Author Archives: Joe Doc

Register for the 11th Annual Philadelphia AFL-CIO Conference

– The Philadelphia Council AFL-CIO’s Annual Conference, February 2-4 2014 in Atlantic City, will feature lively discussions, workshops, and appearances by two speakers with well-deserved, national reputations as experts and leaders.

A discussion of the 2014 electoral landscape in Pennsylvania with Dr. Terry Madonna, the Director of the Center for Politics and Public Affairs at Franklin and Marshall College. Dr Madonna is a leading expert on Pennsylvania politics and elections, and is one of the most experienced and insightful pollsters in the Commonwealth.
The newly elected Executive Vice President of the AFL-CIO, Tefere Gebre, will join us to share his vision of the future of labor and the labor movement and to hear from us about the work on the ground in Philadelphia. As the former Executive Director of the Orange County (CA) Central Labor Council, Gebre is the first National AFL-CIO Executive Officer to come from the ranks of the local labor movement.

Other likely topics on the agenda at the conference are:

an update on progress towards implementation of resolutions passed at the National AFL-CIO Convention in September;
a possible visit from a high-ranking US Department of Labor official to discuss DOL’s plans to put workers’ rights first again;
time for conversation with your brothers and sisters from over 100 affiliates who make up the Philadelphia Council AFL-CIO.

The Conference will start with a welcome reception on the evening of Sunday, February 2, and run through noon, Tuesday February 4th. Please fill out and return the downloadable registration form by clicking the link below this story, and if you’re planning to stay overnight Sunday or Monday, please contact the Sheraton Convention Center in Atlantic City to make reservations. Registering for the Conference will not automatically reserve you a hotel room! Our room block at the Sheraton closes on January 15, so make your reservations now!

Source: http://www.pa.aflcio.org/philaflcio/index.cfm?action=article&articleID=1fd65ff0-cdc8-4dc2-b724-3f548cefb5a2

National Paid Family Leave May Finally Be on the Horizon

By Michelle Chen

– Any working parent will tell you that raising a family might as well be another full-time job—one that comes with no vacation days or health benefits. But millions of Americans don’t get days off from their regular job, either, even for the sake of their health or their family’s.

According to the National Partnership for Women and Families (NPWF), just 12 percent of American workers can take paid leave time to tend to an illness in their household, and only about 40 percent can get time off for themselves through employer-sponsored disability coverage. This gap affects about two-fifths of the private sector workforce, or 40 million people—a vast deficit compared to many other industrialized countries, where paid leave is routine.

Now, though, some lawmakers are recognizing that taking a few weeks off to deal with a health challenge shouldn’t hurt your paycheck. Representative Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) and Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) have sponsored legislation to establish a nationwide paid family leave insurance program that would partially protect the wages of workers who take time off for the medical needs of themselves or their families.

Financed by small contributions from payroll checks and employers, the program would allow workers to “take time for their own serious health condition, including pregnancy and childbirth recovery; the serious health condition of a child, parent, spouse or domestic partner; the birth or adoption of a child; and/or for particular military caregiving and leave purposes,” according to a briefing by NPWF, who is one of the groups campaigning for the bill, known as the Family And Medical Insurance Leave Act (FAMILY) Act.

The proposed weekly benefits would generally range from $580 to $4,000, depending on income. Like Social Security taxes, the insurance would require a small payroll deduction from the employee and would enable workers to earn as much as two-thirds of their regular weekly earnings for 12 weeks. After the first year, the payment rate would increase based on the average national wage. Overall, advocates say, the federal program would help provide stability for many low-income and precariously employed people by covering workers in any size workplace at any income level, including part-timers.

With the state of current legislation, activists point out, even workers with some insurance coverage may experience extreme hardship when a child’s illness destabilizes a family. In a testimony gathered by the New York State Paid Family Leave Coalition, a mother named Devorah from Rosendale, N.Y. recalled the hardships she faced when her daughter was born premature with a severe medical condition and continued to suffer from long-term medical problems in later years. Though her family had some insurance protection, Devorah said, “By the time we walked out of the hospital with our baby, we had spent an additional $30,000 out of pocket.” In her daughter’s first years, she went on:

There were times when … we didn’t pay our bills. We didn’t pay the gas company or the oil company or the phone company. If there was a choice between prescription drugs and groceries, we bought prescription drugs. If there was a choice between groceries and the phone bill, we went without a phone. … And it’s taken us six years to dig our way out of the financial hole that this dumped us into.

