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Category Archives: News

Mayor Nutter and Gov. Corbett linked and condemned at national AFL-CIO convention. Resolution passed.

From The National AFL-CIO Convention

Resolution 52: Governor Corbett and Mayor Nutter’s Attack on Philadelphia Public Education and Public Service
Submitted by AFT, AFSCME and UNITE HERE

Those who work in Philadelphia public schools, represented by the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers, and those who provide the city’s vital public services, represented by AFSCME District Councils 33 and 47, do so out of a sense of mission: they want to help kids, they want to care for those who are most vulnerable, and they want to ensure that the vital public services that keep our city moving are reliably provided to build a better Philadelphia for all.

But educators and public employees are under attack from forces intent on rolling back the promise of equal opportunity, basic fairness and responsive government.

Governor Corbett and his legislative partisans are leading the attack. While extending $2.4 billion in tax breaks to corporate special interests and political donors, including expanded favors for energy and telecommunications companies, Corbett eliminated assistance to 69,000 financially distressed Pennsylvanians suffering from illness, disability or domestic violence; cut environmental funding by 20 percent and slashed more than $1 billion from public education, including more than $304 million from Philadelphia’s schools.

Right now, Governor Corbett is holding hostage $45 million in federal assistance targeted for Philadelphia schools. Holding back the money is part of his plan to boost his sagging poll numbers by manufacturing a crisis in which schools are starved, children are denied the education they deserve and teachers are blamed for the disruption.

Instead of standing up to Corbett and demanding the federal funds Philadelphia schools were promised and desperately need, Mayor Michael Nutter has joined Corbett in scapegoating hardworking public employees and educators, while continuing tax breaks for large corporations.

And even though Philadelphia teachers have offered substantial contract concessions by forgoing pay increases and making changes to health care benefits, the mayor dismisses these concessions and continues his push to eliminate the ability of educators to speak up for public schools and fight for the things students need—like a safe and welcoming school to attend, with a rich curriculum and extracurricular activities, where teachers have the support they need in order to improve their instruction and students receive the services they need in order to be ready to learn.

When Mayor Nutter wanted the support of city workers, he said he would work to negotiate a fair contract for public employees and improve public services for all Philadelphians. AFSCME District Councils 33 and 47 have demonstrated flexibility in working with the city, but the mayor has not kept his word. Instead, Nutter has focused on advancing the Corbett agenda, attacking public employees, cutting services and granting tax breaks to big corporations.

City workers in Philadelphia have now gone five years without contracts or wage increases, have paid significant increases for their health care and suffered relentless attacks from Mayor Nutter’s administration. Under Mayor Nutter, the number of city workers living in poverty has doubled.

While both AFSCME DC 33 and DC 47 have attempted to negotiate a solution with the Nutter administration, he has gone to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to impose a contract that means cuts to vital services, wages reductions and less retirement security.

Mayor Nutter’s failed policies have cut vital services to the residents of our city. Because of his failures, library doors often remain locked and fewer people work in our recreation centers. It’s time for Nutter to change course, stop putting the Corbett agenda and the interests of large corporations ahead of the interests of the people of Philadelphia, and negotiate a fair contract for educators and municipal workers.

The labor movement stands with neighbors, parents, students and community leaders in condemning these attacks on the schools and the vital services on which our city relies. We are united in calling on Mayor Nutter to reverse course and stand up for a better Philadelphia for all by:

1. Demanding the immediate release of the $45 million in federal assistance targeted for Philadelphia.

2. Instructing the mayor’s representatives on the School Reform Commission to demand the funding necessary for our schools to educate students, and shelve further plans for school closings, budget cuts and giveaways to market-based reformers.

3. Working with parents, teachers, students and community leaders to put politics aside, fix the damage already inflicted, raise additional revenues by eliminating unnecessary tax breaks for wealthy corporations, collect taxes which are overdue, and do what’s right for Philadelphia children, families and public schools.

4. Immediately working with the City Council to identify and raise additional revenues in the form of fair-share assessments on wealthy tax-exempt Philadelphia institutions, such as the University of Pennsylvania.

5. Collaborating with teachers and city municipal employees to find fair solutions through good faith negotiations rather than using this manufactured fiscal crisis or the courts to attack collective bargaining and dismantle vital public services.

In Solidarity, On The 12th Anniversary of 911, We Remember!

By PhillyLabor.com

– There’s not an American over the age of 18 that will ever forget were they were on that tragic day, September 11, 2001 when 2977 innocent victims lost their lives to senseless acts of terrorism in New York, Washington D.C. and Pennsylvania. To this day, I can still hear Dennis Brennan say in a curious voice, while at his desk in the office at Finnigan’s Wake, “a plane just hit the World Trade Center”. Like many people who heard the news for the first time, I just assumed it was a small passenger plane that mistakenly flew in to the tower, not knowing the horror that was yet to come. Within minutes, I remember, proprietor, Mike Driscoll, turning the TV on in the office and us all watching in disbelief as the tragedy unfolded right before our very eyes.

The next thing I knew, I was speeding through the streets of downtown Philadelphia picking up my wife from work, then quickly over to my son’s school, Roman Catholic HS also in center city in the middle of absolute chaos because, at that point, New York had been hit, Washington D.C. had been hit and a lot of people thought downtown Philly, being in the middle of both, might be next. There were cars blowing red lights, horns honking and people panicking trying to get the hell out of the metropolitan area.

