An Economic Disaster for Working Families

September 5th, 2008

Since January, more than 600,000 Americans have lost their jobs. The jobless rate is at a five-year high. Home foreclosures are at a 30-year high. Food and fuel costs are skyrocketing. On Thursday the Dow plunged more than 300 points. In his latest entry on the Huffington Post, AFSCME President Gerald McEntee points out that, “John McCain spoke last night for close to an hour and failed to offer a single solution to the real problems facing American families.

Read the full post.

Labor Day 2008: Support Employee Free Choice

September 4th, 2008

This guest post was written by Michael Honey, Haley Professor of the Humanities at the University of Washington, Tacoma, and a former holder of the Harry Bridges labor studies chair at the University of Washington. His recent book, “Going Down Jericho Road: The Memphis Strike, Martin Luther King’s Last Campaign,” recently won the Robert F. Kennedy Book Award. He is President of the national Labor and Working-Class History Association.

Labor Day 2008 marks a moment of crisis for middle and working-class Americans. Housing, health care, transportation, education and job needs are growing acute in an economy that has been run into a ditch. If you have been paying any attention at all for the last eight years, you know what I’m talking about. Yet 2008 also may be a time of significant change. People are fed up and many are demanding a new direction.

However, really changing the American economy is a long-term project and it revolves around improving the conditions of American workers. Furthermore, whether things get better and incomes go up in the months to come depends a great deal on whether workers are able to organize unions. In a recent opinion survey by Peter D. Hart Associates, 65 percent supported unions while only 25 percent did not. That is no surprise: by one research estimate, unionized workers earn 30% higher wages, are 59% more likely to have employer-provided health insurance, and are 400% more likely to have pensions than their non-union counterparts. Unionized workers have more rights than those without unions, and a union still remains the best anti-poverty program for a wage earner, as Martin Luther King once said.

In Washington State, New York and a few other places, nearly 20 percent of workers belong to unions. But nationally, less than 12 percent do and in the South and parts of the west the percentages are much lower. If statistics show that workers want unions and that unions improve their conditions, why do so many not have them?

In many work places, employees simply do not have the freedom to choose. Employers blatantly disregard their First Amendment rights to speak, associate, and organize. The National Labor Relations Board, stacked against unions by the Bush administration, admits that at least a fifth of those who try to join a union get fired instead. The actual percentage is much higher. Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch designate the land of the brave and the home of the free as one of the greatest violators of workers rights. American workers are not free.

This summer, federal agents in Smithfield, North Carolina, slowed a campaign to organize a union of African-American, Anglo and Latino packinghouse workers with deportation raids. Across the land, deportations turned into felony proceedings, imprisoning workers and smashing union organizing in the process.

Many of us have seen the full-page ads employer groups place in newspapers falsely blaming unions for America’s huge job losses (half a million in the last six months). They even mail anti-union literature into the homes of workers when they try to organize, while employers curse and run union representatives off job sites. Employers systematically break federal labor laws to put unions out of business.

This summer, Wal-Mart held captive audience meetings warning its employees against voting for Democrats. They said Democrats will support the Employee Free Choice Act (which they will), and claimed EFCA will force them to join a union (which it will not). This is blatantly illegal and underlines the simple fact that we need to strengthen labor laws and their enforcement to stop corporate bullying of employees.

Last year, EFCA passed in the House of Representatives but Republicans prevented a vote in the Senate. It allows workers to form unions through majority sign-up rather than through elections procedures that take years and have become a travesty as employers hold captive audience meetings to pressure workers into voting against unions. EFCA shields workers from such practices. It increases penalties for illegal employer actions, and creates mechanisms for binding arbitration for first collective bargaining contracts when employers refuse to bargain in good faith or the parties can’t reach an agreement.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has made defeat of EFCA in the next Congress a top legislative priority. In contrast, union supporters are signing millions of post cards and circulating a national petition to support EFCA in the next Congress. Senator Barack Obama co-sponsored EFCA while Senator John McCain voted against it, so as they battle it out for President, employee freedom of choice hangs in the balance.

Employee free choice and union growth offer the most direct path to reduce the monstrous economic disparities between the great majority of wage and salary earners and the top 1 percent of the population, which owns more wealth than 90 percent of Americans combined. Unions are also important if we are to rejuvenate progressive politics in America. As Stewart Acuff and Sheldon Friedman recently wrote in the Huffington Post, “Social security, civil rights, women’s rights, progressive taxation, high-quality public education and health care for all are but a small sample of the national policies that cannot be defended or implemented without a strong labor movement.”

This Labor Day 2008 is a critical time that holds the possibility for sweeping political and economic change. Vote like the future of working-class and middle-class America depends upon it, because it does.

