Author Archives: Joe Doc

Workers Say the Fight for 15 Isn’t Just About Raises—It’s a Fight for Meaning in Their Lives

BY David Moberg

– If Douglas Hunter succeeds with his plans on April 15, the public’s attention this year may be diverted from grumbling about taxes to demanding higher wages for millions of low-income service workers—including many who earn so little at their jobs that they need public subsidies for a minimal standard of living.

Hunter, 53, is a leader nationally and in Chicago of the Fight for $15, an ambitious campaign that New York City fast food workers launched two-and-a-half years ago. But other cities picked up the call, then other occupations, from retail workers and childcare providers to adjunct professors. It has caught the imagination of the public as well and notched some notable victories, such as a $15 minimum wage in Seattle and Seatac in Washington state, as well as in San Francisco.

“We can’t wait. Jewel isn’t waiting. People’s Gas isn’t waiting,” he says, referencing a Chicago grocery chain and natural gas utility, respectively. “We need higher wages to support our families. Many people thought we were crazy two years ago when we walked off our jobs in New York and demanded $15 an hour. They don’t think we’re crazy now.”

Workers’ right to form a union free from employer interference, the second goal of the campaign, often gets less attention than the pay hike, and the protest actions have not yet produced a formal national or local union recognized as a bargaining agent by McDonald’s or any other fast food employer. But the movement is already becoming a de facto union through its organizing of workers into aggressive and effective direct action, its attraction of widespread labor and community support and its legal challenges to employer abuse of the franchise model of business organization.

On Tuesday, Hunter, a member of the national organizing committee, led a press conference in Chicago announcing plans for the April 15 protest, billed as “the largest low wage worker mobilization in modern history.” Organizers also describe the event as a strike for many workers, but the planned rallies will involve many who will not actually walk out of their jobs, including community groups, student organizations, social justice advocates (such as #BlackLivesMatter, raising the slogan than “black workers’ lives matter”), and faith organizations (such as religious activists who “fasted for 15” last weekend in Chicago).

Actions are planned for about 200 cities in the U.S. and for allied demonstrations around the world in countries such as Italy, Switzerland, France, New Zealand, Brazil, Japan and Bangladesh, many organized with help from the International Union of Foodworkers, a global union federation.

The low-wage workers beyond the fast food business had distinct complaints but identified with the problems fast food workers have with low pay, unpredictable hours, bad working conditions and unsympathetic managers—circumstances compounded for students who face growing debt for school as they simultaneously work for inadequate pay.

The April 15 rally will include students for the first time from more than 170 universities. “The fight for 15 on April 15 is not just about fast food workers,” Montserrat Cazeres, a student at the University of Illinois at Chicago, who is also a retail worker. “It’s about the future for students like myself. It becomes difficult when you have to choose between what you need for your class or if you’re going to pay your bills.”

Even after graduating, a growing share of university instructors are part-time, insecure, ill-paid adjuncts, such as Matt Hoffman, who divides his teaching among several universities. “Almost one third of us part-timers live near or below the poverty line,” he says. “Faculty across Chicago and across the nation have drawn a lot of inspiration from fast food workers in the Fight For 15. Contingent faculty are in the same boat. We struggle with our bills, we have no benefits, and we have little job stability.”

Many of these conditions have worsened, but what’s remarkable is that this dismal state of affairs has persisted so long with so little protest. Hunter says he can understand how people can change, from grudging acceptance of a miserable lot to a desire for change. An African-American from the city’s west side, Hunter is the single father and sole financial supporter of a 16-year-old daughter. For the past four years, he has worked at McDonald’s, now earning $9.25 an hour.

Hunter only joined the Fight For 15 a year ago. “I didn’t want to join. It took some time. I was committed to my job. I thought I was doing what I was supposed to do. But in reality I was not.” Managers discouraged him from getting involved: “Don’t be part of it,” they said. “They’re wasting their time.”

But his daughter changed his way of looking at the world.

