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Category Archives: News

Philadelphia Coalition Advocating for Public Schools (PCAPS) Plans Back to School Week of Action

By Philadelphia Coalition Advocating for Public Schools (PCAPS)

– In a few days, the children of Philadelphia are supposed to go back to the classroom. Unfortunately many of them will return to schools with no arts, no music, no counselors, no nurses and no supplies.

This is the Philadelphia public school system that Governor Corbett has created by denying Philadelphia’s children the resources they need to succeed. What’s worse is that our own city elected leaders have failed to secure the funding necessary to turn this crisis around.

EVENTS:

Candle Light Vigil: Sunday, September 8th at 6:30pm- 200 South Broad Street: Students parents and educators hold a candle light vigil to hold the Governor, the Mayor and city council accountable. If you plan to attend, Go to: https://www.facebook.com/events/222898804531542/?context=create

First Day of School Leafleting: Monday, September 9th: Join dozens of PCAPS activists who will sign up parents in front of schools for our fight against more school closings and for education funding. To volunteer for a school, contact Jesse Braxton at Jbraxton@actionunited.org or call 215-301-0032

City Council Opening Session: Thursday, September 12th at 10:30am- City Hall (NE Corner): Lets meet at city hall to demand Full Funding for our schools as city council resumes meeting.

Let’s start the school year off united to protect our schools, our kids and our communities!

P.S. To check out the clip, “Why Some Students Fear Heading Back to Philly Schools.”, go to: http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/Why-Some-Students-Fear-Heading-Back-to-Philly-Schools-222451461.html?_osource=SocialFlowTwt_PHBrand

City Workers Take Their Fight to the Airwaves for a Better Philadelphia for ALL

– Philadelphia, PA – A 60-second spot airing on radio stations beginning today argues that Mayor Michael Nutter continues to balance the city’s budget on the backs of children and working families.

The spot is sponsored by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), the national union of DC 33 and DC 47, which represent 17,000 women and men in Philadelphia who go to work every day to build a Better Philadelphia for All.

The spot follows a television ad released last week by the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), which argued that Mayor Nutter’s policies have hurt public education in Philadelphia.

“Under Mayor Nutter, the number of city workers living in poverty has doubled,” said AFSCME DC 33 President Pete Matthews. “This is shameful and never in the history of Philadelphia have children and workers been so disrespected. His attempt to sidestep the collective bargaining process shows his disdain for the women and men of Philadelphia.”

“Mayor Nutter’s failed policies have cut vital services to the residents of this city who use them,” continued AFSCME DC 47 President Cathy Scott. “Because of his failures, library doors often remain locked and fewer people work in our recreation centers. It’s time for smart policies that put the people of Philadelphia first, rather than these policies that give tax breaks to large corporations on the backs of children and workers.”

City workers in Philadelphia have gone 5 years without contracts or wage increases, and suffered increases to their healthcare, attacks from Mayor Nutter’s administration and been forced into poverty. While both 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.

The radio ad closes with a call for the residents of Philadelphia to go to: www.abetterphilly.org to sign a petition to call on Mayor Nutter to stop balancing the budget on the backs of children and workers.

Dateline: Philadelphia, PA, Wednesday, September 4, 2013, 10:30 am
Source: AFSCME District Councils 33 and 47
Contacts: Kevin Hanes: 412-330-9930, Bob Wolper: 215-896-2970

Sen. Tartaglione bill would raise Pennsylvania minimum wage

by Randy LoBasso

– Philadelphia State Sen. Christine Tartaglione recently announced plans to introduce a bill which would raise Pennsylvania’s minimum wage to $9 per hour.

Tartaglione, who represents parts of North and Northeast Philadelphia, joined with the Restaurant Opportunities Center of Philadelphia and local company Little Baby’s Ice Cream to make the announcement in time for Labor Day.

The state senator, who represents the second district, has been one of Harrisburg’s champions of labor and workers’ rights during her tenure in the state Senate, writing the bill that would eventually raise the minimum wage form $5.15 an hour to $7.15 in the middle of last decade.

The state’s minimum wage has now been stuck at $7.25 per hour since 2009, when the federal government raised the wage nationwide and Pennsylvania was forced to follow suit. The tipped minimum wage has remained below $3, however, since the early 90s.

Earlier this year, the senator noted what she’d be up against in the “Labor Report” section of her website.

“Today, we again have a governor and bicameral majorities that oppose adjusting the minimum wage for inflation, even though the last time we did it, Pennsylvania’s poverty rate took its biggest drop in decades. Opponents’ predictions of job losses were debunked with strong growth in low-wage service and health-care jobs,” she said.

Getting a minimum wage hike passed Gov. Corbett and some new rank-and-file Tea Party Republicans in the state Legislature is going to be harder than it was under Rendell—if not impossible.

The professional and libertarian right have always fought for the idea that if you raise the minimum wage, you not only take money from the CEO’s and owners’ pockets (the “job creators”), but you actually put more people out of a job. This theory has generally not proven to be true since the minimum wage has existed. Though the same argument has often been made of raising taxes on big business.

A worker earning minimum wage in Pennsylvania currently takes in about $290 per week, or $15,080 per year, and is often forced to take public assistance. This often means it’s the taxpayer, rather than the CEO, footing some of the bill for the minimum wage worker. Raising the wage to $9 would give employees about $3,500 more per year.

Last week, fast food employees staged a national walkout in numerous cities, including Wilmington, Delaware, demanding a $15 minimum wage.

Tartaglione’s most recent incarnation of a minimum wage standard happens to coincide with President Obama’s desire to raise the wage to the same numeric value, which he noted at his 2013 State of the Union.

Earlier this year, Philadelphia City Council expanded the 21st Century Minimum Wage and Benefits Standard to force city companies and contractors with 25 employees or fewer to pay a living wage of $10.88 per hour. This, of course, did not include private-sector workers in the city.

Source: http://blogs.philadelphiaweekly.com/phillynow/2013/09/03/minimumwage201/

Happy Labor Day From Your Friends at Phillylabor.com

“Remembering and Honoring” those pioneers, past and present, who have dedicated their lives to fighting the fight for fair working conditions, standards and living wages for working families and the middle class in America! The Struggle Continues and So do We!!!!

In Solidarity, We Thank The Labor Movement!

From PhillyLabor.com

Labor Day Represents Our Continued Fight, Not A Victory

By Walter Wise (Iron Workers General President)

– Labor Day became a national holiday in 1894, pre-dating the founding of our own International Association. It was a time of brutal working conditions: 6-12s the standard workweek; child labor; no holidays, no sick days or pensions; and worker safety was unheard of. It was a time when corporate power and excesses were at a peak. Monopolies dominated industries and labor alike. Wages were depressed to the point where workers were paid in company script (money) that could only be spent on housing, goods or services sold by the employer. Most employees owed more than they earned each month.

Intolerable conditions led to strikes that were met with brutal retaliation from company thugs, the police and even the government. Those confrontations were described as a second “civil war.” Labor Day as a federal holiday was a failed attempt by President Cleveland to gain labor support for a third term after he sent 12,000 federal troops to break the Pullman Car Company strike where at least 13 strikers were killed. The demands of decent wages, an 8-hour workday and the right to organize did not come about until nearly 50 years later. Labor Day represents our fight, not a victory.

The strength of individual workers overcame ethnic and racial tension to unite in their common plight. They fought to gain bargaining power with their employer, to demand a fair share of the profits that their labor helped generate. As Abraham Lincoln, the first Republican president, said: “Labor is the superior of capital and deserves much the higher consideration.”

Since the eighties, that shared equity partnership has been broken. Not between us and our signatory contractors, but by the moneyed interests of Wall Street with their pursuit of unfair profits and higher bonuses at the expense of everyone else, including our own nation’s independence and security.

This history is not only worthy of being remembered on Labor Day, but every day you walk into the workplace, every time you cash your collectively bargained paycheck, each year when you vote and every time you hug your loved ones. Our fight continues.

Thank you for helping to build our great Union.

Source: http://www.ironworkers.org/news-magazine/news/2013/08/30/labor-day-represents-our-continued-fight-not-a-victory