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Category Archives: News

PGW sale means higher gas bills, says advocacy group

By Jared Shelly

– Philadelphians are in for a big hike in their gas bills after the sale of Philadelphia Gas Works to UIL Holdings Corp. for $1.86 billion, an advocacy group is warning.

Food & Water Watch warns that if gas utility privatization is anything like water privatization, then customers will pay the price with rate increases. Sam Bernhardt, senior Pennsylvania organizer for Food & Water Watch, said that rate increases occur “time and time again” when water utilities go private. (See infographic.)

In Bensalem, Pa., a typical annual water and/or sewer bill was $137.08 before privatization but climbed to $578.05 after. In Bristol, Pa., the bill jumped from $165.44 to $661.43. After privatization in Media, Pa., water bills climbed from $335.69 to $792.22.

“We don’t have any reason to believe that in the privatization of a gas utility, we’d see anything different,” said Bernhardt, whose group has joined with a coalition of unions, consumer groups, neighborhood associations, and environmental groups to urge City Council members to vote against the sale of the utility during the approval process.

To be fair to the city, terms of the deal require that UIL not raise prices on consumers for three years and no jobs will be lost in that time. Mayor Michael Nutter said in a press conference on Monday that UIL Corp. can only raise its rates if it goes through the same process PGW would go through today.

But what happens after three years?

Bernhardt argues that UIL Corp. will be itching to make a “return on its investment.” He expects the company to do so in two ways: By cutting costs (“the easiest way to do that is to cut labor force”) and increasing revenue (“we expect them to largely do that through increased rates for consumers.”) He says that any rate freeze is just an attempt to block citizens and advocacy groups from fighting the sale.

But is it really a far cry that a private company can run PGW more efficiently? Think about paying a bill online. It currently costs $2.95 to do so, which seems pretty antiquated compared to the way many private companies allow customers to pay bills online for free.

“I don’t think there are a ton of people out there saying PGW is running poorly — its making a profit right now,” said Bernhardt. “I don’t see Mayor Nutter’s office or UIL for that matter, coming out with specific proposals on increasing efficiency.”

Public ownership of utilities is a good thing, he says, because if it goes private, citizens lose their right to speak out against company policies.

“If PGW is privatized,” he said, “We lose ability to have a public voice on the topic what gas infrastructure looks like in Philadelphia.”

Source: http://www.bizjournals.com/philadelphia/news/2014/03/03/pgw-privatization-means-higher-rates.html?page=all

AFSCME DC 33 Members To Rally On Thursday For Fair Contract

AFSCME DC 33 is calling on all of their members and supporters to join together with their leadership at a rally called “RALLY FOR OUR FUTURE” this coming Thursday during Mayor Nutter’s budget address at City Hall. The purpose for the rally is to get their message out to the politicians that “It’s Time For A Fair Contract for hard working DC 33 members! Please support AFSCME DC 33 in their fight to gain a fair contract for their members with the City of Philadelphia.
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DETAILS

WHAT – RALLY FOR OUR FUTURE

When – This Thursday March 6 at 8:30 AM

Where – Philadelphia City Hall

Who – Hosted By AFSCME District Council 33

All AFSCME DC 33 MEMBERS AND SUPPORTERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO ATTEND!

 

Are unions necessary? Short answer: Yes.

By Michael Hiltzik

– The question is posed by an exchange launched by Evan Soltas at Bloomberg View, and answered by Michael Wasser of the workers rights organization Jobs for Justice. Soltas has defended himself against Wasser’s response, so this could go on for a while.

The discussion was inspired by the recent defeat of a United Auto Workers drive at the Chattanooga, Tenn., plant of Volkswagen, which we discuss here. The case has inspired lots of commentary about the long-term decline of industrial unions in the U.S. and the role of that trend in the increasing of income inequality. The two trends coincide, so there really is no question that the decline of workers’ voice and worker rights resulting from the decline of unions has played an important role in the rising power of the shareholding and managerial class.

One hates to say of a writer as fluent as Soltas that his analysis lacks the depth that would come from experience, but Wasser is certainly correct in arguing that Soltas’ argument that the U.S. is better off without unions and “unions can’t be saved” reflects the limitations of textbook-learning. A few specific issues:

To think that federal labor law has had “little to do” with union decline, as Soltas puts it, is hopelessly naive. He’s misled by the fact that union membership has fallen even though we have laws guaranteeing the right to collective bargaining, and by the failure to recognize how inadequately those laws are enforced.

“Soltas doesn’t even consider the ramifications of broken labor law,” Wasser observes, and he’s right. “Without any real penalties to fear, employers have an economic incentive to violate federal labor law. Research shows that indeed they regularly do, using a variety of often unlawful tactics to coerce and intimidate workers during union organizing campaigns.”

When the employers don’t do so, political representatives of the capital-holding class will, as was seen in Chattanooga, where politicians used the threat of the withdrawal of government subsidies, and the impact that would have on the workforce, as a weapon against the union.

Over the years, employers have developed an exquisite arsenal against union organizing. For a succinct description of how the war is waged, Soltas needs to examine “Confessions of a Union Buster,” the heartfelt memoir Martin Jay Levitt published in 1993.