Like many Americans that day, after we got home, we turned on our own TV and planted ourselves directly in front of the screen frozen in disbelief as we lay witness to one of the worst tragedies in American history. I remember we shut the door behind us and from the moment we got settled till we went to bed late into the night, we were paralyzed in our living room watching as the world changed in front of our eyes in ways we could never have imagined just hours before the 2 iconic symbols of American stability crumbled to the ground and we realized, at that time, that life as we knew it would never be the same.

On this, the 12th Anniversary of 911, we remember the day it happened and most every detail of that day but most importantly we remember them. We remember those innocent people who went off to work for their families on that fateful morning and never came home. We remember the tears of the families who lost loved ones who will grieve today just as deeply as when it happened and we remember the first responders, many of them union workers, who flocked to New York City, without hesitation. While others were leaving, they entered to lend a helping hand in hopes of making a difference.

With the recent celebration of the the Spire being placed atop One World Trade Center by union workers, many who were there both as first responders after the initial collapse of the World Trade Centers, as well as to proudly rebuild the current tower, I could not help but to pray that all those who lost their lives were looking down from above, as the Spire was placed so beautifully atop the new Trade Center Tower, and were just as proud as the rest of us with the knowledge that the rebuilding of the new tower symbolizes the spirit of the United States of America and the proud legacy they left behind!

In Solidarity, We Remember!

Philadelphia Building Trades Endorse Plumbers Local 690, Business Manager, John I. Kane For Pa. State Senate

By PhillyLabor.com

– The Philadelphia Building Trades Council has endorsed, Plumber’s Local #690, Business Manager, John I. Kane for Pennsylvania State Senator in the 26th Senatorial District which includes parts of Chester and Delaware Counties.

Additionally, John has been endorsed by the PHCC Plumbing, Heating and Cooling Contractors of PA., further demonstrating the respect he has earned within his professional community.

As supported by his union membership, if elected, Kane will maintain his position as business manager of the Plumber’s union thus giving working families throughout the Delaware Valley a true voice in Harrisburg.

“With John Kane in office, working people will always have a true voice and representative in Harrisburg who understands the challenges of working families and, who is committed everyday to working on their behalf” says, Joe Dougherty, Business Manager of Ironworkers Local #401. “Too many times, candidates running for office vow their support for working people during their campaign and then forget about us after they’re elected, if John Kane is elected, we won’t ever have to worry about that happening”, A vote for John Kane is a vote for all working men and women throughout Pennsylvania”. says Dougherty.

ABOUT JOHN I. KANE

John Kane was raised and is raising his family in Delaware County, where he is a leader in his community. John knows the challenges that middle class families face, and has the experience to tackle them – a former apprentice who worked his way up to business manager of Plumbers Local 690 and member of the SEPTA board, John has negotiated contracts, navigated politics, and worked to make sure the voices of his members are heard, and is running to bring that experience to the State Senate.

From Harrisburg we have seen unprecedented attacks on the middle class, working families, women, and students. The only way to change this is to have proven leaders who can stand up for those whose voice needs to be heard.

Once Elected, John Will:

o Restore funding to schools across Pennsylvania,
o Make corporations pay their fair share by closing the Delaware loophole,
o Stand up for the rights of every worker to organize and fight for fair wages and a path to middle class,
o Protect women’s rights by leaving the decisions about women’s healthcare to women, not bureaucrats.

John Kane has worked tirelessly to protect our working families, keep our communities safe and healthy, and empower our youth. As a State Senator, he will continue to fight for the working class and achieve our shared vision of a better Pennsylvania.

5 Reasons to Thank a Union Member Today

– 40 Hr. Work Week

– Child Labor Laws

– Collective Bargaining

– Safety Regulations

– Employee Healthcare

When you see union members walking on a picket line or protesting on TV, please understand that they are not just doing it for themselves, they are doing it for for everyone! They need your support to keep fighting for a strong middle class in America!

Undercover TV News Investigative Report Shows Potential Fire Hazards that could threaten the lives of Residents at Goldtex Apartments at 12th and Vine.

– A Channel 6 Action News Investigative report aired (last night) on September 5th on their 11PM Newscast tells of statements made by an apartment a sales rep, who told undercover reporters, that they could use elevated spaces within certain loft spaces and one room apartments in the building as bedrooms, guest rooms and/or office spaces.

The only problem is that, in order to access these elevated areas within these particular apartments, one has to use drop down stairs which block the only door in and out of the apartment which would make it difficult for tenants to exit the apartment in case of fire or emergency thus creating a dangerous/hazardous situation, according to Fire Fighter’s Union President, Joe Schulle

The segment also features, building developer, Michael Pestrunk, shown making a conflicting statement (from the Sales rep) that the elevated areas are only for storage. As per the report, this is in spite of the photos on their website, brochures showing furniture in the elevated spaces, the phone and cable jacks in the elevated space and the statements by the sales rep to the contrary.

In spite of the potential hazardous situation, somehow L&I has provided the building with approval of it’s plans and a Temporary Certificate of Occupancy (TCO) for the building’s 8th floor.

PhillyLabor Editorial: When is the madness going to stop! Haven’t the lives of those lost at 22nd and Market opened the eyes of those at L&I that they need to take warnings of potential hazards from both concerned citizens and experts seriously!!!

What is it going to take to wake these people up? Hopefully not more lives lost!

To view the Channel 6 segment, go to: http://abclocal.go.com/wpvi/story?section=news%2Flocal&id=9238163