The FAMILY legislation is modeled after similar landmark family leave insurance laws in California and New Jersey, which provide benefits that cover partial weekly earnings on a short-term basis. In addition, policies enabling workers to take paid leave time to tend to family health needs have been emerging at the local level all over the country. In recent years, New York City, San Francisco, Washington, D.C., Seattle and Portland lawmakers have all passed paid sick days legislation, often braving fierce opposition from the business lobby.

The paid leave insurance act would complement laws like these, which focus on short-term medical needs like a bout of the flu, by allowing financial protection for long-term medical needs in a self-financed system. As Vicki Shabo, NPWF director of work and family programs, tells In These Times via email:

It is reasonable to expect employers to provide a basic amount of paid sick time for routine illnesses or health needs, but providing a significant level of wage replacement or full wage replacement for an extended period of time may not be feasible for some employers. Requiring employers to bear the full cost of an extended family leave could also dissuade employers from hiring women, who would be more expensive to hire and retain.

The insurance, administered through the Social Security Administration, would not completely replace a worker’s wages during her time off, but it would be a major step toward broadening access to compensated leave time—and, in turn, improving gender and age equity in the workplace. According to NPFW, “In the year following a birth, new mothers who take paid leave are more likely than those who take no paid leave to stay in the workforce and 54 percent more likely to report wage increases.” Older workers and family caregivers tending to elders would also benefit from extended time off for medical issues that come with aging.

In addition, expanding access to paid leave would help narrow racial divides. Surveys indicate that Latina and black women are less likely than whites to have access to paid sick days or parental leave, with many of them working in precarious service sector jobs that with less access to healthcare in general.

And for many parents, it’s one less thing to be concerned about in a baby’s first few months. In New Jersey, which recently instituted its own statewide leave insurance program, one mother testified for advocacy campaign New Jersey Time to Care, “When I had my first son, I was only able to take a few months off.” But after she got paid leave for her second child, she continued, “I was able to take longer time off and bond with him for what I felt was a more substantial amount of time … and not have to worry about the financial impact of staying home without pay.”

Having one parent at home also makes it easier to manage clinic visits and preventive care, ultimately minimizing a child’s time away from school for health issues. A policy analysis by the California-based think tank Human Impact Partners found that parental leave leads to better health outcomes that can “improve a child’s brain development, social development and overall well-being.”

But workers aren’t the only people stand to gain from the insurance. Their bosses would benefit, too, because employees will be more likely to stick with a company in the long run if they can occasionally leave work when necessary. Under California’s program, NPWF reports, “workers in low-wage, high-turnover industries are much more likely to return to their jobs after using the program.” And there will be public health benefits for consumers when low-paid cooks, servers and hotel cleaners aren’t pressured to go to work with the sniffles.

Paid family leave insurance won’t overcome all the obstacles that workers face when coping with a medical challenge. For the most vulnerable groups, however, paid time off for care will be time well spent.

Source: http://inthesetimes.com/working/entry/15998/is_paid_leave_coming_to_washington/

From PFT President Jerry Jordan – Fighting Poverty: Tis More Than Just a Season

– During the Holiday Season, it’s common for us to reflect on how difficult this time of year is for families in poverty, and even engage in charitable acts of kindness. While this is a tradition that will—and certainly should—continue this year, 2013 is also the year that a special emphasis has been placed on the issue of poverty in our city and across the nation.

We’ve always known that economically disadvantaged children face more challenges in school than their more affluent peers. The new narrative entering the discussion is just how many children face this reality.

The poverty rate in Philadelphia is around 28 percent, but the reality of being poor is not confined to those who live in the city. The Inquirer’s Al Lubrano just reported on how the effects of a struggling economy can be seen even in the nearby suburbs.

Last week, USA Today published a sobering opinion piece outlining the impact that poverty has on public school students. The piece cites a new study from the Southern Education Foundation that reveals nearly half of the nation’s public school students live in poverty. The New York Times has published a truly eye-opening five-part series chronicling the life of Dasani, one of 22,000 homeless children struggling to learn and survive in New York City.