“I come from a very dirty business,” Levitt told a carpenters union audience (after his conversion). As he described it, “the enemy was the collective spirit. I got hold of that spirit while it was still a seedling; I poisoned it, choked it, bludgeoned it if I had to, anything to be sure it would never blossom into a united work force, the dreaded foe of any corporate tyrant.”

One simply can’t explain the decline of union representation without acknowledging the role of employer opposition and its empowerment by government policy, as outlined in this 2009 report from the Economic Policy Institute. The government role includes not merely the behavior of the Tennessee GOP, but “right to work” laws, and the enfeeblement of the National Labor Relations Board and its intimidation by members of Congress.

It’s also important to understand two additional factors that make union organizing difficult, and which can’t be absorbed from college textbooks or academic papers: fear and complacency. Fear reigns during periods of slack employment and job growth, when workers perceive that the surfeit of replacement labor makes it costless for employers to sack them for any reason at all, including labor organizing. Lax enforcement of labor law plays into this in a big way.

Complacency reigns during periods of tight labor supply and prosperity, when the workforce figures, why siphon off part of my paycheck in union dues, since I’m already well-paid and reasonably secure? To a certain extent this was a factor in Chattanooga, where workers considered themselves well-paid and well-treated, and therefore couldn’t fully comprehend what more union membership would get them.

Fear has been the dominant factor over the last decade or so of economic underperformance, but they’re both obstacles to union growth.

Yet we must ask why employers would so assiduously fight unions if not for fear of their effectiveness? Soltas’ take on the union’s role in the workplace is by far the most naive element of his original piece. He cites a judgment by two academic economists that unions balance power between employers and workers, and that this role is important but not entirely positive. “They’re right,” he concludes. Although union power “helps union members, it’s inefficient and bad for the economy as a whole, and it’s especially bad for nonunion workers.”

Soltas cites no authority for these statements. That’s unsurprising because they’re nonsensical. The only vantage point from which union power can be seen as inefficient and bad for the economy is that of rent-seeking management, which is far more inefficient and bad for the economy–that’s exactly what has led to income inequality and the stagnation of economic growth that is its consequence. As Brad DeLong of UC Berkeley wrote recently, “Tell me, if you can do so with a straight face, that any aspect of the large upward leap in inequality we have experienced has paid any benefits at all in terms of true … human material welfare-enhancing economic growth. I don’t think you can.”

As for the benefits unions have brought to nonunion workers, they’re legion: progressive workplace laws including safety and child labor regulations, overall higher wages, retirement and healthcare benefits. The decline of all these features of the American workplace has coincided exactly with the decline of unions. That should tell you something.

Soltas argues that the answer to the decline of unions is to “stop businesses from abusing labor laws by classifying their employees as independent contractors.” We should institute “monetary and fiscal policies aimed at full employment,” he says.

Where does he think the impetus for these advances will come from, if not the labor movement? He may not have noticed, but Congress today is in the grip of the employer class. They’re not agitating for tighter enforcement of labor laws, and they’re not speaking up for full employment, either–that just means they’d have to pay higher wages, and who needs that?

Source: http://www.latimes.com/business/hiltzik/la-fi-mh-are-unions-20140227,0,4832449.story#ixzz2ugzSTQxm

Editorial From The Rank & File: ‘Paycheck’ Bill Is Union-Busting Law

By Bill Jones

– I’ve been a corrections officer at Lancaster County Prison for 24 years.

I’ve been attacked by inmates. I’ve had urine and feces thrown at me by inmates. I have to be tested for HIV regularly. Every day I’m exposed to hepatitis, MRSA and other diseases. I’ve had to break up fights and confiscate homemade weapons. I’m the guy that keeps these violent offenders away from you and your kids. And I’m the guy so-called “paycheck protection” bills HB 1507 and SB 1304 are attacking.

Membership and political deductions are voluntary and negotiated. We were not able to negotiate political contributions at my job. So, I write out a check or come up with the cash because I want elected officials to have my back and make sure my high-risk job is as safe as possible. And I want my community to be as safe as possible.

Union members are proud public service workers. We take care of your elderly parents. We take care of your children while you’re at work. We plow your roads in sub-zero weather. We keep violent criminals off the street. For many of us, when our families watch us go to work, they can’t be sure if we will come home.

My union is an advocate for my rights and protection at work. Collective bargaining helps workers and employers find safe and cost-effective solutions. This legislation would place unnecessary hardships on my union and silence our political voice. It’s time to call this what it really is: union-busting.

Bill Jones

Corrections Officer
Lancaster, Pa.

Source: http://lancasteronline.com/opinion/letters_to_editor/paycheck-bill-is-union-busting-law/article_174e38fc-9f36-11e3-babf-001a4bcf6878.html?mode=jqm

UPDATE – AFSCME District Council 33 announces time and location for contract negotiations with the City of Philadelphia.

AFSCME District Council 33, today announced that contract negotiations between the Union and the City of Philadelphia are set to resume on Friday February 28, 2014 at 2:00 pm at the Philadelphia Sheraton on 17th Street and Race Street and may continue, around the clock if necessary, until a fair contract settlement is reached.