“My daughter and I were having a discussion one night,” Hunter said. “I was complaining about what I wasn’t able to do. But she said, ‘What are you doing?’ I thought about it long and hard. I went to work the next day. The organizers came around, and I said, This is something I can do. I want to have a say. And my daughter supported me 100 percent. Now it feels good every day. She feels proud of me. “

As organizers explained his legal rights, and he saw that other strikers returned to their jobs, he grew more confident. He won recognition from other workers, winning positions of leadership, as well as from his daughter and her friends. He also developed a new sense of morality, a view that justified opposition to injustice and challenge to illegitimate authority. The movement also helped open up his social universe and expand his sense of solidarity with workers around the world—which is what Douglas says so excites him about the April 15 actions.

“I remember when we were out at Oak Brook last year,” he said. He was part of a protest on the McDonald’s Chicago suburban corporate campus that involved a sit-in blockade of a street leading to the office complex and arrests for the acts of civil disobedience.

“It was the first time I was arrested for doing something right.” For Duncan, the Fight for 15 has turned into a fight not just for money or a union, but a fight for meaning in his life and a moral community. That fight is part of what will continue to grow on April 15.

Source – http://inthesetimes.com/working/entry/17801/workers_say_the_fight_for_15_isnt_just_about_raisesits_a_fight_for_meaning

Obama’s fourth veto protects unionization rules

By Gregory Korte

– President Obama vetoed a congressional resolution seeking to overturn new unionization voting rules Tuesday, keeping in place procedures that will allow a more streamlined process for workers to vote to unionize.

Republicans said those new rules would allow for “ambush elections,” and tried to roll back the new National Labor Relations Board rule with a congressional resolution of disapproval.

It’s the second veto of the year for Obama, and the fourth of his presidency. More vetoes are sure to come: the White House has issued 17 specific veto threats on bills working their way through Congress, and several others still being drafted in committee.

With Congress out of session for its Easter recess, Obama issued a “pocket veto” of the resolution. But as he’s done twice before, he also sent the Senate a veto notice “to leave no doubt that the resolution is being vetoed.”

The resolution passed the Senate 53 to 46 and the House 232 to 186, with all Democrats and three Republicans voting no. Under the Congressional Review Act, Congress could still override the veto, although Republicans are well short of the two-thirds majorities necessary.

House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., said the veto shows that Obama is passing up opportunities to work with the Republican-controlled Congress to help the economy.

“Ambush elections don’t help workers. Instead, they bully workers into accepting unionization as fast as possible. That’s not pro-worker. That’s pro-union, and there’s a big difference,” McCarthy said in a statement.

But Obama said the new rules were “common-sense, modest changes to streamline the voting process for folks who wanted to join a union.” If workers want to join a union, “they should be able to do so, and we shouldn’t be making it impossible for that to happen,” he said.

Obama also announced he would hold a summit on worker’s rights at the White House this fall. “Part of what we want to do is to make sure that we give workers the capacity to have their voices heard, to have some influence in the workplace, to make sure that they’re partners in building up the U.S. economy, and that growth is broad-based, and that everybody is benefiting just as everybody is contributing,” he said.

Source – http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2015/03/31/obama-nlrb-unionization-ambush-election/70718822/

The Philadelphia Coalition Of Labor Union Women Annual Benefit For Women Against Abuse

– THE PHILADELPHIA COALITION OF LABOR UNION WOMEN: ANNUAL BENEFIT FOR WOMEN AGAINST ABUSE

When – Tuesday, March 31, 2015 – 5:30 p.m.

Where – WORKERS UNITED: 22 S. 22nd Street, 2nd floor, Joint Board Room, Philadelphia, PA 19103

(Some parking available in building garage after 5:00 p.m.)

In honor of Women’s History Month, we are hosting a workshop on “Why Courts Matter”. There are three levels of the Federal Court System: District Court, Circuit Court and Supreme Court. The Supreme Court only reviews 80 cases a year, which leaves the majority of cases to the District and Circuit Courts. Electing Judges who represent the general population is essential. Courts make decisions on workers’ rights, protected class discrimination, campaign financing and many other issues critical to workers and women.

