over NYC vehicle cap, drivers say rule keeps them afloat https://t.co/57xDx9QwPC

— NY Taxi Workers (@NYTWA) June 12, 2019

News Guild:

56 years after the passage of the Equal Pay Act, moms, women and people of color still earn less. Moms want and deserve equal pay! #MomsEqualPay pic.twitter.com/Jg8xKLdgzH

— NewsGuild (@news_guild) June 10, 2019

NFL Players Association:

Despite threats from management, Sam McCullum led a pregame handshake demonstration for the union, building solidarity for the 1982 strike & support for a proposal that ultimately gave players a bigger piece of the pie. #CountdownToKickoff #NFL100 pic.twitter.com/hIValjEd0U

— NFLPA (@NFLPA) June 13, 2019

North America's Building Trades Unions:

Just a few reasons we CANNOT wait any longer for an infrastructure bill:

➡ Creates jobs
➡ Keeps Americans safe
➡ Saves your money
➡ Reduces time wasted in traffic
https://t.co/KIiqQz3oIW

— The Building Trades (@NABTU) June 10, 2019

Office and Professional Employees:

In a historic vote, delegates to the 28th #OPEIUconvention just voted to adopt a resolution affirming our union’s support for #MedicareForAll.

In the wealthiest nation on the face of the planet, healthcare can and should be a right — not a privilege. #1u #M4A pic.twitter.com/ENJtj7uJYZ

— OPEIU (@opeiu) June 12, 2019

Painters and Allied Trades:

In passing The American Dream and Promise Act, the House recognized that law-abiding, tax-paying, hard-working immigrants deserve a shot at achieving the American Dream.
We call on the Senate to get this bill to the president’s desk for his signature. https://t.co/eBzNvtR4kM pic.twitter.com/Gi87tMMIJX

— GoIUPAT✊? (@GoIUPAT) June 5, 2019

Plasterers and Cement Masons:

“Research finds under-investment costs the U.S. 900,000 jobs, & every $1 billion invested in transportation infrastructure creates more than 21,000 jobs. Further, every single dollar invested in infrastructure more than triples itself in economic impact.” https://t.co/m7KET2tZwP

— OPCMIA International (@opcmiaintl) June 12, 2019

Professional Aviation Safety Specialists:

Thank you @RepChrisPappas for meeting w PASS members Michael Yanis & Ken Barrett, both dedicated employees at Federal Aviation Admin. PASS appreciates your strong support on federal worker issues & adequate funding for FAA. @PASSRegion1 @passng3 #publicservice #aviationsafety pic.twitter.com/HJif4RQWrI

— PASS (@PASSNational) June 12, 2019

Professional and Technical Engineers:

We know you that quality healthcare comes from #VA workers that have a voice on the job! We need to FUND the VA instead of attacking the people taking care of our veterans! #SaveOurVA #1u https://t.co/GLYpujWsMb

— IFPTE (@IFPTE) June 6, 2019

Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Workers:

Great to see the workers at a storied New York institution working together to form a union. https://t.co/LICarRIkpr

— RWDSU (@RWDSU) June 13, 2019

Roofers and Waterproofers:

Need help selecting and using personal fall arrest systems? Check out this guide! https://t.co/8F7sLQkswL #roofersafety365 pic.twitter.com/1B6J5AWJgL

— Roofers Union (@roofersunion) June 12, 2019

SAG-AFTRA:

Does @MPAA @TheESA think it is ok for filmmakers to depict actors in #deepfake porn and digitized sex scenes without permission? They should support #5959A #5605A in the #MeToo era #ProtectMyImage Sex abuse is not free speech! https://t.co/DWjUj3jJRP

— SAG-AFTRA (@sagaftra) June 12, 2019

School Administrators:

Parents: The biggest challenge is getting kids out the door on time. https://t.co/rtT0rJrSbp

— AFSA Leadership (@AFSAUnion) June 11, 2019

Seafarers:

#TBT We were so happy to have @SeafarersUnion #PortEverglades members helping us with our Shoebox Christmas efforts on the #DayoftheSeafarer 2015! #IAmOnBoard pic.twitter.com/4udjsolzry

— Seafarers' House (@Seafarers_House) June 13, 2019

Solidarity Center:

Workers & their unions are at #ILC2019 to push for @ILO global standard to #StopGBVatWork! @IFJGlobal @AFLCIOGlobal @AFTIntlAffairs @CAREActionNow @LaborProject @equaltimes @ILOACTRAV @mcwalker64 @GLJhub @16DaysCampaign #ILOendGBV @ILRF @SolidarityCntr https://t.co/YjPAHFTHKF

— Solidarity Center (@SolidarityCntr) June 13, 2019

Theatrical Stage Employees:

Solidarity with the workers at the Brooklyn Academy of Music. The IATSE stands with workers in the Arts.@BAM_union @UAW2110 #Solidarity pic.twitter.com/fBZezJBOXU

— IATSE (@IATSE) June 13, 2019

Transport Workers:

"If our jet mechanics raise a safety concern, it is because there is a safety concern with the plane and a safe ride for passengers." Maybe Parker and Isom want unsafe planes in the sky? @AmericanAir @TheChiefLeader https://t.co/CLuwpvDNLn

— TWU (@transportworker) June 11, 2019

Transportation Trades Department:

We stand in solidarity with the airline food workers in 21 cities taking strike votes to show the airlines they’ll be ready to strike when released by the Government. Because #1job should be enough –– and airline food workers won't quit until it is. #AirportStrikeAlert pic.twitter.com/aR8OQJAnGy

— Transp. Trades Dept. (@TTDAFLCIO) June 11, 2019

UAW:

UAW, Mercy Health Reach Tentative Agreement https://t.co/JZ1gE0gXnM

— UAW (@UAW) June 12, 2019

UFCW:

We're proud to support #PRIDEmonth every June -- and year round! ❤️????? Union contracts can provide stable protection for LGBT workers during uncertain times, and UFCW supports legislation that protects your rights at work: https://t.co/IHCHxwlz2Qhttps://t.co/cPCjcOuKsU pic.twitter.com/3xrkLvEjSX

— UFCW (@UFCW) June 13, 2019

Union Label and Service Trades:

The POWER of Unions... https://t.co/X5DOMP6lQc

— Union Label Dept. (@ULSTD_AFLCIO) June 4, 2019

Union Veterans Council:

All American workers have earned the freedom to Organize, especially if you are a veteran.

We stand side by side with the workers exercising their freedom to form a union at the Chattanooga VW plant. STAY STRONG, UNION YES! #1u #Freedom #UnionYes pic.twitter.com/gwfbi8asD9

— Union Veterans Council (@unionveterans) June 3, 2019

UNITE HERE:

The US airline industry is booming.

Revenue from fees & increased passenger numbers contribute to annual record profits.

As profits soar, 20k airline food workers refuse to con't to accept lousy wages & substandard healthcare.#1Job #AirportStrikeAlert ?

? @UniteHereLocal8 pic.twitter.com/nq3XQoAP46

— UNITE HERE (@unitehere) June 13, 2019

United Steelworkers:

Racist laws took the vote away from prisoners. After serving time, one man is fighting to give it back to them. https://t.co/8w7AxvZLHm via @MotherJones #USWVotes

— United Steelworkers (@steelworkers) June 13, 2019

Utility Workers:

Jon Stewart's powerful testimony before Congress yesterday speaks to the importance of renewing the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund. This clip is worth a watch. https://t.co/GFKZLwrsUK #Renew911VCF @Renew911Health

— UWUA National (@The_UWUA) June 12, 2019

Working America:

"Medicaid expansion alone — opposed by the Trump administration and Republican state officials, leaving more than 1 million people in non-expansion states without coverage — might actually do a better job than a work requirement."https://t.co/pW3MYU0lL3

— Working America (@WorkingAmerica) June 12, 2019

Writers Guild of America, East:

"The WGA East and various New York City agencies have unveiled the 10 writers selected to take part in the second “Made in NY Writers Room” program designed to open doors to writers from backgrounds that are underrepresented in mainstream entertainment." https://t.co/IWhkBhZiKu

— Writers Guild of America, East (@WGAEast) June 13, 2019 Kenneth Quinnell Thu, 06/13/2019 - 10:56

‘State of the Unions’ Podcast: Union Proud

Wed, 06/12/2019 - 13:50
‘State of the Unions’ Podcast: Union Proud AFL-CIO

On the latest episode of “State of the Unions,” Julie and Tim talked with Pride At Work Executive Director Jerame Davis as the AFL-CIO constituency group celebrates its 25th anniversary. They discussed the progress made by LGBTQ working people over the past quarter-century and the work still left to be done. 

State of the Unions is a tool to help us bring you the issues and stories that matter to working people. It captures the stories of workers across the country and is co-hosted by two young and diverse members of the AFL-CIO team: Mobilization Director Julie Greene and Executive Speechwriter and Editorial Manager Tim Schlittner. A new episode drops every other Wednesday featuring interesting interviews with workers and our allies across the country, as well as compelling insights from the podcast’s hosts.

Listen to our previous episodes:

State of the Unions” is available on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher and anywhere else you can find podcasts.

Kenneth Quinnell Wed, 06/12/2019 - 14:50

Tags: Podcast

Governor Murphy Signs ‘Panic Button’ Bill to Protect Hotel Workers from Assaults, Harassment

Wed, 06/12/2019 - 09:07
Governor Murphy Signs ‘Panic Button’ Bill to Protect Hotel Workers from Assaults, Harassment New Jersey State AFL-CIO

Hundreds of hotel workers, union leaders and elected officials gathered at Harrah’s Resort in Atlantic City today to witness the signing of a bill requiring hotels to equip certain employees with “panic buttons” for their protection against inappropriate conduct by guests.