Labor Day and the Election Season

August 29th, 2008

This entry by AFSCME President Gerald McEntee was crossposted on The Huffington Post.

Labor Day traditionally marks the start of the election season. This year is certainly no different, but the stakes are much higher than they’ve been in a long time. The economy is in trouble, unemployment is high, bankruptcies are up, and families are finding their budgets crimped by rising gas, food and utility costs. The media reports that even college students are turning to food stamps to make ends meet and sky-rocketing food prices are forcing more and more people to rely on charity food pantries to feed their families.

It’s true that the economic indicators paint a gloomy picture, yet workers have much to be proud of and even to celebrate. Although largely unheralded and unseen, most workers contribute to their workplaces and communities. AFSCME members in particular can take pride in doing the work that makes America happen.
Every day, in towns, cities, suburbs and exurbs across our nation, AFSCME members are driving school buses, working in hospitals, caring for children, staffing 911 call centers, fixing bridges and roads, repairing tunnels, providing food stamps and other emergency assistance to families, and doing many other jobs that protect and strengthen communities.

Our nation’s economy has faltered during these last eight years and from time to time, so have our spirits. But we have an opportunity to regain what we’ve lost. We all are ready for change. And what’s more, we are ready to create it. In 2006, union workers voted for change in overwhelming numbers, taking back the U.S. Congress and putting worker-friendly governors and state legislators in office across the country. This year, we’re going to do everything we can to build on that success. We need a new President who will stand with workers.

We need a president who supports public services and the workers who provide them, and opposes the privatization of public service jobs. We need a president who will work to protect Social Security, not privatize it. We need a President who will sign the Employee Free Choice Act so that workers can join unions to negotiate for better wages and benefits, not one who opposes efforts of workers to organize. We need a President who will work to enact quality, affordable health care for all Americans, not one who supports taxing employee health benefits. This year, the choice for working families is clear.

Although we can’t hit the rewind button and undo the last eight years, we can move forward by electing a new president who will be a champion for working families. With this election, we can restart our economy and regain workers’ rights. We can restore food safety and environmental protection laws. We can create good jobs and revive public services and people’s faith in them. And we can end the war in Iraq that’s robbed our nation — and families — of too many working men and women, and is costing us $12 billion a month.

Now’s the time for us to reclaim America — and to reclaim the values that built America’s middle class. Now’s the time for us to elect candidates who truly value workers and understand the needs of the nation’s working families.

Employers and Labor Unions: a Partnership that can (and does) work

August 28th, 2008

It’s been proven time and time again that employers can have a productive relationship with their employees’ unions. See for yourself in the fourth annual Labor Day List:Partnerships that Work, a current snapshot of the most innovative and productive ways in which management and employees are working together across the country.

The partnership between the state of Kansas and the Kansas Organization of State Employees (KOSE), a joint union of AFSCME and the American Federation of Teachers is featured in the Labor Day List report as a recent example of how workers and employers can collaborate as equal partners.

As the Labor Day List states:

Thanks to the strong partnership between the state and KOSE, employees are now positioned to address their own workplace issues through their union and provide better agency services. Workers in thousands of job titles—correctional officers, social workers, transportation employees, and mental health facility staff—can now bargain over issues including increased security, training, pay equity, and hours of work.

The report was released by Americans Right at Work, a nonpartisan organization dedicated to educating the American public about the obstacles workers face when attempting to form a union.

Social Security Gets Clean Bill of Health from CBO

August 25th, 2008

From the Economic Policy Institute (EPI): Fears about the future of Social Security were allayed on Friday by a new report issued by the independent Congressional Budget Office. The report finds that not only can future beneficiaries keep counting on receiving benefits in retirement, they can expect those benefits to be larger – even after adjusting for inflation – than those being paid to today’s retirees.

Bush and company in 2005 failed miserably to convince the American public that Social Security privatization was the holy grail of retirement security. Doomsayers will continue to claim the sky is falling, but the facts tell a different story.

EPI outlines the CBO’s findings in a new Policy Memo.

AFSCME in San Francisco – Celebrating Activism

August 1st, 2008

Day 4 of AFSCME’s 38th International Convention: Activism was celebrated on day 4 with an inspiring program emceed by Lamont Wilkerson of New Jersey Council 1, Local 2209), and a Volunteer Member Educator since 2002.

Things got cooking when Deborah Jeffers, the head cook for a school in Salem, MA told how she helped build a partnership of parents, workers, principals, teachers, school committee members, and students to fight to keep freshly cooked meals prepared by skilled AFSCME workers. Not only did they win, they’ve now been selected to run the food service program in 2008-2009, and Jeffers is taking a year leave of absence to become interim Director of the program.