These stories shining a light on the faces of poverty represent disturbing accounts of an increasingly grim phenomenon. It’s distressing to read and hear the growing problem of poverty, how much it is costing us, and how it will impact the future of too many children. If there’s a silver lining, it’s that there is an increasing awareness that poverty is not “someone else’s problem,” or an excuse for lower academic achievement. It is something that we have to face and fight as a city, a community and a country.

All of this underscores the need for Pennsylvania to implement a fair funding formula for education. The research clearly indicates that schools and districts with high poverty populations need more resources in order to close the social and academic learning gaps that exist between poor and wealthier children. Moreover, schools are the one place many of our poorest children can go to get hot meals, healthcare, counseling and much-needed stability and constancy in their lives.

This is not asking for a handout. It is recognizing that there is a dire long-term cost to the current practice of slashing education budgets, and to cutting school programs and services like nurses and guidance counselors. We can no longer afford to place our most vulnerable children—and our city’s future—at risk.

Poverty is quickly becoming the biggest threat to the lives of our children and the security of our nation. It won’t be solved by solely individuals donating to charities at Christmastime. It’s time for city, state and federal legislators to embrace the idea that helping poor families must be more than a holiday tradition.

Source: https://www.facebook.com/notes/philadelphia-federation-of-teachers/jerry-jordans-blog-fighting-poverty-tis-more-than-just-a-season/734601619903251

AFSCME District Council 33 Hosts Holiday Food Drive for Families In Need!

– AFSCME District Council 33 is hosting a Food for Families Holiday Food Drive from now through January 8, 2014. Help them help families in need this holiday season! Please bring NON-perishable items to the Drop Boxes on the main floor and the 4th floor of the DC 33 Offices located at: 3001 Walnut Street Philadelphia, PA 19104

HIGH PRIORITY ITEMS INCLUDE: Canned or shelf-stable tuna, Macaroni & Cheese, Canned pasta, Canned beef stew, Creamy peanut butter, Canned chili, Jelly, Canned green beans, Canned corn, Canned fruit, Breakfast Cereal and Hot Cereal

Help a Family in Need This Holiday Season with AFSCME District Council 33!

Source: http://www.afscme33.org/index.cfm?action=article&articleID=f6774120-e45e-48fc-9846-803343fe4a9b

U.S. Worker Output Rises at Best Pace in 4 Years

By AP / Josh Boak

— U.S. workers boosted their productivity from July through September at the fastest pace since the end of 2009, adding to signs of stronger economic growth.

The Labor Department said Monday that productivity increased at a 3 percent annual rate in the third quarter. That’s up from an initial estimate of 1.9 percent and much stronger than the 1.8 percent rate from April through June.

Productivity rose because economic growth was much stronger than previously estimated in the third quarter. Productivity is the amount of output per hour of work.

Labor costs fell in the third quarter, evidence that inflation will remain low.

Higher productivity enables companies to pay employees more without sparking inflation. But greater productivity can also slow hiring if it shows companies don’t need more workers to boost output.

However, productivity growth has been mostly flat over the past year. That’s because the gains from the past six months have been offset by declines in previous six months.

Worker productivity is improving along with economic growth. Hiring has accelerated since the summer and wages are gradually rising. The economy grew a 3.6 percent annual rate in the third quarter, much faster than the 2.8 percent rate previously estimated.

But productivity gains have slowed in the past three years after jumping in the aftermath of the recession. Worker productivity grew just 1.5 percent in 2012 and 0.5 percent in 2011. Those gains followed much healthier increases of 3.3 percent in 2010 and 3.2 percent in 2009. But productivity improved because companies ramped up output after having laid off many workers during the Great Recession.

The Federal Reserve monitors productivity and labor costs for any signs that inflation could pick up. Mild inflation has allowed the Fed to keep short-term interest rates at record lows and to buy bonds to try to keep long-term rates down. Fed officials meet Tuesday and Wednesday to assess their stimulus policies.

Read more: U.S. Worker Output Rises at Best Pace in 4 Years | TIME.com http://business.time.com/2013/12/16/u-s-worker-output-rises-at-best-pace-in-4-years/#ixzz2neX6abXr

Source: http://business.time.com/2013/12/16/u-s-worker-output-rises-at-best-pace-in-4-years/