“We must protect the safety of workers in the hospitality industry,” Gov. Phil Murphy (D) said. “I am proud to sign panic button legislation that Bob [McDevitt] and the working men and women of UNITE HERE, Assemblymen Vince Mazzeo and John Armato, Charlie [Wowkanech] and Laurel [Brennan], Senator Loretta Weinberg and so many others have fought for to give hotel workers greater security and the ability to immediately call for help should they need it on the job.”

The portable safety device, known as a panic button, will allow hotel workers to alert security personnel if they feel they are in danger or a compromising position while performing housekeeping duties. Today’s signing makes New Jersey the first in the nation to have a statewide law requiring hotels to provide their employees with such devices.

Hotels that do not comply can be fined up to $5,000 for the first violation and $10,000 for each additional violation, according to the legislation.

“The safety of women in the hospitality industry has been overlooked,” said Bob McDevitt, president of UNITE HERE Local 54. “I'm proud that my state is the first to pass and sign into law real protections for housekeepers in the hotel industry.”

The harassment of hotel workers, especially housekeepers, has been a longstanding issue the hotel industry has struggled to address. Unite Here Local 54, a union representing nearly one-third of casino and hospitality workers in Atlantic City, was a driving force behind this legislation, which will provide an additional measure of security for thousands of hotel workers across the state.

“Whenever I go into a room, I wonder what is going to happen,” said Miriam Ramos, a housekeeper at Bally’s in Atlantic City. “Most guests are nice and respectful, but every housekeeper has either been sexually assaulted or harassed doing her job, or knows someone who has.”

“I’m glad that the legislature and the governor are making it safer for us,” Ramos said.  

Assemblyman John Armato (D-2) introduced the “panic button” bill in the General Assembly in September. Assemblyman Vince Mazzeo (D-2) also sponsored the bill. Sens. Loretta Weinberg (D-37) and Linda Greenstein (D-14) proposed it in the Senate.

“The New Jersey State AFL-CIO thanks the sponsors of the panic button bill for recognizing that hotel workers deserve to feel safe while on the job,” said Charles Wowkanech, president of the state federation. “We are proud to have lobbied on behalf of this important legislation, which will no doubt help create a safer working environment for all of New Jersey’s hotel workers.”

Kenneth Quinnell Wed, 06/12/2019 - 10:07

Pride Month Profiles: Irene Soloway

Tue, 06/11/2019 - 11:03
Pride Month Profiles: Irene Soloway Sisters in the Brotherhoods

For Pride Month, the AFL-CIO is spotlighting various LGBTQ Americans who have worked and continue to work at the intersection of civil and labor rights. Our first profile this year is Irene Soloway.

As a young adult in 1978, Irene Soloway moved from St. Louis to New York. She was working in a bar that had a significant clientele who were roofers. Soloway referred to the behavior of her boss at the bar as "appalling," so she quit. The roofers in the bar that she knew jokingly offered her a roofing hammer. She took it as a challenge, and it made her want to show them that she could do the job.

Soloway did some roofing work, but hated it. She moved through various jobs in the construction industry, but settled on carpentry, both because she liked the work and the Carpenters union opened its doors to women. She became a member in 1979, when she began the Women in Apprenticeship Program. Soloway and other women were made to feel that they belong, that the program was more than tokenism.

At the time, not only were there few women in the building trades, even fewer of them were feminist Jewish New York lesbians. Soloway said that she rarely faced any direct discrimination. Instead, the concerns of rank-and-file members, women or otherwise, were largely ignored in her local at the time. She said:

The union and the apprenticeship in the Carpenters Union was now what I would consider sexist...we were never discriminated against within the school—but the specific issues that were barriers to women were never addressed specifically. So it was a second hand...diffuse kind of way that sexism was expressed.

Even when concerns were raised, leaders in the local were told to keep their concerns quiet, as they were all "brothers" in the union. Soloway explained:

We tried to inform the Carpenters Union of what we thought they needed to do to make the union receptive to women and to be inclusive. And we...became aware...that the Carpenters Union was not interested in fresh, new ideas coming from rank and file. We came in with ideas about having sexual harassment for the men in construction. We came in with ideas about having a Women's Committee that would address the issues of women in construction. We actually came in with ideas about how the apprenticeship school could be more in touch with the apprentices around issues of ethnicity and race and issues....And what we were always told was: We're all one Union and we're all brothers, and there's no need...to point out these differences because we're all carpenters.

This was the first time she had been in a union and Soloway was very excited about it because she believed that it was a structure that was supposed to support her and provide a steady job. But her local at the time was very undemocratic and her concerns weren't taken seriously. Despite the fact that she was often the only woman in the meetings, she kept attending for the next five years, never backing down from the agenda that she pursued. 

In 1979, Soloway had been a founding member of United Tradeswomen, a group of diverse women working in the building trades. The organization was originally formed to recruit women into apprenticeship programs but quickly grew to provide support and advocacy for women who were starting to enter the construction industry in New York. Much of Soloway's early activism took place outside the union hall.

Fear and intimidation weren't limited to the union hall, they were also present in the workplace. Rumors were rampant that members who spoke out against union leadership were met with violence or had their careers and lives destroyed. Soloway wasn't intimidated. By 1994, she noted in an interview that many of the things she and allies had pushed for at the time have come to pass:

Now almost fifteen years later—they actually are being addressed, so that in terms of, yes, there is actually a Women's Committee now that's...sanctioned to meet within the Carpenters school, and it's advertised in the Carpenters paper that there is such a committee, and who the contact people are—so there's, at least, an acknowledgement of this committee. And there is specific training—sexual harassment training—for men and being done by women who are Carpenters—graduates of our school—who are now teaching at the school—which is an important part of the program. And another one of our other ideas was about teaching labor history in the Carpenters school, which was then ignored, and now, you know, like history's being taught in the Carpenters school.

During the mid-1980s, she got a job with the city's Health and Hospitals Corporation. The shift from at-will work that was left to the whims of the local's power structure to a secure job with security was a major turning point in her life. When she started working for the city, she felt that her job was more secure and she could speak out more. In the civil service, they had elected stewards, not ones chosen by the power structure. She won the steward position after becoming outspoken about asbestos problems on her worksite. She started refusing to work in contaminated areas. Management wasn't prepared for the problem and had to deal with it because of her. Several men came and asked her to run for steward. She won.

Soloway also helped produce the newspaper "Hard Hat News" and had to use pseudonyms like Brick Shields, to disguise her identity. She worked on a long, but successful, campaign to expand representation for rank-and-file members within the district council. In 1990, she appeared with other carpenters before the New York City Commission on Human Rights to testify about gender and race relations in the industry. She shared widespread reports that women in the industry faced threats of rape and physical violence and were subjected to pornography and insulting personalized graffiti on the worksite. 

While she was working as a carpenter at Lincoln Hospital, she began taking pre-med classes and completed the coursework to become a physician's assistant. She left carpentry and began work at a methadone clinic. She looked back on her activism and those of her fellow carpenters and what impact it had:

We still felt very much on the outside of the construction industry. It felt very kind of scary to us, but we kind of created cultural groups that supported ourselves and each other, that was able to move forward into that industry. Now I think that women are more into the industry, so I think we did do something. I think we did, like, move ourselves inside—from the outside to the inside—by creating an identity for ourselves, as well as educating ourselves and each other, and trying to educate the union about us....I think our presence and our strong continued presence for each other and ourselves was the main accomplishment of this group. 

Kenneth Quinnell Tue, 06/11/2019 - 12:03

Tags: LGBTQ Rights

Stop the War on Working People: In the States Roundup

Tue, 06/11/2019 - 09:11
Stop the War on Working People: In the States Roundup AFL-CIO

It's time once again to take a look at the ways working people are making progress in the states. Click on any of the links to follow the state federations on Twitter.

Alaska AFL-CIO:

The front page of the Daily News-Miner today: Dunleavy administration warns workers of possible #layoffs. Tell your legislators you oppose a #DunleavyShutdown. visit https://t.co/FYG467ufBT to write your legislator TODAY!#akgov #akleg
Full story: https://t.co/gwIW8GlWMy

— Alaska AFL-CIO (@AKAFLCIO) June 7, 2019

Arkansas AFL-CIO:

America's Workplaces Aren't Often Safe for LGBTQ Employees https://t.co/zfPNPaEwfs via Teen Vogue

— Arkansas AFL-CIO (@ArkansasAFLCIO) June 10, 2019

California Labor Federation:

Californians deserve protection from high-interest, predatory loans. Join the @Cali4EJ coalition and support #AB539 to guarantee access to safe and affordable credit. Take Action by visiting https://t.co/Za4wSPqGLV #StopTheDebtTrap #1u pic.twitter.com/Y7zBaKgXeV

— California Labor Federation (@CaliforniaLabor) June 10, 2019

Colorado AFL-CIO:

After hearing powerful testimony from SEIU Local 105 President @RonRuggiero105 the Colorado AFL-CIO unanimously voted for a resolution to fully support SEIU Local 105 and its members as they fight for a good contract with Kaiser Permanente. #@SEIU105 pic.twitter.com/J0uVIEkPTI

— Colorado AFL-CIO (@AFLCIOCO) June 7, 2019

Connecticut AFL-CIO:

The Trump administration's plot to cripple the union contract between the VA and @AFGENational will make it harder for front-line workers to give veterans the care they deserve. We stand with AFGE and VA workers nationwide. #SaveOurVA #1u

— Connecticut AFL-CIO (@ConnAFLCIO) June 5, 2019

Idaho AFL-CIO:

I just signed a @theactionnet petition: Tell Volkswagen: It’s time to stop your war on workers!. Sign here: https://t.co/y68Pn592S5

— Idaho State AFL-CIO (@IdahoAFLCIO) June 3, 2019

Indiana State AFL-CIO:

Unions: fighting for working people yesterday, today, and tomorrow. #1u pic.twitter.com/nNbsGtMmTO

— Indiana AFL-CIO (@INAFLCIO) June 5, 2019

Iowa Federation of Labor:

Rep. Cindy Axne Leads Fight to Protect Health Care for Iowans https://t.co/HGajkaSQxx pic.twitter.com/ze5hNfW7wX

— Iowa AFL-CIO (@IowaAFLCIO) June 7, 2019

Kentucky State AFL-CIO:

Paducah Unions Observe Workers Memorial Day by Helping Feed the Hungry https://t.co/atiAFnfSfB

— Kentucky AFL-CIO (@aflcioky) May 6, 2019

Maine AFL-CIO:

THANK YOU @chloemaxmin for engaging with labor early on in the process to create a great piece of legislation that will not only fight climate change, but provide good paying working class jobs with benefits! #mepolitics @AFLCIO #1U #ClimateAction #ClimateChange https://t.co/t3eopk0MK2

— Maine AFL-CIO (@MEAFLCIO) June 10, 2019

Massachusetts AFL-CIO:

"...the muscle-flexing by airport workers may reflect the return of a model in which aggrieved employees threaten the wheels of commerce." Workers across the country are changing the tides! #UnionPower #OneJobShouldBeEnough #1uhttps://t.co/gRCtv17fvX https://t.co/0xZALpwqeG

— Massachusetts AFL-CIO (@massaflcio) June 10, 2019

Metro Washington (D.C.) Council AFL-CIO:

CBTU and CLUW among the constituency groups represented at the Metro Washington Council Constituency Group Open House pic.twitter.com/Z3kaI5L7pX

— MetroDCLaborCouncil (@DCLabor) June 6, 2019

Michigan AFL-CIO:

“Our state’s economy is driven by the labor of the working men and women of this state. It makes perfect sense that all agencies related to labor and economic development be placed under one coordinated effort." President Ron Bieber, Michigan AFL-CIOhttps://t.co/CRW9ZNoAlK

— Michigan AFL-CIO (@MIAFLCIO) June 6, 2019

Minnesota AFL-CIO:

This is why I went on a two-day strike this past week https://t.co/qYTe3Gi1aN #Solidarity with the workers at Guardian Angels nursing home in Elk River who stood up for their residents last week. #1u @SEIUHCMN @seiumn

— Minnesota AFL-CIO (@MNAFLCIO) June 10, 2019

Missouri AFL-CIO:

Deteriorating infrastructure are a threat to safety and quality of life! #InfrastructureNowhttps://t.co/r6Is1c0N0R

— Missouri AFL-CIO (@MOAFLCIO) June 8, 2019

Montana AFL-CIO:

Support Missoula's future, support apprenticeship utilization.https://t.co/2mo0K5s9no

— Montana AFL-CIO (@MTaflcio) June 7, 2019

Nebraska State AFL-CIO:

I just took action on @theactionnet: Add Your Name: No Vote on NAFTA Until It Is Fixed. Take action here: https://t.co/xo8ppzWiyN

— NE State AFL-CIO (@NEAFLCIO) June 6, 2019

Nevada State AFL-CIO:

Inspiring to hear how @Local4041 used organizing & communications to pass collective bargaining through #NVLeg for 20k state employees! Big win for NV working families #IAMComms19 pic.twitter.com/7UTZuyndlH

— Nevada State AFL-CIO (@NVAFLCIO) June 6, 2019

New Hampshire AFL-CIO:

Great work to everyone who made the Public Workers Memorial possible. An important and long overdue tribute. https://t.co/Il4BInDykF

— NewHampshire AFL-CIO (@NHAFLCIO) June 7, 2019

New Mexico Federation of Labor:

#Solidarity https://t.co/dNKqf4yVU3

— NMFL (@NMFLaflcio) June 6, 2019

New York State AFL-CIO:

Can you describe your housing? “The landlord is, as I said, our boss because he's the owner of the house” How many rooms are there? “Only 2.” For how many people? “9 or 10 people.” - Boris

Take action! Text Farmworkers to 877877 today!#Justice4Farmworkers #UnionStrong pic.twitter.com/4s6cGeG8Kx

— NYSAFLCIO (@NYSAFLCIO) June 6, 2019

North Carolina State AFL-CIO:

United we stand. Divided we fall. Together we win, so say, "#CountMeIn" to building a bigger, more engaged, more powerful labor movement to win for working people! #1u pic.twitter.com/LSc3GO6Ppg

— NC State AFL-CIO (@NCStateAFLCIO) June 7, 2019

North Dakota AFL-CIO:

ND AFL-CIO 60th Annual Convention Delegates celebrate ND Mill and Elevator Day with @BCTGM President David Durkee, greetings from MN & SD AFL-CIO and Manitoba Labor Feds, & elect new President and Board: https://t.co/37EMYQaRZb #1u

— North Dakota AFL-CIO (@NDAFLCIO) June 8, 2019

Ohio AFL-CIO:

Always a beautiful sight when to many friends of ⁦@AFLCIO⁩ and working people join together. Thanks to ⁦@CincyAFLCIO⁩ and ⁦@UAW⁩ for hosting the annual COPE dinner and celebrating #DignityOfWork pic.twitter.com/9q1OnvdWFu

— Ohio AFL-CIO (@ohioaflcio) June 7, 2019

Oklahoma State AFL-CIO:

Check out our June Newsletter with information about Companies who Falsely Labeled Products "Made in U.S.A", AFL-CIO State Convention, Union Made Fathers Day, Millennialization of American Labor and more!

Check it out at https://t.co/N1dYjUN2cS

— Oklahoma AFL-CIO (@OK_AFL_CIO) June 3, 2019

Oregon AFL-CIO:

“Oregon’s union movement will continue to fight to protect the compensation of all workers and against these types of harmful cuts.” https://t.co/vcO3Y4ZaQ1

— Oregon AFL-CIO (@OregonAFLCIO) June 7, 2019

Pennsylvania AFL-CIO:

A strong union contract for VA workers = a strong VA for veterans. We stand with @AFGENational! #SaveOurVA #1u@3Afge @PhilGlover15 @unionveterans @Darrinkellypgh pic.twitter.com/greNn9YeY2

— PA AFL-CIO (@PaAFL_CIO) June 5, 2019

Rhode Island AFL-CIO:

RICOSH / ILSR Alliance Luncheon Fundraising Event. R.S.V.P. to info@riaflcio.com #1U pic.twitter.com/wROy3vwlwH

— Rhode Island AFL-CIO (@riaflcio) June 10, 2019

Texas AFL-CIO:

ULP Strike by IBEW 520 in Austin, TX #1u https://t.co/HpylTPkuvs

— Texas AFL-CIO (@TexasAFLCIO) June 10, 2019

Virginia AFL-CIO:

What a ‘Living Wage’ Actually Means--If you ask a dozen lawmakers what constitutes a “living wage,” you’ll get a dozen answers. Where does the term come from? And is it even accurate? Read about it here: https://t.co/fFSSwKeVEE

— Virginia AFL-CIO (@Virginia_AFLCIO) June 7, 2019

Washington State Labor Council:

Thank you for your leadership, @PattyMurray and @RepJayapal, and for standing up for working people! https://t.co/uZdJW7haML

— WA State AFL-CIO (@WAAFLCIO) June 7, 2019

Wisconsin State AFL-CIO:

Intertwined: The Labor Movement and LGBT Rights, https://t.co/YwOe5WYEqB

— WI AFL-CIO (@wisaflcio) June 9, 2019 Kenneth Quinnell Tue, 06/11/2019 - 10:11

Pride Month Profiles: Bill Olwell

Tue, 06/11/2019 - 08:16
Pride Month Profiles: Bill Olwell UFCW

For Pride Month, the AFL-CIO is spotlighting various LGBTQ Americans who have worked and continue to work at the intersection of civil and labor rights. Our next profile is Bill Olwell.

In 1953, Bill Olwell started working as a grocery clerk at Lucky's supermarket in Seattle, where he became a member of the Seattle Retail Clerks Local 1001. In 1959, he became a business representative for the local and in 1968, he was elected president. He held that position for a decade, and starting in 1972, he was an international vice president of the Retail Clerks International Association, as well.

Afraid that others would exploit his sexual orientation, he stayed in the closet during this time and often took a friend who was a lesbian to union social events as a cover story. "It wasn't that often, but I used her for years, and it took the heat off," he said. But as Olwell rose up the union's ranks, political opponents began attempting to derail him using gay smears, despite the fact that his activism was focused on labor, not LGBTQ rights.

Olwell also served as president of the King County Labor Council. He was an outspoken advocate for racial integration in construction and strongly opposed the Vietnam War. These more radical stances were at odds with many in the Seattle labor movement at the time, so they began a smear campaign against him focused on his homosexuality. 

The efforts were too little and too late. Olwell had worked hard for the membership and helped secure contracts after several strikes. He also helped organize insurance and bank workers. One of his biggest victories was negotiating with Seattle's high-end department stores to end long-standing gender-based discrimination. Women comprised approximately 75% of the local and Olwell had helped many of them get a big bump in pay. They supported him enthusiastically: "Those members could have cared less about me being gay. From that day on, there was a huge change in me. I stopped worrying about what people knew."

When he was running for re-election as president of Local 1001 in 1969, Olwell realized that focusing on the issues that actually matter to workers was not only the right thing to do, but popular as well:

I always knew that if I could get the election on my experience and my delivery, I would win, and as it turned out I did. Once I put my contracts up front, the gay thing just wasn't an issue. I don't think it cost me ten votes out of the four thousand that voted. We had 121 polling places, and I won every polling place but one, and the day after the election, I started working on that one.

He later moved to Washington, D.C., with his partner Eddie Miller. In the nation's capital he worked on the merger between the Retail Clerks and the Amalgamated Meat Cutters to form the new United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW). Despite another campaign to smear him because of his sexuality, he was elected national vice president. In 1981, he became the international union's executive vice president and assistant to President Bill Wynn. UFCW would grow to become the largest member of the AFL-CIO during this time, surpassing 1 million members.

Despite the frequent and vicious attacks against his sexuality, Olwell never let them distract him from his efforts on behalf of working people:

People would dismiss me as a lightweight because I'm gay, and then when they saw my influence, they figured that Bill (Wynn) and I had an affair. I was a trench fighter, a real political operator. The question of my gayness only came up when people couldn't think of anything else to say against me.

In 2015, the UFCW's LGBTQ constituency group, OUTreach, named its "Champion of Equality Award" in Olwell's honor. 

Additional source: Out in the Union: A Labor History of Queer America by Miriam Frank.

Kenneth Quinnell Tue, 06/11/2019 - 09:16

Tags: LGBTQ Rights

Reject Toothless Laws: The Working People Weekly List

Mon, 06/10/2019 - 10:52
Reject Toothless Laws: The Working People Weekly List AFL-CIO

Every week, we bring you a roundup of the top news and commentary about issues and events important to working families. Here’s the latest edition of the Working People Weekly List.

SEC Adopts New Broker Rules That Consumer Advocates Say Are Toothless: "The Securities and Exchange Commission voted on Wednesday to pass the so-called Regulation Best Interest. The commission said the changes would help Main Street investors by tightening the standards governing brokers who sell investment products and outlining a fresh interpretation of the duties of investment advisers who provide financial guidance. 'When working people seek out investment advice, they expect and deserve to be able to rely on the people providing that advice to prioritize their need for a secure financial future over the financial professional’s interest in getting rich,' said Heather Slavkin Corzo, a senior fellow at Americans for Financial Reform and director of capital markets policy at the AFL-CIO."

Trump’s North American Trade Deal Must Do More to Protect U.S. Jobs, Rep. Andy Levin Says: "Mexico didn’t foist NAFTA on the United States, despite President Donald Trump’s constant claims that the U.S. loses 'so much money' on the deal. We did it to ourselves, and we did it deliberately. Corporations wanted to create in Mexico a low-wage haven where they could shift production, expecting us to happily buy the imported goods built with cheap Mexican labor—while exporting our jobs."

House Votes to Give ‘Dreamers’ a Path to Citizenship: "The Democrat-led House passed legislation on Tuesday to grant a path to citizenship to about 2.5 million immigrants whose legal protections President Trump has moved to end, advancing a measure that highlights the bitter partisan differences over immigration. The bill, which passed 237 to 187, with seven Republicans voting yes, would create a new legal pathway for young undocumented immigrants brought to the United States illegally as children, known as Dreamers, and for those with Temporary Protected Status, granted to immigrants whose countries are ravaged by natural disaster or violence."

Trump’s War on Worker Rights: "President Trump ran for office as a champion of American workers and a friend of labor unions, but his administration has systematically favored employers at the expense of workers. In recent months, the administration has moved to tighten qualifications for who must be paid the minimum wage and who must be paid overtime. It is asking the Supreme Court to rule that companies can fire workers on the basis of sexual orientation. The number of workplace safety inspectors employed by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration has fallen to the lowest level in the agency’s half-century of operation."

A Court Blocked Trump’s Bid to Weaken Unions. The White House Found Another Way: "President Donald Trump suffered a major legal setback last August in his effort to deconstruct the administrative state when a federal judge struck down key portions of three executive orders aimed at weakening federal unions and making it easier to fire government employees. But since then, the administration has been achieving the same goals through a different avenue―the bargaining table. And they’ve done it with an assist from presidential appointees whose job is to referee labor disputes within the federal government."

Delaware Governor Signs Bill Protecting Collective Bargaining Rights of 2,000 More State Employees: "Delaware Gov. John Carney signed a bill on Thursday that allows more public employees to collectively bargain for fair wages and good working conditions in the state. Previously, only select professions were afforded this protection and now more than 2,000 workers will have all the benefits that collective bargaining brings. Passage of the bill was possible through the direct and sustained involvement of a number of union members that have been elected to the state legislature."

Profiling Labor Leaders and Activists for Pride Month: "For Pride Month, the AFL-CIO is spotlighting various LGBTQ Americans who have worked and continue to work at the intersection of civil and labor rights. First, let's take a look back at LGBTQ Americans we've profiled in the past."

Get to Know AFL-CIO's Affiliates: Ironworkers: "Next up in our series that takes a deeper look at each of our affiliates is the Ironworkers."

Kenneth Quinnell Mon, 06/10/2019 - 11:52

Get to Know AFL-CIO's Affiliates: Fire Fighters

Mon, 06/10/2019 - 08:03
Get to Know AFL-CIO's Affiliates: Fire Fighters AFL-CIO

Next up in our series, which takes a deeper look at each of our affiliates, is the Fire Fighters.

Name of Union: International Association of Fire Fighters (IAFF).

Mission: To be a strong representative for our members through collective bargaining; to maintain their health and safety; to provide them with education, training and resources to do their job; and to be politically active in campaigns and legislation in order to make a difference in who gets to have the power that drives the decisions that affect members and the work they do.

Current Leadership of Union: Harold A. Schaitberger serves as the ninth general president of the IAFF. He was a local president and state president before coming to the IAFF to create its political and legislative operation. He was first elected president in 2000. Schaitberger began his professional career as a firefighter in Fairfax County, Virginia. 

Edward A. Kelly serves as the IAFF general secretary-treasurer, hails from Boston and was elected in 2016. The IAFF is also represented by 16 district vice presidents who together form the IAFF Executive Board. The union conducts its convention every two years.

Current Number of Members: 316,000.

Members Work As: Firefighters and paramedics.

Industries Represented: Fire and emergency services in the United States and Canada.

History: Founded on February 28, 1918, delegates representing 24 locals met in Washington, D.C., and held their first IAFF convention. In the following 100 years, the IAFF expanded the role it plays for its members in the political, health, safety, financial and technological arenas.

Throughout its first 100 years, the IAFF has been the leader in improving the health, safety and careers of its members. It has worked to pass legislation that takes care of the families of fallen members and has advanced the fire service forward through health and safety improvements.

The IAFF takes great pride in developing the services it offers its members. From opening its members-only behavioral health facility in 2017 to having a robust disaster relief program on the ground supporting members in the aftermath of our worst natural disasters, the IAFF strives to provide the best value possible for the investment its members make.

And as the IAFF enters its second century, the resources and value it provides to members continues to grow. With the creation of its very own Financial Corporation, the IAFF now provides opportunities for its members to not only improve their financial well-being, but to improve their union. A great example of this is E-18 Media, the IAFF’s multimedia production company. Founded in 2013, E-18 is part of the IAFF’s rapid response team tasked to repel attacks against members by creating and editing videos, making online ad buys and producing educational content from its state-of-the-art, in-house studio at IAFF headquarters.

Take a deeper dive into the history of the IAFF.

Current Campaigns: The IAFF’s Southern Strategic Organizing Initiative to increase membership has seen a 30% growth in membership across the states of North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia.

Member trainings include the Affiliate Leadership Training Summit, Communications Training Academy, Fire Ground Survival, FIRE OPS 101, HazMat, the Partnership Education Program, Peer Fitness Trainer Certification, Peer Support, the Political Training Academy (U.S.)Occupational Medicine Resident Program and an Online Learning Center. 

Other activities driven by the IAFF include: FIREPAC, the IAFF App, the Media Awards Contest, Fire Fighter Quarterly Magazine, the IAFF Foundation, the IAFF Motorcycle Group and a series of scholarships to advance the education of our members and the children of members who have died in the line of duty.

Member Efforts: Health and safety resources for IAFF members include: the Behavioral Health Program, Burn Injury Assistance, Cancer Awareness and Prevention, the Center of Excellence for Behavioral Health Treatment and Recovery, Line-of-Duty Death Resources, the Presumptive Health Initiative, Suicide Awareness, the Wellness Fitness Initiative and the World Trade Center Health Program.

Learn More: WebsiteFacebookTwitterYouTube.

Kenneth Quinnell Mon, 06/10/2019 - 09:03

The TWU Celebrates Its 20th Organizing Victory!

Fri, 06/07/2019 - 11:34
The TWU Celebrates Its 20th Organizing Victory! TWU

The TWU organizing machine is in full swing.

Under this new leadership, the Transport Workers union has just won our 20th new worker organizing drive. We continue to grow and thrive across the entire transport sector. Since 2017, our membership has increased from 137,000 to 151,000.

The TWU is by far the fastest growing union in the country. Our most recent victory came on June 6, when Envoy Air pilot simulator instructors voted unanimously to join our union.

We’ve secured organizing wins with the following work groups:

  • JetBlue Airway inflight crew members
  • Spirit Airlines customer service agents
  • PSA Airlines dispatcher coordinators
  • Kalitta Air cargo dispatchers
  • Envoy Air pilot ground simulator instructors
  • San Francisco bike share workers
  • Washington, D.C., Big Bus workers
  • New York City Big Bus workers
  • Miami Big Bus workers
  • Las Vegas Big Bus workers
  • Chicago Big Bus workers
  • Los Angeles Big Bus workers
  • San Francisco Big Bus workers
  • Phoenix, Mesa and Tempe, Arizona, bike share workers
  • Cleveland bike share workers
  • SP Plus Corp. transportation ferry bus drivers
  • SP Plus transportation shuttle bus drivers
  • Bronx, N.Y., Quality Bus Service drivers
  • New York City Mount Sinai Hospital Shuttle Drivers
  • New York City Metropolitan Transportation Authority Bus White Collar Unit
  • New York City MTA staff analysts

Thank you to our organizing teams! Thank you to the workers who stepped up to fight back against the bosses and take action to improve the economic security of your families.

It is the goal of our leadership to demonstrate every day that we are America’s Fighting Democratic Union!

John Samuelsen is international president of TWU, which originally published this post.

Kenneth Quinnell Fri, 06/07/2019 - 12:34

Economy Gains 75,000 Jobs in May; Unemployment Steady at 3.6%

Fri, 06/07/2019 - 10:15
Economy Gains 75,000 Jobs in May; Unemployment Steady at 3.6%

The U.S. economy gained 75,000 jobs in May, and the unemployment rate remained at 3.6%, according to figures released this morning by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Wage growth of 3.1% was lower than last month's 3.4% and, a downward revision of 75,000 for the job numbers for March and April signals that the Federal Reserve's Open Market Committee needs to inch down interest rates.

In response to the May job numbers, AFL-CIO Chief Economist William Spriggs tweeted:

Though payroll gains were modest, they happened in most industries but were most modest for the highest wage industries. Biggest gains were average and low wage industries. @AFLCIO pic.twitter.com/oZumO58wqu

— William E. Spriggs (@WSpriggs) June 7, 2019

 

Amid a not-so-good jobs report from @BLS_gov Black unemployment stops worsening. Black women's unemployment rate falls from 5.3 to 5.1% as labor force participation rose 62.5 to 62.8% @APRI_National @CBTU72 @drjlastword @rolandsmartin @AFLCIO #JobsReport

— William E. Spriggs (@WSpriggs) June 7, 2019

 

Long-term unemployed as a share of the unemployed continues its disturbing rise, now up to 22.4% from January's 19.3. This is a warning that the 151,000 a month payroll growth is too modest. @AFLCIO #JobsReport

— William E. Spriggs (@WSpriggs) June 7, 2019

 

Over the year, since last May, unemployment fell for all major occupations except administrative and office support which rose from 3.3 to 4.0%. Given the wide use of computers by those workers, the unemployment challenge isn't structural. @AFLCIO #JobsReport

— William E. Spriggs (@WSpriggs) June 7, 2019

 

Another not-so-bad number is modest 2.8 thousand gain in motor vehicle manufacturing, this is a good sign. @UAW @AFLCIO

— William E. Spriggs (@WSpriggs) June 7, 2019

 

Retail trade weakness continues, this time the big loss was in clothing stores, down 12.8 thousand. Heavy leveraging of retail firms make this continued weakening ominous. @UFCW @AFLCIO #JobsReport

— William E. Spriggs (@WSpriggs) June 7, 2019

 

Losses in state government employment (down 10,000) and local government (down 9,000 including 3,100 in education) are continuing worrying signs we are failing to restore public investment to the levels needed for sustained growth. @AFSCME @AFTunion @AFLCIO #JobsReport

— William E. Spriggs (@WSpriggs) June 7, 2019

 

Another sign why a 151,000 payroll gain rate a month is too low: women who were unemployed in April were more likely to have dropped out in May (746,000) than found a job (643,00) a reversal from faster job growth @AFLCIO #JobsDay #JobsReport

— William E. Spriggs (@WSpriggs) June 7, 2019

Last month's biggest job gains were in professional and business services (33,000), health care (16,000) and construction (4,000). Employment in other major industries, including mining, manufacturing, wholesale trade, retail trade, transportation and warehousing, information, financial activities, leisure and hospitality, and government, showed little change over the month.

Among the major worker groups, the unemployment rates fell for blacks (6.2%). The unemployment rates for teenagers (12.7%), Hispanics (4.2%), adult men (3.3%), whites (3.3%), adult women (3.2%) and Asians (2.5%) showed little or no change in May.

The number of long-term unemployed (those jobless for 27 weeks or more) was little changed in May and accounted for 22.4% of the unemployed.

Kenneth Quinnell Fri, 06/07/2019 - 11:15

Delaware Governor Signs Bill Protecting Collective Bargaining Rights of 2,000 More State Employees

Tue, 06/04/2019 - 12:00
Delaware Governor Signs Bill Protecting Collective Bargaining Rights of 2,000 More State Employees Office of Governor John Carney via Flickr

Delaware Gov. John Carney signed a bill on Thursday that allows more public employees to collectively bargain for fair wages and good working conditions in the state. Previously, only select professions were afforded this protection and now more than 2,000 workers will have all the benefits that collective bargaining brings.

The Delaware State AFL-CIO played a critical role in moving the bill through the legislature to the governor’s desk. "This is a proud moment for our unions that represent our state workers," said James Maravelias, president of the Delaware State AFL-CIO. "This shows our constant commitment to their livelihood and our ever-present representation."

"Allowing more state workers to collectively bargain for better wages is a critical step toward improving the lives of all Delaware families," said state Sen. Jack Walsh, the prime sponsor of the legislation. "As the state’s largest employer, we have led the way time and again when it comes to caring for our workers. From paid parental leave and loan forgiveness for public school teachers to cost-of-living wage hikes and stronger labor unions, we are creating a stronger workforce and a brighter future for thousands of our residents."

Michael Begatto, executive director of AFSCME Council 81, praised Carney for helping get the bill through the General Assembly. "It’s not just a big moment, this is a huge moment," he said. "I won’t use the words of our former vice president, but this is a big deal. Believe me, it’s that big of a deal."

Kenneth Quinnell Tue, 06/04/2019 - 13:00

Profiling Labor Leaders and Activists for Pride Month

Mon, 06/03/2019 - 09:20
Profiling Labor Leaders and Activists for Pride Month

For Pride Month, the AFL-CIO is spotlighting various LGBTQ Americans who have worked and continue to work at the intersection of civil and labor rights. First, let's take a look back at LGBTQ Americans we've profiled in the past:

Check back throughout June as we add more names to this prestigious list. 

Kenneth Quinnell Mon, 06/03/2019 - 10:20

Get to Know AFL-CIO's Affiliates: Ironworkers

Mon, 06/03/2019 - 08:52
Get to Know AFL-CIO's Affiliates: Ironworkers

Next up in our series that takes a deeper look at each of our affiliates is the Ironworkers.

Name of Union: International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Ironworkers

Current Leadership of Union: Eric Dean serves as general president, a position he has held since 2015. Prior to that he served as general organizer, general secretary, general vice president, president of the Iron Workers District Council of Chicago and Vicinity and numerous positions for Iron Workers Local 63 in Chicago.

Other officers include General Secretary Ron Piksa, General Treasurer Kenneth "Bill" Dean and general vice presidents Marvin Ragsdale, Darrell LaBoucan, Bernie Evers, Stephen Sweeney, Kevin Bryenton, Robert Boskovich, Don Zampa, James Mahoney and Steve Pendergrass.

Current Number of Members: 130,000.

Members Work As: Ironworkers who work on bridges, structural steel, ornamental, architectural and miscellaneous metals, rebar and in shops. 

Industries Represented: Ironworkers are employed by every industry that needs construction and have worked on nearly every major construction project in North America, including the Golden Gate Bridge, the Willis Tower (formerly the Sears Tower), the Gateway Arch, the expansion of oil sands plant in Alberta, the World Trade Center and Freedom Tower, among many others.

History: The International Association of Bridge and Structural Iron Workers of America was formed in 1896, when 16 delegates came together for the founding convention in Pittsburgh. By that time, steel had become the primary material used in the erection of bridges and buildings and the abrupt change from wood and stone drove demand for ironworkers. Ironworkers became known as "cowboys in the sky" for their daring and dangerous work. They joined together to ensure that their voices were unified and heard.

Current Campaigns: The Ironworkers promote standards of excellence for the industry and apprenticeships. Countdown to Zero promotes safety and prevention of death and injury. Iron Worker Women provides news and resources for ironworker women. The Ironworkers participate in the Helmets to Hardhats program that provides training and career opportunities for veterans.

Community Efforts: The John H. Lyons Sr. and Eric S. Waterman scholarships help the children of ironworkers go to college. The Ironworker magazine and IW mobile app are the primary communication tools for ironworkers across North America. The Ironworkers Relief Fund helps members and their families who have been affected by disasters and other traumatic events.

Learn More: WebsiteFacebookTwitter.

Kenneth Quinnell Mon, 06/03/2019 - 09:52

Fix Our Crumbling Infrastructure: The Working People Weekly List

Fri, 05/31/2019 - 09:38
Fix Our Crumbling Infrastructure: The Working People Weekly List AFL-CIO

Every week, we bring you a roundup of the top news and commentary about issues and events important to working families. Here’s the latest edition of the Working People Weekly List.

Pelosi Slow-Walks Trump’s New Nafta Deal: "'We are not going to be a cheap date,' said Richard Trumka, the president of the AFL-CIO, a Pelosi ally who is pushing the administration to reopen negotiations with Mexico to strengthen enforcement of labor provisions. 'Nancy Pelosi is not going to sign an agreement if it is not a good agreement. She is not going to bring it to the floor unless she knows that it is going to make the changes that we need in Nafta, period,' he added, echoing the sentiments of people close to the speaker."

Leo Gerard to Step Down After 18 Years as Head of United Steelworkers: "The United Steelworkers announced on Wednesday the retirement of four top officials, including International President Leo W. Gerard, effective mid-July. The changes begin a period of major leadership transition for the Pittsburgh-based union ahead of the 2020 presidential election. Mr. Gerard—high profile in the steel industry and recognizable for his sharp wit and Canadian lilt—will step down after more than 50 years with the largest manufacturing union in the country. The union has 850,000 members in North America. Elected international president in 2001, Mr. Gerard 'has largely decided to enjoy his well-earned retirement and looks forward to spending more time with his wife and family,' according to a union press release."

How Boots Riley Helped Salt Lake Film Society’s Front-of-House Staff Unionize: "'There’s a bunch of us that are organizing to get us paid more. Get some benefits. We could really use your energy to jump things off.' The Salt Lake Film Society is Salt Lake City’s hub for independent cinema, and the front-of-house staff are the ticket selling, snack providing gate keepers to audiences looking for inspiration on the big screen. They’re mostly under the age of 30, and all are passionate film lovers. Although many of them have worked at these theaters for years, the jobs have stagnant wages and provide no sick time and no path for advancement. Many employees were attracted to jobs at these theaters by their love for film, but despite their commitment to the organization, workers saw limited opportunity for growth. So they reached out to the Utah AFL-CIO, who connected them with an organizer from the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, the union that represents people in all kinds of behind-the-scenes jobs in the entertainment industry across North America. Despite representing the people who make movies in Hollywood and the people who work front-of-house in theaters with live shows, movie theater front-of-house staff is largely unrepresented in the United States. But the IATSE doesn’t back down from a challenge."

The Interstate Is Crumbling. Try Fixing the Section Used by 200,000 Vehicles a Day: "Dense cities have grown up around the aging freeways, hemming them in so that expensive engineering feats are needed to do work on them. Yet work is often unavoidable. I-4, for instance, was built in the 1960s to handle 70,000 vehicles a day. Now it is jammed with up to 200,000."

Giving Workers a Voice: What Working People Are Doing This Week: "Welcome to our regular feature, a look at what the various AFL-CIO unions and other working family organizations are doing across the country and beyond. The labor movement is big and active—here's a look at the broad range of activities we're engaged in this week."

Asian Pacific American Heritage Month Profiles: Jung Sai Garment Work Strikers: "For Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, the AFL-CIO is spotlighting various Asian Americans and Pacific Americans who have worked and continue to work at the intersection of civil and labor rights. Our next profile is about the Jung Sai Garment Work Strikers."

‘State of the Unions’ Podcast: A Union Organizer Goes to Washington: "'State of the Unions' podcast co-hosts Julie and Tim talk to Rep. Andy Levin (Mich.), a former AFL-CIO employee and career union organizer and activist. They discuss labor law reform, trade and the path to power for working people in Michigan and across the country."

Get to Know AFL-CIO's Affiliates: Theatrical Stage Employees: "Next up in our series that takes a deeper look at each of our affiliates is the Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE)."

Asian Pacific American Heritage Month Profiles: Monica Thammarath: "For Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, the AFL-CIO is spotlighting various Asian Americans and Pacific Americans who have worked and continue to work at the intersection of civil and labor rights. Our next profile is Monica Thammarath."

Teamwork On and Off the Ice: Worker Wins: "Our latest roundup of worker wins begins with women's hockey players forming a union and includes numerous examples of working people organizing, bargaining and mobilizing for a better life."

Asian Pacific American Heritage Month Profiles: Silme Domingo and Gene Viernes: "For Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, the AFL-CIO is spotlighting various Asian Americans and Pacific Americans who have worked and continue to work at the intersection of civil and labor rights. Our next profiles are Silme Domingo and Gene Viernes."

We Need Action on Infrastructure, Not More Talk: "More than half a century ago, Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower and a Democratic-majority Congress empowered millions of Americans to build an interstate highway system that became the envy of the world. Back then, our nation understood that investment in infrastructure was crucial to creating a better future."

Phoenix Rising: Betty Guardado Ousts Incumbent in City Council Race: "Labor union member and activist Betty Guardado was elected to the Phoenix City Council this week, and with strong union support, she ousted the incumbent. Guardado easily beat her opponent as she won more than 62% of the vote."

Power Connection: Connecticut AFL-CIO Empowers Fight for $15: "In a monumental leap of economic justice last week, the Connecticut Legislature passed a law that increases the state minimum wage to $15 per hour by 2023. The increase brings Connecticut into parity with its neighboring states of New York, Massachusetts and New Jersey, which have passed similar increases. The victory comes as a result of unprecedented coordination among labor unions and allied advocates in the state that have been fighting for an increase for years."

Path to Power Is Clear in the Ocean State: "The Rhode Island AFL-CIO has been busy in 2019, leading the fight on a number of important legislative initiatives. There are numerous union members who have been elected to the state legislature and that has provided an opportunity to pass legislation that will make a huge difference for our members and for working people across the Ocean State."

Get to Know AFL-CIO's Affiliates: Farm Labor Organizing Committee: "Next up in our series that takes a deeper look at each of our affiliates is the Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC)."

Asian Pacific American Heritage Month Profiles: Arlene Inouye: "For Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, the AFL-CIO is spotlighting various Asian Americans and Pacific Americans who have worked and continue to work at the intersection of civil and labor rights. Our next profile is Arlene Inouye."

It's Time to Fix Our Roads and Infrastructure with Funding from Congress: "Bent rims. Broken springs. Bridges and roads unfit for drivers. Search #FTDR (short for “Fix the Damn Roads”) on social media, and you’ll find countless stories from Michiganders who are paying the price of crumbling, potholed roads and highways."

The PRO Act: Pathway to Power for Workers: "Abigail Disney, granddaughter of the co-founder of the Walt Disney Co., called out the family business’ current CEO last month for making what’s supposed to be the happiest place on earth pretty darn miserable for its workers."

Invest in Infrastructure: In the States Roundup: "It's time once again to take a look at the ways working people are making progress in the states."

Kenneth Quinnell Fri, 05/31/2019 - 10:38

Giving Workers a Voice: What Working People Are Doing This Week

Fri, 05/31/2019 - 06:11
Giving Workers a Voice: What Working People Are Doing This Week AFL-CIO

Welcome to our regular feature, a look at what the various AFL-CIO unions and other working family organizations are doing across the country and beyond. The labor movement is big and active—here's a look at the broad range of activities we're engaged in this week.

A. Philip Randolph Institute:

Judge Orders New Union Vote at Kumho Tire Plant in Georgia https://t.co/fhFNViDEYE

— APRI National (DC) (@APRI_National) May 16, 2019

Actors' Equity Association:

"It took me nine years and four states to get my Equity Card!" - Equity member Mary Martello shares how she received her Equity card! #HIGMEChttps://t.co/M9mOJTl0NF pic.twitter.com/CHRmnJbI3L

— Actors' Equity (@ActorsEquity) May 29, 2019

AFGE:

.@AFGENational supports civil and equal rights for workers from all backgrounds. That’s why we applaud the House for passing the Equality Act that would prohibit discrimination against all LGBTQ Americans, including federal employees. #1u https://t.co/3BOy6RWzFE pic.twitter.com/6dblPPi9Z2

— AFGE (@AFGENational) May 29, 2019

AFSCME:

“If we’re going to change how we do things, who knows how to better do it than front-line staff. To give those people a voice and the opportunity to do their jobs more efficiently, that improves patient care.” https://t.co/3EE5attM4j

— AFSCME (@AFSCME) May 28, 2019

AFT:

"As teachers, we ... see the impact of discrimination on the faces of our kids. As a responsible adult & mandated reporter, it is my duty to stand up for ... my students." -MN Teacher of the Year Kelly Holstine on why she boycotted the White House https://t.co/G9AAVUot8j pic.twitter.com/BOEpv8CBgB

— AFT (@AFTunion) May 29, 2019

Air Line Pilots:

Airline #pilots want to make a very safe system even safer. #KeepFlyingSafe https://t.co/tmM6pKV2r9

— ALPA (@WeAreALPA) May 24, 2019

Alliance for Retired Americans:

Thanks for fighting for retirees @RepLawrence! We appreciate your votes to protect #Medicare and #SocialSecurity https://t.co/gS2DyX6R5z #RetireeHero #RetireeVR18 pic.twitter.com/ufXSSHMcR0

— Alliance Retirees (@ActiveRetirees) May 28, 2019

Amalgamated Transit Union:

CT Lawmakers Supporting Federal #Transit Worker Protection Bill https://t.co/2JwruoZjtx #publictransit #safebus pic.twitter.com/ld1L1DlU6e

— ATU, Transit Union (@ATUComm) May 15, 2019

American Federation of Musicians:

Outrageous! ALL musicians deserved to be paid fairly for ALL their work ALL the time. #1u #Organize! ✊?✊✊? https://t.co/DDRXbQujq1

— AFM (@The_AFM) May 24, 2019

American Postal Workers Union:

"The survey is being pushed immediately before the APWU will begin interest arbitration...There is more than a good chance that the results of this survey will be utilized, as has been done previously, in interest arbitration against you."#APWUnited #USPS https://t.co/VCjfJS4sOV

— APWU National (@APWUnational) May 21, 2019

Asian Pacific American Labor Alliance:

This #APAHM let's pledge to get #AAPI communities counted in the Census! We have everything you need to join our campaign here --> https://t.co/pRYCvgUoup pic.twitter.com/zepobCcK3A

— APALA (@APALAnational) May 13, 2019

Association of Flight Attendants-CWA:

Flight Attendants! Sign this petition to demand the DOT & FAA immediately implement our 10 hours rest & to encourage members of Congress to hold them accountable: https://t.co/WpCESqTDGs It's been 8 months since we achieved 10 hours min. rest. This is unacceptable! #Fightfor10 pic.twitter.com/VQhLxP61Yl

— AFA-CWA (@afa_cwa) May 28, 2019

BCTGM:

In 2016, @MDLZ outsourced 600 #Nabisco jobs to Mexico & paid workers as low as 97 cents/hr.

In 2017, CEO @Dirkvandeput took $42M pay package.

In 2018, shareholders rejected CEO pay & MDLZ then eliminated worker pensions.

That's not just low, that's #OreoLow. #1u pic.twitter.com/g3wTJcilRg

— BCTGM International (@BCTGM) May 15, 2019

Boilermakers:

Great presentations, @GlobalCCS & @ccsknowledge, at our #Boilermaker + Building Trades Town Hall yesterday. Great to see so many MPs, local officials & trade union members come out to learn about #CCUS & why it MUST be part of the climate change solution. https://t.co/aOt4oWSH4E pic.twitter.com/pFboMQslY9

— Boilermakers Union (@boilermakernews) May 24, 2019

Bricklayers:

We need investment in #infrastructure like school #construction, not the walls. #BuildSchoolsNotWall #buildfortomorrow #1u https://t.co/3dfAWQnHsE

— Bricklayers Union (@IUBAC) May 28, 2019

California School Employees Association:

Charter schools are among the nation’s most segregated, an Associated Press analysis found in 2017. #education4everyone https://t.co/siBkMJc1ry

— CSEA (@CSEA_Now) May 28, 2019

Coalition of Black Trade Unionists:

The @NAACP’s@Tiffanydloftin is dropping wisdom and wit at CBTU’s political townhall. #CBTUVotes #Be2020Ready pic.twitter.com/AHP4HqS571

— CBTU (@CBTU72) May 23, 2019

Coalition of Labor Union Women:

Nationwide, there are more than 5,000 outdoor statues of people of all sorts. But estimates show fewer than 400 of them (or 8%) are of women. https://t.co/NJQRFyK0UM

— CLUW National (@CLUWNational) May 26, 2019

Communications Workers of America:

Over the last 12 years, New York has lost nearly 40,000 call-center jobs because major corporations decided to ship them away. The practice of subsidizing corporations that destroy good, middle-class jobs must end now.https://t.co/lVTRd1jf3l

— CWA (@CWAUnion) May 29, 2019

Department for Professional Employees:

By joining together in union, physicians and other professionals can negotiate for more manageable workloads and other tools to prevent burnout. #1u https://t.co/Kuv58CniPY

— Department for Professional Employees (@DPEaflcio) May 29, 2019

Electrical Workers:

College isn't for everyone. The #IBEW is partnering with this Chicago-area school to let kids know about careers in the skilled trades. https://t.co/MN7qb2xEVV

— IBEW (@IBEW) May 24, 2019

Farm Labor Organizing Committee:

One distinctive of FLOC is our members drive our initiatives. They speak and we get their permission to speak on issues. We are made up of some of the hardest working poor people: migrant/seasonal farm workers/ & city dwellers in urban Toledo. Here are some NC members: pic.twitter.com/7LQC5x1DTg

— Farm Labor Organizing Committee (@SupportFLOC) May 28, 2019

Federal Employees:

NFFE's statement on the Trump Administration's plan to close multiple Civilian Conservation Corps Centers. https://t.co/t2ghdvF0fU pic.twitter.com/PC49QBraP9

— NFFE (@NFFE_Union) May 24, 2019

Fire Fighters:

Cancer leading cause of death among #firefighters https://t.co/wTFGHHLRrt

— IAFF (@IAFFNewsDesk) May 29, 2019

Heat and Frost Insulators:

Did you know you can get paid to go to school? There's no catch. The Insulators Union wants to recruit you for the upcoming Mechanical Insulators class. Put yourself in a competitive field and work with the best instructors! Visit https://t.co/l2fUX4vhtf

— Insulators Union (@InsulatorsUnion) May 29, 2019

International Labor Communications Association:

“I went straight from college to work as a union organizer in Mississippi,” said the late author and working people's storyteller #1u https://t.co/s036AXWo3I

— Labor Communications (@ILCAonline) May 28, 2019

Ironworkers:

An inspirational story of a small business owner who defied the odds to achieve success. Happy National Small Business Week! #SmallisMighty
View case study: https://t.co/TpfQ0F0LwRhttps://t.co/Zx5AmbUZ95

— Ironworkers. (@TheIronworkers) May 24, 2019

Jobs with Justice:

.@Google is taking full advantage of contract employees--who now outnumber those actually employed by Google. Being a contractor often means lower wages and fewer perks for working people. https://t.co/mctYrI8Igb

— Jobs With Justice (@jwjnational) May 29, 2019

Laborers:

LIUNA is proud to provide the best training and apprenticeship programs in North America. Congrats Local 1059! https://t.co/FJ2JKv42ER

— LIUNA (@LIUNA) May 28, 2019

LCLAA:

“If we keep avoiding the issues that are damaging our air, plants, and waters, then we will fail to keep our environment and communities in existence.” - Erica Capetillo #Trabajadoras #LatinoWorkerPriorities #ProtectNEPA pic.twitter.com/41iNRxsiaV

— LCLAA (@LCLAA) May 29, 2019

Machinists:

Meet personal support worker Jamillah Wyllie of @iamawcanada.#MemberMonday #MembersoftheIAM pic.twitter.com/YJuadB8CRv

— Machinists Union (@MachinistsUnion) May 27, 2019

Metal Trades:

Union workers at the Hanford nuclear reservation are entitled to back pay estimated at more than $140,000 for sick leave after Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., took up their complaint.

Read more here: https://t.co/Da0sLRUC26 https://t.co/CKoN1PNcAJ

— Metal Trades Dept. (@metaltradesafl) May 28, 2019

Mine Workers:

The United Mine Workers would like to thank the @NAACP for supporting our legislation and standing with us while we fight to secure the pensions our miners deserve! https://t.co/0P1I8UWW4E

— United Mine Workers (@MineWorkers) May 29, 2019

National Air Traffic Controllers Association:

Team USA is forming for World Controllers’ Cup 2019. As 28 countries and over 200 controllers and aviation professionals play Nov. 3-9 in Riviera Maya, Mexico,
Team USA invites NATCA members to join them. Visit https://t.co/OI05cH88K5 for more information. pic.twitter.com/eUJm99ERLx

— NATCA (@NATCA) May 28, 2019

National Association of Letter Carriers:

Nominate a letter carrier #hero! Letter Carriers are in constant touch with the public & so when they notice something unusual, they go out of their way to rescue people. Since 1974, the NALC has been recognizing letter carriers for these selfless deeds. https://t.co/LCiXRfcJJx pic.twitter.com/8EAkvMtNK2

— Letter Carriers (@NALC_National) May 29, 2019

National Domestic Workers Alliance:

Time off is good for both workers AND employers. Vacation and paid time off from work is associated with improved health, lower stress, lower likelihood of depression, and more happiness at home and at work.

— Domestic Workers (@domesticworkers) May 28, 2019

National Nurses United:

BREAKING: Federal #WorkplaceViolence prevention legislation has just picked up several new cosponsors!

? Join NNU nurses in taking action --> Ask you Congress member to support H.R.1309: https://t.co/HL0BDgIMiq #WednesdayMotivation pic.twitter.com/fYEPXEgVMx

— NationalNursesUnited (@NationalNurses) May 29, 2019

National Taxi Workers Alliance:

Report: Uber and Lyft’s rise tanked wheelchair access to taxis – The San Francisco Examiner https://t.co/gEf0AnOly3

— NY Taxi Workers (@NYTWA) May 23, 2019

News Guild:

Solidarity with the workers of #GateHouse -- those who are facing #layoffs & those who are left to do more with less. We are fighting for a voice at work and for journalism that serves our communities. DM us to find out how to form a Guild unit. #SaveLocalNews #GateHouselayoffs pic.twitter.com/iC3q84lE6B

— NewsGuild (@news_guild) May 23, 2019

NFL Players Association:

.@josh_dobbs1 ✈️ #AthleteAnd Pilot https://t.co/Do7mW3p4Gn

— NFLPA (@NFLPA) May 29, 2019

North America's Building Trades Unions:

Nevada Governor @SteveSisolak passed a bill restoring #PrevailingWage to public construction projects in the state!

“As of now, any gov’t project that costs more than $250,000 must pay a prevailing wage. Assembly Bill 136 lowers that to $100,000.” ??https://t.co/ck5Pf2R259

— The Building Trades (@NABTU) May 29, 2019

Office and Professional Employees:

“Finding a job in the US is pretty easy these days. Finding a good one isn’t.” #1u https://t.co/JSC3fLP28P

— OPEIU (@opeiu) May 29, 2019

Painters and Allied Trades:

Check out the documentary "Bridge Brothers", which explores the lives of our own IUPAT bridge painters, working on two of Philly's most important bridges.https://t.co/8czTZLviKB

— GoIUPAT✊? (@GoIUPAT) May 25, 2019

Plasterers and Cement Masons:

“Infrastructure is not a partisan issue. It is an American priority. Our nation’s leaders must find common cause — as we have — and once again make America a global leader on infrastructure.” Hear, hear @RichardTrumka & @ThomasJDonohue! #BuildForTomorrow https://t.co/51iE9WYKCY

— OPCMIA International (@opcmiaintl) May 26, 2019

Professional Aviation Safety Specialists:

Over 1,000 gov jobs in rural communities lost if program cut that trains low-income, rural students to respond to natl emergencies. Wildfires rising in number & severity. Fed govt needs all hands to combat them. We support our brothers & sisters @NFFE_Union fighting this action. https://t.co/dAX0m1eYoc

— PASS (@PASSNational) May 29, 2019

Professional and Technical Engineers:

This is a prime example of why professionals are organizing more and more! Solidarity with these workers!https://t.co/SuIZTHjloa

— IFPTE (@IFPTE) May 20, 2019

Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Workers:

Wow! Great news!

