Author Archives: Joe Doc

MAY 1 – The 8th Annual May Day USA March, Rally and Celebration in Philly at Clark Park!

By The May Day USA Education Committee Philadelphia

– FROM THE 8-HOUR DAY TO THE FIGHT FOR $15 – WHEN WE ORGANIZE WE CAN WIN!

– Unbeknownst to many Americans, May Day was founded in the United States after the nationwide general strike for the eight-hour workday that started on May 1, 1886. The annual May Day USA Education Committee celebration – taking place at Clark Park in West Philly this year – highlights this hidden labor history as well as today’s struggles and past labor struggles honored by the Elmwood Park Labor Monument right here in our own City of Brotherly Love! [See below for more on the Labor Monument.]

The 8th annual “May Day USA March, Rally and Family Celebration” on Friday, May 1st 2015, kicks off at 2PM with a rally and march – co-run by our allies at “Fight for $15” and “$15 Now” – calling for a livable wage for all workers — starting in front of the McDonalds at 40th & Walnut Streets and ending up at Clark Park (43rd Street & Baltimore Avenue) where our celebration will begin at 3PM. The Clark Park rally and celebration will include a DJ, live music, singers, poets, a BBQ by the Veterans For Peace Chapter 31 “Precision Grill Team,” children’s entertainment, and an array of notable speakers from Labor and other allied organizations in Philly. We will also be awarding the annual Aggie Moran Human Rights Awards.

PLEASE SPREAD THE WORD AND JOIN US!

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The Elmwood Park Labor Monument, erected in 2010, was commissioned by the Fairmount Park Art Association in cooperation with the Philadelphia Parks and Recreation Department and represents ten years of perseverance by the neighborhood organization, The Friends of Elmwood Park, to build a tribute to Labor in their community. More info: http://associationforpublicart.org/interactive-art-map/the-labor-monument-philadelphias-tribute-to-the-american-worker

Source: https://www.facebook.com/events/634069030057459/

Newspaper Guild Leadership is Fighting For Wages, Healthcare and The Livelihood of It’s Members!

– For five years, Newspaper Guild members have given up two weeks of pay saving the company about $1 million a year.

Now when we want to devote those funds to our health and welfare fund, the company is balking. That $1 million won’t even fill the $2.5 million hole created by the company’s refusal to increase its fund contribution in 15 years. But it will help.

The company says we can’t afford furloughs. That it’s embarrassing to the company.

But consider this: Can any one of you afford to pay $4,000 (for single coverage) to $8,500 (for family coverage) MORE a year for health care? That would be on top of the $20 a week, or $1,040 a year singles pay as well as the $750 deductible bringing their total annual cost to $5,790. Those with family coverage already pay $50 a week or $2,600 a year plus a $1,500 deductible. Their new total would be $12,600 a year.

Have you thought about what that will do to your budget? Can you stay in your apartment? Your home? What else can you cut from your budget? Contributions to a retirement fund in lieu of the pension the company killed? A car, vacations, a college education for your children? How about clothes and food?

Not only has the company taken our money but the company’s chief financial officer won’t even acknowledge the hundreds of hours of free overtime that employees give this company every year saving hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Now, ask yourself, how did the company spend your money? Did it succeed in finding ways to improve our revenue stream? Or, did it pay our members not to work in a series of buyouts which created more work for the rest of us? Did select executives take raises and bonuses?

Where do you think that $903 profit sharing check came from? Our givebacks.

It is our money and our sacrifices, our commitment and our ever increasing workload that drives this company. But this company doesn’t think it has to pay for that by providing adequate health care benefits. Instead, it wants you to cover yet another management failure to increase revenue.

The problem for the company is that we have nothing left to give because they’ve sucked it all up. Not only does upper management refuse to acknowledge that, it refuses to budget for the expense of having workers.

Management behavior in these negotiations is strong evidence for you to understand that when it matters, your sacrifices have not been appreciated or even noticed.

Management feels it does not have an obligation to you.

That is what is embarrassing.

In solidarity,

Howard Gensler

Bill Ross

Diane Mastrull

Cindy Burton

Melanie Burney

Regina Medina

Brian McCrone

Let’s Make Safe Jobs the Number One Priority by Making Our Workers Memorial Day Observances Successful

By The PA. AFL-CIO

– President Bloomingdale and Secretary-Treasurer Snyder encourage you to participate in our many Workers’ Memorial Day events and encourage all of your members and co-workers to participate in one or more of these observances if possible.