Natasha Pranger, a Forensic Scientist and a member of Local 304, Council 28 in Washington State went from fee payer to Next Waver. And now she’s helping organize the Next Wave of AFSCME members 35 and under.

And Janet Ramsey (Wisconsin Council 24), a Medical Lab Tech for almost 30 years at the University of Wisconsin Hospital, attended an AFSCME women’s leadership training in San Jose, California where she learned how to organize – and hasn’t stopped organizing since.

Watch these inspiring AFSCME activists here:

AFSCME in San Francisco – Final Election Results

August 1st, 2008

From AFSCME’s 38th International Convention: Congratulations to International President Gerald W. McEntee and International Secretary-Treasurer William Lucy who were both re-elected by delegates to another four-year term.

The following International Vice Presidents were elected by Convention delegates:

California – George Popyack and Lakesha Harrison
Capital – Glenard Middleton
Central – Dave Warrick
CSEA – Danny Donohue, Mary Sullivan and George Boncoraglio
Eastern – Sherryl Gordon
Hawaii – Randolph Perreira
Illinois – Henry Bayer and Roberta Lynch
Michigan – Albert Garrett
Midwestern – Danny Homan
New York City – Eddie Rodriguez and Veronica Montgomery-Costa
New York State – Raglan George Jr.
North-Central – Eliot Seide
Northern New England – Anthony Caso
Northwestern – Greg Devereux and Ken Allen
NUHHCE/1199 – Henry Nicholas and Kathy Sackman
Ohio – John Lyall
OAPSE – Joe Rugola
OCSEA – Eddie Parks
Pennsylvania – David Fillman and Mike Fox
Puerto Rico – Braulio Torres
Southeastern – Jeanette Wynn
Southern New England – Salvatore Luciano
Southwestern – Greg Powell
United Domestic Workers – Douglas Moore
Wisconsin – Michael D. Murphy

AFSCME in San Francisco – Convention Business

August 1st, 2008

Resolutions
Delegates to AFSCME’s 38th International Convention adopted several resolutions, among them were these calling on AFSCME to:

  • provide each council and large, unaffiliated local with assistance to facilitate strategic planning work and implementation (#12)
  • enhance member communications and activism through the use of new media (#24)
  • reform government contracting to protect against privatization problems (#51)
  • promote public service workers and the public services that keep our families safe and make our communities strong (#84)
  • protect deserving homeowners from bank foreclosures (#87)
  • fight for passage of the Employee Free Choice Act (#7)
  • seek neutrality agreements during organizing campaigns (#16)
  • provide resources to develop the union’s “Next Wave” program(#59)
  • lead the fight to defeat Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s (R) efforts to slash the salaries of California’s state workers (#98)
  • fight for universal health care (#19 and #81)
  • build member activism (#77)
  • redouble efforts to raise PEOPLE dollars (#83)
  • and support our troops and veterans, and urge the quickest possible withdrawal consistent with troop safety (#84)

New Legislative District
On Wednesday, delegates adopted Amendment Number 7, establishing the United Domestic Workers District, consisting of California Locals 3930 and 4034, formerly of the NUHHCE/1199 District. The 57,000 members of the newly created UDW District are home care workers throughout the state of California.

AFSCME in San Francisco – Homage to Memphis

August 1st, 2008

Day 4 of AFSCME’s 38th International Convention: This day was about activism, so, fittingly, we also honored the 40th anniversary of AFSCME Memphis sanitation workers’ strike and the tragic assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Ruth Davis, proud President of Local 1733, introduced a special video saying, “The video honors Local 1733’s fight, determination and their victory that underlies not only Local 1733, but all of AFSCME and the House of Labor.”

See the video below:

AFSCME in San Francisco – Obama!

July 31st, 2008

Day 4 of AFSCME’s 38th International Convention: Hope was in the air when U.S. Senator Barack Obama spoke to thousands of cheering AFSCME activists today. Even though he spoke via satellite, we could feel the energy of his words as he called for “jobs for the jobless and hope for the hopeless.”

Shirley Brown
Shirley Brown

Obama told the inspiring story of Shirley Brown, a housekeeper at Resurrection Health Care’s Westlake Hospital in Illinois, and a leader in workers’ efforts to win a voice and dignity on the job with AFSCME. Senator Obama has been an active supporter and has spoken at two rallies in support of Resurrection workers. He also signed a letter to Resurrection CEO Joseph Toomey urging him to dialogue with employees.

In addition, Senator Obama renewed his commitment to make sure the Employee Free Choice Act becomes law. The Employee Free Choice Act would allow employees to form a union without employer interference and intimidation.

Senator Obama was preceded by U.S. Senator Hillary Clinton.

Watch an excerpt from Senator Obama’s address: