Author Archives: Joe Doc

Urgent Action! Wagner’s Payroll Attacks Have Returned; Tell Your Senator To Vote NO!

By The PA. AFL-CIO

– The enemies of labor are at it again, and to defeat these latest attacks requires your immediate action!

Scott Wagner has introduced SB500, which would amend the PA Constitution to block the collection of union dues, and Senator Eichelberger has introduced SB501, another “Paycheck Protection” bill that seeks to silence workers. In the co-sponsorship memo he circulated, Eichelberger claimed that his bill would only block the deduction of political money, but his actual legislation would block deductions of all union dues, including what’s known as the fair agency shop fee.

These bills are devoid of any benefit for the State budget, for taxpayers, or for workers. The lies that have been used to promote these attacks on workers must not distract from the reality; that these bills are nothing but a naked, opportunistic power-grab by opponents of union rights.

To E-Mail Your Senator NOW and Tell Them To OPPOSE SB500 and SB501, Go To: http://act.aflcio.org/c/236/p/dia/action3/common/public/?action_KEY=9717

Source: http://www.paaflcio.org/?p=5797

PA. State Rep. Turzai’s Twenty Liquor Lies

By UFCW 1776

– House Majority Leader Mike Turzai took part in PCN’s Legislative call-in program on Tuesday, February 10th sparking many callers and questions regarding his latest plan to privatize the PLCB.

His answers, or lack-there-of, has us questioning: Is Turzai grossly uninformed about his own legislation to dismantle the PLCB or is he just a liar?

TURZAI: The PLCB has been operating in the red for the past 10 years.
FACT: The PLCB’s net profit for the past 10 years is almost $1 billion total.

TURZAI: There is going to be an auctioning off of 1,200 wine and spirits licenses.
FACT: There is not one mention of auctioning licenses in House Bill 790 or his current legislation House Bill 466.

TURZAI: When West Virginia went to the private sector they saw an increase in revenue.
FACT: West Virginia lost millions and has never financially recovered since privatizing.

TURZAI: There will be no increase in unemployment compensation and all PLCB jobs will be absorbed in the private sector.
FACT: The Public Financial Management study (commissioned by former Governor Corbett and endorsed by Turzai) states 2,302 full-time equivalent employees will lose their jobs and cost more than $64 million in unemployment costs over four years.

TURZAI: There will be open dialogue and everyone will be at the table to discuss issues.
FACT: There has not been a House hearing on liquor privatization since 2011.

TURZAI: The public supports privatization at a 70-75% approval rating and there is widespread support for his plan.
FACT: No poll shows this claim. Instead, recent polls show support going the other way. Also, dozens of groups oppose House Bill 790 from last session.

To Read All Twenty of Turzai’s Lies, Go To: http://www.ufcw1776.org/PLCB/Index%20only%20Turzai%20lies%20on%20PCN.pdf

Source: http://myemail.constantcontact.com/Turzai-s-20-Liquor-Lies.html?soid=1112575112488&aid=FMA9eqbziXc

TAKE ACTION! Stop Representative Turzai’s Bill, House Bill 466, Privatization Of PA’s Wine And Spirits Shoppes

By The PA. AFL-CIO

– Once again State Representative Mike Turzai wants to give away to his friends one of Pennsylvania’s most valuable public assets that helps keep our communities safe, employs over 5,000 workers in family sustaining jobs, and generates over $500 million in revenues and profits, each year to the benefit of taxpayers and our communities.

Representative Turzai’s bill – House Bill 466 – will destroy good jobs, further increase Pennsylvania’s budget deficit this year and for years to come, and lead to an increase in the consumption of alcohol and alcohol related deaths and illnesses.

Pennsylvania’s Wine and Spirits Shoppes and the employees of the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board have are serving our communities and the taxpayers very well. Legislation, House Bill 228 sponsored by State Rep. Gene DiGirolamo, to modernize Pennsylvania’s Wine and Spirits, builds upon the success of our current public system with more improvements in convenience, maintaining the public health and safety, while generating an additional $185 million per year in revenue and profits, which will benefit taxpayers and our communities.

ASK YOUR STATE REPRESENTATIVE TO SUPPORT MODERNIZATION NOT PRIVATIZATION OF PENNSYLVANIA’S WINE AND SPIRITS.

To E-Mail Your State Representatives Now, Go To – http://act.aflcio.org/c/236/p/dia/action3/common/public/?action_KEY=9706

– Tell Them to Oppose HB 466 and any other proposal to Privatize Pennsylvania’s Wine and Spirits

Source – http://www.paaflcio.org/?p=5793

Plotting Greater Philadelphia’s structurally deficient bridges

By Dan Norton

– How unyielding is that bridge you drive across every day?

We teamed up with our friends at Esri to produce a map of every structurally deficient bridge in the Greater Philadelphia region. The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation defines a “structurally deficient” bridge as having deterioration to one or more of its major components.

Twenty-three percent of Pennsylvania’s 22,660 bridges are structurally deficient, which is the highest in the nation. The Transportation Funding Bill Act 89, passed in late 2013, will provide the dollars needed to heal this component of the state’s ailing infrastructure, but it won’t be fully funded until 2019.

The American Society of Civil Engineers gave Pennsylvania bridges a D-plus on its 2014 infrastructure report card. (At least bridges got a better grade than Pennsylvania’s D-minus in wastewater management systems, which “discharge billions of gallons of untreated sewage into Pennsylvania’s surface waters each year.”)

Just because a bridge is classified as structurally deficient doesn’t make it too dangerous to cross. Bridges are required by law to be inspected at least once every two years. If a bridge is deemed unsafe, it can be saddled with weight and speed limits or even closed down for repairs.

Go to: http://www.bizjournals.com/philadelphia/datacenter/plotting-greater-philadelphias-structurally.html to click around the map to see if any of your local bridges are on it, or feel free to search the map by ZIP code.

Source: http://www.bizjournals.com/philadelphia/datacenter/plotting-greater-philadelphias-structurally.html

Striking Oil Workers Are Fighting for Safe Communities, Not Just Better Conditions for Themselves

BY Leo Gerard, United Steelworkers President

– The federal agency that investigates refinery catastrophes released its final report late last month on the massive fire, volatile vapor release and toxic smoke plume at Chevron’s Richmond, California, refinery in 2012 that imperiled 19 workers and sickened 15,000 residents of surrounding communities.

The report says Chevron knew the pipe that ruptured was made of material likely to corrode, that pipes of the same material at Chevron plants had previously failed and caused fires, that Chevron repeatedly rebuffed experts’ recommendations to replace the pipe and that when the pipe did begin to breach, Chevron disastrously attempted to patch it instead of shutting down the high-pressure, high-temperature hydrocarbon process unit to which it was attached.

For neighborhoods around the refinery, the upshot of all of those decisions by Chevron was a nearly six-hour order for residents to remain indoors as their homes were engulfed in smoke and soot. Approximately 15,000 received medical treatment for breathing difficulty, chest pain, headaches and eye irritation. Twenty were admitted to hospitals. Incredibly, 19 workers caught in a highly flammable vapor cloud all survived with only minor injuries.

Because of oil companies’ bad-faith bargaining and other serious unfair labor practices, more than 5,000 refinery workers who are members of the United Steelworkers (USW) union are conducting unfair labor practice strikes across America. Those at Richmond are among 25,000 USW-represented refinery workers still working, but they strongly support the demand for safety and they’re strongly supported by Richmond residents who know they’re endangered when workers are. They all want refineries to become good neighbors.

The August 6, 2012, fire at Chevron was the latest in a long list of failures that spewed toxins into the community. In a lawsuit against Chevron for the 2012 smoke deluge, Richmond cited 14 incidents over the past 25 years. That’s roughly one every other year. They include major explosions and fires in the plant and smoke overwhelming the community in 1999 and 1989. In those two, a total of 11 workers were injured, three critically.

More recently, in 2007, a failure caused by sulfidaton corrosion resulted in a huge fire. In that blaze and smoke plume, a worker was injured and community members ordered to stay indoors for five hours. Richmond area residents suffering breathing problems packed emergency rooms. That exact type of corrosion led to the 2012 fire as well.

The refinery industry has known about the dangers of sulfidation corrosion for 40 years. That specific corrosion has caused repeated problems at refineries and, as a result, in surrounding communities.

For example, a sulfidation corrosion breach occurred in 2009 at the Silver Eagle refinery in Woods Cross, Utah. The Chemical Safety Board (CSB), the federal agency that investigates refinery disasters, reported that the corrosion led to a 10-inch pipe failing catastrophically, releasing hydrogen, which exploded, triggering a massive fireball. The blast damaged hundreds of homes in the surrounding community,knocking cupboards off walls, blowing out windows and doors, cracking curbs and foundations.

From up close and personal experience, Chevron knew for a decade what the corrosion could do. In 2002 at its Salt Lake City refinery, sulfidation corrosion caused a pipe failure and fire.

After that, Chevron inspected the Richmond facility for similar weakness and experts recommended the refinery replace the pipe that ruptured in 2012. Chevron didn’t do it. The CSB found that specialists advised replacement four more times. Chevron never did it. That’s not a good neighbor.

A year after the disaster, Richmond sued Chevron, alleging it willfully disregarded public safety. Gayle McLaughlin, then the mayor, said, “This is not about money, although there are certainly costs attached to the impact of this fire. This is about a change in Chevron’s corporate culture, to place safety of the community as a top priority.”

The allegations in Richmond’s lawsuit are supported by state and federal agencies’ investigative reports. The California Division of Occupational Safety and Health issued 25 citations against Chevron for the 2012 fire and charged it the highest penalty in the agency’s history, nearly $1 million. And Chevron pleaded no contest to six criminal charges arising from the 2012 fire and agreed to pay $2 million in fines and restitution.

Still, Chevron belittled Richmond for the lawsuit. Its spokesperson, Melissa Ritchie, said: “We believe the decision to pursue such a suit is a waste of the city’s resources and yet another example of its failed leadership.”

Then, Chevron spent $3 million to buy itself the mayor’s office and three council seats in the town of 107,000. It failed. It won not one race against opponents who spent less than $160,000. Richmond residents don’t care how rich a neighbor Chevron is. They wants a good neighbor.

After the fire, Richmond residents, environmentalists and USW members began working together in a coalition called the Refinery Action Collaborative to protect the safety and health of refinery workers and citizens living near the Richmond refinery and five others located within a 25-mile radius in the San Francisco Bay area.

Michael Smith, who has worked at the Chevron refinery in Richmond for 13 years, serves on the collaborative as a representative of his local union. Previous coalitions have not typically included workers, but this one understands their role, Smith said. “The workers are the front line of the community. If we are safe, then the community around the refinery is safe.”

In the past, Smith said, Chevron deployed a successful divide and conquer strategy, telling workers that the community and environmentalists were trying to shut the refinery and kill jobs. Now, however, the three groups understand their shared interest, which is maintaining a clean-operating, tax paying, job sustaining facility. “We want them to run it safely, to be a good neighbor, not shut it down,” Smith said.

Tom Butt, Richmond’s new mayor, is among the candidates who defeated the Chevron slate. Before the 2012 fire, Butt said, Chevron had always insisted safety was its highest priority. However, every investigative report on Chevron’s behavior proved that wasn’t true, the mayor said.

“They are certainly a rich neighbor. But I can’t say that has made the neighborhood improve,” said Butt, who has lived in Richmond for 42 years.

Mike Parker, who worked to support Butt and the progressive slate of candidates that won, lives less than a mile from the refinery.

He said after the fire, black particles and soot settled on everything—cars, homes, vegetables in gardens. “It was clear that people were breathing a lot of this stuff,” he said. And they didn’t know what was in it.

Later, when residents read the investigative reports, he said they were angry, “This wasn’t an accident or an act of God. This was a result of conscious policy of a company to cut corners.”

Parker said he hopes Chevron will be changed by the many forces now working together for safety because at this point, “Chevron is a very arrogant neighbor, one who seems to totally run on the basis of [the fact that] it has the money and therefore it can get its way.”

Source: http://inthesetimes.com/working/entry/17646/oil_workers_safety