Area Labor Federations, Central Labor Councils and Local Unions will be hosting these events, along with friends. The events are listed on our calendar, CLICK HERE. Observances will include prayer services, memorial marches, candlelight vigils, the laying of wreaths, as well as the reading of names of deceased workers and the tolling of bells. Once again our unions and volunteers will be making these events a solemn and lasting reminder of the need to continue to fight for safe jobs and improved working conditions for every working man and woman.

Every day 12 Workers are killed on the job and thousands of workers are injured or die due to unsafe working conditions and exposure to hazardous substances.

“Job safety has always been a top priority for working men and women and until every job and every workplace is safe we will continue working and fighting to improve protections and safety. Workers’ Memorial Day is our opportunity to underscore our commitment to each other to be sure that safety is always placed ahead of corporate profits,” Bloomingdale said.

“One life lost is one too many. A union contract and a strong union presence in our economic and political life are still just as important to safe jobs today as they were in previous generations. Our commitment and energy to protect workers from unsafe jobs will not subside until every worker can go to work and return home safe and healthy at the end of the day,” Snyder said.

Source: http://www.paaflcio.org/?p=5920

New Poll: Jim Kenney Continues To Lead

Survey underscores significant economic concerns among voters, reveals consistent favorable support for a series of specific policy proposals

PHILADELPHIA – April 23, 2015 – As the Philadelphia Democratic primary election enters its final month, a new poll commissioned by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), finds that Jim Kenney, Anthony Hardy Williams, and Lynne Abraham are still locked in a tight three-way race.
Jim Kenney (26 percent) holds a slim 1-point lead over Anthony Hardy Williams (25 percent) and a 4-point advantage over Lynne Abraham (22 percent), with nearly 1-in-5 likely Democratic primary voters still undecided (18 percent).

The poll, conducted by GBA Strategies which surveys 587 likely Democratic primary voters, also finds that Philadelphia voters embrace economic priorities focused squarely on wages and increased opportunity for those struggling to get by in an economy that rewards big corporations and the wealthy at the expense of workers and the middle class.

In addition, among voters, consistently popular economic messages and policy priorities for the next Mayor emerge across typical dividing lines in the city’s politics, including age, gender, race, and geography.

Pa. schools are the nation’s most inequitable. The new governor wants to fix that.

By Emma Brown

– PHILADELPHIA — At Martin Luther King High, a hulking half-full school here, there aren’t enough textbooks to go around. If teachers want to make a photocopy, they have to buy paper themselves. Though an overwhelming majority of students are living in poverty, no social worker is available to help. Private donations allow for some dance and music classes, but they serve just 60 of the school’s 1,200 students.

At Lower Merion High, 10 miles away in a suburb of stately stone homes, copy paper and textbooks are available but are rarely necessary: Each student has a school-provided laptop. A pool allows for lifeguarding classes, and an arts wing hosts courses in photography, ceramics, studio art and jewelry making. The campus has a social worker.

While there always have been inequalities among the nation’s public schools, the gap in spending between public schools in the poorest and most-affluent communities has grown during the past decade.

Nowhere is that gap wider than in Pennsylvania, according to federal data. School districts with the highest poverty rates here receive one-third fewer state and local tax dollars, per pupil, than the most affluent districts. This spring, the new governor has outlined an ambitious plan to address the inequities, but it faces opposition at the statehouse. At the same time, a lawsuit over inadequate school funding is making its way through the courts, and Education Secretary Arne Duncan has called for change.

“When the state systematically, significantly underfunds children who weren’t born with a silver spoon in their mouths, something is wrong with that picture,” Duncan said last month at a Philadelphia elementary school.

Spending on school operations — not including school construction or debt payments — ranges from less than $8,700 per student in a coal country district, one of the state’s lowest-achieving, to more than $26,600 in a tony Philadelphia suburb.

Philadelphia falls in the middle, spending about $13,000 per student to operate schools, compared with about $23,000 per child in Lower Merion, according to state data.

Tom Wolf, the new governor of Pennsylvania, wants greater parity.

The chief executive of a kitchen-cabinet business who had never held public office, Wolf campaigned last year on promises to tax the gas industry to raise money for education. The strategy paid off: Polls showed that voters, after watching public schools sustain deep cuts, considered education the top issue in the race. In November, as Republicans won sweeping victories across the country, Wolf became the nation’s only Democrat to unseat a Republican governor.

“There was a wide recognition that the system was broken,” Wolf said in a recent interview, adding that cuts to public school funding were both an economic and moral mistake. “One of the great civil injustices is to say we’re going to make your education dependent on your Zip code.”

Advocates and teachers have cheered his proposal to increase education funding by $1 billion. But Pennsylvania faces a $2 billion budget deficit even without that new spending on schools, and so Wolf’s plan depends on changes in state taxes, including a new tax on gas production and increases in both personal income and sales taxes.