This is our 17th annual benefit for this UAW-staffed shelter for women and children in crisis. Due to space limitations, only these items can be accepted by the agency – all items must be NEW! Financial donations are especially needed as public funding continues to drop. Please consider running a donation drive at your union or workplace.

Women’s Winter coats, jackets, hat, gloves & shoes/boots; Backpacks & school supplies; Muslim garb for women; Gift cards (No Wal-Mart!); Diapers (all sizes), pull-ups, wipes, formula; baby pacifiers; Toddlers Clothing for ages 1-5; Toiletries (toothpaste, shampoo, etc.); Tampons, pads; Tea; Hand Lotion; Nail Polish; Colored Pencil Sets; Bookmarks; Tote bags; 2015 planners; USB drives, portfolios, blank cards for thank you notes, journals, stress balls; children’s DVDs.

Checks should be made payable to Women Against Abuse, and mailed to CLUW, 1606 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19103 or brought to the event. Please ask your Union to donate too! If you would like to donate but cannot come to the event, you may bring your items, prior to the event, to AFSCME DC47, 1606 Walnut Street.

Refreshments will be served. 50/50 Raffle. The event is free and open to the public. To RSVP or for more information, call or e-mail CLUW, 215-893-3770, cluw.philly@gmail.com.

Three AFSCME District Councils to Announce Joint Endorsement for Mayor of Philadelphia.

For Immediate Release

– AFSCME District Council 33, AFSCME District Council 47 and AFSCME/ NUHHCE/District 1199C will hold a joint press conference at

9:00 am,
Tuesday, March 31, 2015,
Northeast Corner of City Hall,
Philadelphia

The purpose of the press conference will be to announce AFSCME’s endorsement for Mayor of Philadelphia.

All media are invited to attend.

Philadelphia Teachers union canvasses for Kenney

By John Corrigan

– The chants echoed outside the Philadelphia High School for Girls as about 50 teachers, students, and local community organizers rallied on a chilly Saturday morning in support of mayoral candidate Jim Kenney.

“Yes we Kenney! Yes we Kenney!”

Volunteers from the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers gathered to canvass the neighborhood, knocking door to door asking folks to vote for the former city councilman.

“If we’re going to improve the quality of our schools,” PFT President Jerry Jordan began, “if we’re going to have books in our classrooms and not in the basement of an administrative building, if we are going to have safer schools, we are going to need to have Jim Kenney sitting in room 215, that’s the mayor’s office.”

Kenney recalled visiting Julia De Burgos Elementary School in North Philadelphia and meeting with student leaders who told him about a project they had been working on regarding crime in the area.

“They had been locked down four times in a month because of shootings outside their school,” Kenney said.

The students made banners and marched nine blocks, stopping at a corner with drug dealers and asked them to let the students be educated.

“There hasn’t been a lockdown since,” Kenney said. “If we can continue to instill that kind of passion in our kids, our teachers and our principals, I think we’re going to make this city a much better place.”

Suzanne Cappo, a 25-year math teacher at Andrew J. Morrison School in Olney, said getting involved has kept her up to date with the ills of the education system.

“People have to become informed and this is one of the ways,” Cappo said. “Kenney is a big union guy, he’s down-to-earth and he’s been around. Our schools need to improve but can only do so with the proper resources.”

Officially endorsed by the PFT on March 16, Kenney has opposed the expansion of charter schools, which employ non-union staff, and has also criticized the School Reform Commission for unilaterally canceling the teachers’ contract.

The Democratic mayoral primary takes place on May 19. Kenney is running against former district attorney Lynne Abraham, state Senator Anthony Williams, former state Senator Milton Street, former mayoral aide and PGW executive Doug Oliver and former city judge Nelson Diaz.

Source: http://www.newsworks.org/index.php/local/item/80125-teachers-union-canvasses-for-kenney