"This is a victory for farm workers, as we have finally had our day in court. All workers deserve to have a voice and be heard at their place of work, and farm workers deserve to be treated with respect and dignity." https://t.co/ZSeWk2LbM0

— RWDSU (@RWDSU) May 24, 2019

SAG-AFTRA:

The latest digital issue of #sagaftra magazine is ready for your weekend viewing. Click here to check out what we’ve been up to! https://t.co/9dtVZI3Jka pic.twitter.com/1Azza7eBj2

— SAG-AFTRA (@sagaftra) May 24, 2019

School Administrators:

Union actors are fighting for a fair wage and health care. It's time we join together and stand our ground. AFSA stands with our sisters and brothers at @SAG/AFTRA. #StrikeBBH pic.twitter.com/CZV8Fg5MrT

— AFSA Leadership (@AFSAUnion) March 22, 2019

Seafarers:

#NationalMaritimeDay SIU President Mike Sacco greets apprentices ⁦@DOTMARADpic.twitter.com/jYkLdlkhBE

— Seafarers Union (@SeafarersUnion) May 22, 2019

Solidarity Center:

In corporations' quest to maximize profits, #migrantworkers forced to fish on boats for months, sleeping in dirty cargo holds & subject to beatings & often, denied wages. #forcedlabor #modernslavery @GCMigration @FES_Migration @GAATW_IS https://t.co/TQDu2g2ioe

— Solidarity Center (@SolidarityCntr) May 29, 2019

TCU/IAM:

TCU/IAM Local 626 member Janice Scott is living the American dream. She used the benefits provided by the the union to obtain an Associates Degree in Business Management from Eastern Gateway Community College (EGCC). pic.twitter.com/H9xueCiYyp

— Transportation Communications Union/IAM (@TCUnionHQ) May 15, 2019

Theatrical Stage Employees:

All people are equal & all people deserve respect & fair treatment. On March 20th, 2019, International President @matthewloeb established the IATSE Pride Committee, which is tasked with coordinating activities that support LGBTQ+ workers in the entertainment industry. #IATSEPride pic.twitter.com/SuIOZvNy1k

— IATSE (@IATSE) March 28, 2019

Transport Workers:

The TWU supports the Cabin Air Safety Act of 2019. We are fighting for a solution for this public health crisis! #ToxicFumes #ToxicFumeEvent #ToxicCabinAir #CabinAirSafety #OrganizeTheSkies https://t.co/sc1MUGapsd

— TWU (@transportworker) May 29, 2019

Transportation Trades Department:

America’s transit workers are in desperate need of protections. It’s long past time for Congress to step up and pass the Transit Worker and Pedestrian Protection Act. #DriveOutAssault https://t.co/Aci1fGXKLw

— Transp. Trades Dept. (@TTDAFLCIO) May 28, 2019

UAW:

"The basic promise of America is that regular folks can work hard and get ahead if there are a fair set of rules. We need to find a way to restore this promise to working people." - @RepGolden https://t.co/Zt62ufCYIQ

— UAW (@UAW) May 29, 2019

UFCW:

"In front of my 4 children, I will get to do something I never thought I would, I will walk across the stage and receive my Associates Degree in Criminal Justice." -UFCW Free College program graduate and @UFCW227 chief steward Amy Beasley
More info here: https://t.co/g3KSw5Uw6S pic.twitter.com/455M1heHbA

— UFCW (@UFCW) May 29, 2019

Union Veterans Council:

Today we pay respect to our fallen brothers and sisters, not only the ones that lost their lives on the battlefield, but also the ones who return home to face an invisible enemy.
Let us recommit today to always remember the fallen and fight like hell for the living.#1u pic.twitter.com/AfyWGoegKx

— Union Veterans Council (@unionveterans) May 27, 2019

UNITE HERE:

That's right - Americans know that people who come to this country for a better life, who work hard, raise families, and contribute to their communities epitomize the American dream - and deserve to stay.#DreamAndPromiseNow #TPSJustice #1u https://t.co/RAfVkdVeKH

— UNITE HERE (@unitehere) May 29, 2019

United Steelworkers:

How Volkswagen Has Gotten Away With Union-Busting: https://t.co/5JbhJuv3Sm

— United Steelworkers (@steelworkers) May 26, 2019

Utility Workers:

Prevailing Wage laws ensure fair pay, higher safety standards, and quality union jobs. It’s time for WV to bring back #PrevailingWage #1u https://t.co/8s8AgftjKT

— UWUA National (@The_UWUA) May 28, 2019

Working America:

The United States is the only advanced economy that does not federally mandate any paid vacation days or holidays.

About one in four workers in the U.S. don't get any paid vacation time or holidays at all.https://t.co/921AZVtosZ

— Working America (@WorkingAmerica) May 29, 2019

Writers Guild of America, East:

Parents shouldn't have to worry about choosing between “prioritizing time with the kids [and] focusing on the means of providing for them" — fair union contracts with strong family leave policies are one way to empower families to choose both. #1u https://t.co/JNZE7j7dAV

— Writers Guild of America, East (@WGAEast) May 23, 2019 Kenneth Quinnell Fri, 05/31/2019 - 07:11

Asian Pacific American Heritage Month Profiles: Jung Sai Garment Work Strikers

Thu, 05/30/2019 - 08:38
Asian Pacific American Heritage Month Profiles: Jung Sai Garment Work Strikers Cathy Cade

For Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, the AFL-CIO is spotlighting various Asian Americans and Pacific Americans who have worked and continue to work at the intersection of civil and labor rights. Our next profile is about the Jung Sai Garment Work Strikers.

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, San Francisco's Chinatown was a hotbed of garment manufacturing. Large companies handled the purchase of materials, the design of garments and the cutting of textiles. Contract shops, which used largely immigrant labor, handled the assembly work, sewing and cutting. Manufacturing companies pressured the contractors for low bids, and since entry into the industry was relatively cheap, an oversupply of contractors meant that the companies had the upper hand in any labor disputes. If a contractor paid its workers higher wages, the manufacturers would just go to other contractors who paid lower wages.

The system also allowed the manufacturers to avoid any blame for the sweatshop conditions in the contractors' factories. The International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union (ILGWU), the forerunner of UNITE HERE, attempted to organize the seamstresses in San Francisco in the 1960s, but had limited success. By 1973, the garmet industry was cited by the then-called California State Division of Industrial Welfare, with a one-week probe finding more than 600 violations in just 92 shops in the Bay Area. Many of the contractors were aware of the loopholes that allowed them to evade compliance with state labor law.

The Jung Sai factory was a large plant in Chinatown that in the early 1970s was owned by Esprit de Corp, a company that made clothing for young people. Work in the factory was plagued by harassment, intimidation, speed-ups, lack of breaks, low wages and disrespect for the workforce that consisted largely of Chinese immigrant women. The factory was owned by Douglas Tompkins, who was strongly anti-union. Among the worst violations were daily rationing of toilet paper to two roles for 135 employees and the firing of workers with experience and replacing them with cheaper workers with less skill. Workers who showed they had skills in English were fired and workers were rarely, if ever, allowed to talk with white, non-Chinese speaking management.

On July 4, 1974, four workers (Lily Lee, Lam Bick Chung, Nam Hing Leung and Frankie Ma) began distributing and collecting union authorization cards. While most workers were supportive, management hit back hard. Ma, notably the best of the pro-union leaders in terms of speaking English, was fired within the week. Workers were subjected to psychological pressure and retaliation. Tompkins held a meeting to inform the workers of his position on unionization and the workers' demands. The meeting was filled with threats and offers of higher pay for abandoning unionization. The next day, the workers voted to strike, and they walked out on July 15. Two days later, Tompkins locked the workers out and closed the factory. Dozens of strikers were arrested, and a driver working for Tompkins hit several protesters with a truck. Police harassed the protesters and refused to call an ambulance until forced to.

On July 24, the workers established a Jung Sai Strike Support Committee that began to meet on a regular basis. The Jung Sai workers expressed solidarity with others in the city fighting back against similar treatment. The strike got support from outside the industry, too, as the struggles of Chinese immigrants was an inextricable part of the story. Among the successful tactics the committee launched was a caravan of 30 cars that drove through the streets of Chinatown telling everyone of the conditions at the factory. News of other strikes around the country were coming fast and furious, with more than 1,000 strikes in 1974 alone. The Jung Sai strikers were part of a nationwide movement, and their action inspired others to stand up for themselves as well.

Tompkins responded with more use of police and the courts to undercut the strike. A sympathetic judge granted the company a restraining order against too many pickets. He also arranged to "sell" the plant to his manager, who would supposedly open up the plant again and rehire not only the strikers but other fired workers as well. Other promises of guaranteed work, improved benefits and higher salaries all turned out to be false. 

Esprit de Corp and Tompkins refused to do anything until they were forced to in December 1975. A judge ordered the plant to be reopened, workers hired back and back pay paid out, among other improvements. The average settlement for workers was in the $8,000–$12,000 range. The company used legal maneuvers to delay the payouts for more than four years after the ruling, but eventually it was forced to settle.

Not only did the strike eventually result in gains for the Jung Sai workers, it energized immigrant activism in the Bay Area and beyond, particularly among Chinese immigrants. While the seamstresses at Jung Sai engaged in marches, car caravans, plant shutdowns, community rallies, press conferences, mass media events and an immigrant workers' cultural festival, the rest of the country watched. And many learned from what the Jung Sai strikers did.

Source: "Jung Sai Garment Workers Strike," by Harvey Dong, which appears in Ten Years that Shook the City: San Francisco 1968–1978, edited by Chris Carlsson, 2011. 

Kenneth Quinnell Thu, 05/30/2019 - 09:38

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