Those ideas are not popular with Republican lawmakers, who control both chambers of the state legislature and want to cut costs by overhauling public pension plans before considering new taxes.

GOP leaders point out that the amount of money devoted to education isn’t the only variable that matters; just as important is how those dollars are spent.

“We’ll do our best to make sure we provide all our schools with the resources we need to educate our children,” said the Pennsylvania Senate’s majority leader, Jake Corman (R-Centre County). But, he added, “What makes us think that we can’t do more with less?”
“We don’t gripe”

For students at King High School, it’s hard to imagine having less.

“Many students don’t feel like there’s anything for them here,” senior Kevin Ramsey said.

In 2011, after posting low test scores for years, King became a “promise academy,” an approach to turning around schools that includes a longer school day and a rich set of extracurricular offerings — such as rowing, archery or a poetry club — meant to entice reluctant students.

But after one year, budget cuts put an end to the extra learning time and the enrichment activities, Principal William C. Wade said. King also absorbed hundreds of students from a rival school that was closed to save money.

Wade said the cuts have made it more difficult to transform King. Some class sizes have risen into the 40s. All students are from low-income families; one-third read proficiently, and half graduate on time.

“We don’t gripe,” Wade said. “I think we’re doing well with what we have.”

Philadelphia has gained national attention for its cutting of librarians, counselors, nurses, summer school and other programs and staff. But many districts are quietly feeling the same squeeze, including in poor rural and suburban communities.

Part of the problem, according to Wolf and education advocates, is that Pennsylvania’s 500 school districts rely more heavily than the national average on local property taxes. Though poor communities often tax themselves at higher rates than wealthier communities, their low tax base means they can’t raise as much money as wealthier towns.

Advocates say inequities deepened in 2011, Republican Gov. Tom Corbett’s first year in office. About $1 billion in education spending evaporated as Corbett not only cut state funding, but also did not replace federal stimulus funds that had expired.

At the same time, Corbett scrapped a school funding formula that aimed to send more state dollars to schools serving high numbers of needy students. Poorer districts couldn’t fill the hole, and more than 20,000 education jobs were lost.

In November, a coalition of parents, school districts and the Pennsylvania NAACP sued, contending that the state’s school funding system violated the state constitution’s guarantee of a “thorough and efficient system of public education.”

Ninety-five percent of the state’s school districts didn’t have enough money to provide students with the education they needed to meet state academic standards in 2006, according to a study completed that year at the request of state lawmakers. The state’s schools needed an additional $4.4 billion, the study found, and the poorest districts needed funding increases of close to 40 percent.

“We recognize there will always be differences in what is spent,” said Maura McInerney, an attorney at the Education Law Center, which filed the lawsuit on behalf of the plaintiffs. “What we’re asking for is that every child have a chance to meet state standards.”
Wolf’s funding details

Political observers in Pennsylvania were surprised by the breadth of Wolf’s budget proposals when he unveiled a fundamental restructuring of the state’s taxes in March.

Wolf proposed a new 5 percent tax on the state’s natural gas industry, which he says would raise $1 billion for education.

He also proposed cutting business taxes and spending billions on property tax relief that he says would particularly benefit poor school districts. To pay for that relief, he proposed to raise personal income and sales taxes.

And he wants Pennsylvania to adopt a fair school funding formula, as the state is one of a handful without one.

Corman, the Senate’s Republican majority leader, said he hopes to conclude budget season by June 30 without raising taxes. The fairness of the current school funding system depends on where you sit, he said. Lawmakers representing well-to-do areas are likely to object to Wolf’s plan, he said, because it would send more of their money out of their communities.

States on average spend 15.6 percent less in their poorest schools, up from 10.8 percent a decade ago, according to federal data.

“School funding is the most political thing that we do, and it’s not necessarily Republican or Democrat, it’s all politics is local,” Corman said. “It’s what your school districts are getting.”

But the nation’s poorest communities don’t always get less. Nearly two dozen states, including both red and blue states, spend more in their poorest schools than they spend in their most affluent.

Tori Klevan, a senior and student journalist at Lower Merion High, scrutinized her school’s budget, looking for a story. Then she looked at Philadelphia school budgets.

The differences floored her.

“I realized students at a school 3 1/2 miles away from mine . . . everything about their high school experience is different than mine,” Klevan said. “I couldn’t really wrap my head around that.”

She plans to spend a week in a Philadelphia high school to make a documentary about the differences she finds. “I want more people to know about this,” she said. “I can’t believe more people don’t know.”

Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/pa-schools-are-the-nations-most-inequitable-the-new-governor-wants-to-fix-that/2015/04/22/3d2f4e3e-e441-11e4-81ea-0649268f729e_story.html