Tuesday, January 30, 2024

Please Support SEIU Local 503, OPEU Public University Classified Staff


The following post is a lightly-edited communication from Len Norwitz and Johnny Earl of SEIU Local 503, OPEU concerning the union's on-going effort to win a fair contract for classified staff at Oregon's public universities. We have covered this struggle on this blog previously and we ask that our readers strongly support the union's position and turn out for solidarity actions. For those of us in Marion, Polk and Yamhill counties this means turning out to support the union at either WOU (Monmouth) or OSU (Corvallis) on Thursday, February 8.

Here is the latest message:

a) I want to lift up our Classified worker Picket Training and lunch that SEIU 503 is arranging on the seven Public University campuses on Thursday, Feb 8th at noontime - highlighted below. Most of you have been in recent meetings (this fall/winter) with Classified workers and we really appreciate your support. So come on out if you can and use the link to register below - so we have enough food.

b) I also want to tip our hats to the GTFF-Uof O settlement that came thru. It sounded historic in more ways than one and glad we could lend a little SEIU support to that huge win.

c) We are planning to work with education allies and other friends and labor in campus towns to send small delegations to the Universities Admin offices beginning on President's Day - Feb 19th and running into early March. I will be out to many of you to see if you can join in as we deliver the Community Support Petitions - as we close in on 1000 signers of this message. SEIU 503 Higher Ed Community Support Petition.

The message continues:

You’re receiving this email because you signed our SEIU 503 Higher Ed Community Support Petition. Thank you for your past support these last couple of months! We’re approaching 1,000 Community signatures so please continue to spread the word with sharing the link above. As an update, we are still far away from an agreement with management - as our 90 day economic reopener ended on December 31st and we enter mediation with management of the Seven Public Universities on Thursday, February 8th. We’re using the start of mediation to hold “practice pickets” at campuses across Oregon, and we’d love to see you there at noon time. Please RSVP here: Overview ⋮ Higher Ed Info Picket ⋮ Blackthorn ⋮ Events.

Classified workers from all seven of Oregon's public universities (UO, OSU, PSU, WOU, EOU, SOU, and OIT) will be picketing that day so management can see that we are ready to do whatever it takes to get the contract we deserve--and we're not backing down until we get it. Come on down to a public university near you and join us on the picket line at noon on Feb. 8. Bring your coworkers, family, and friends to help show university management that the community has our backs.

Unless university management comes to the table with fair proposals, this will be just the start of actions on campuses. Presently strike pledges are being collected and plans will be made for future campus visits, phone calls, and written communications to universities. Please feel free to let SEIU 503 Higher Ed Strategist Len Norwitz know how you can help in the future – at norwitzl@seiu503.org.

When we fight, we win!

In Solidarity,

Johnny Earl


Monday, January 29, 2024

A Very Important Post Asking For Solidarity With A Union Sister & Activist

We have a union and Coalition of Black Trade Unionists sister here in Oregon who is in urgent need of assistance. the details are as given below. This post is lifted from an appeal making the rounds. I know  Nanette "d" Carter-Jafri and I have donated because her great work has motivated me over the years. Also, what happened to her could happen to most anyone who does the kinds of homecare work that she does. Please assist if you possibly can by donating to help cover her needs via https://www.gofundme.com/f/rent-assistance-for-assaulted-member-leader.




Nanette "d" Carter-Jafri is a Care Provider who was recently assaulted by a stranger as they were completing a task for their consumer. They suffered injuries that forced them to stop working for the consumer. "D" has been out of work for a whle due to this and has been struggling to make ends meet. She is hoping that the generosity of friends, co-workers, union brothers and sisters and SEIU workers and staff will be able to help her raise $3000.00 to keep her in her home this winter.

I have not had to honor to meet "D" so I reached out to a member of AFRAM to learn more about her:

You may meet her in the Forum Building or at SEIU events. Knowledgeable on everything Union with a passion for showcasing her in every way. "D"is a beloved Member from Local 99 as a PSW, PCA and a HCW. She has been a trailblazer with many hats as a Steward, HomeCare Director for District 1 and AFRAM President. She has brought awareness to important topic both to the Local and her Caucus community. D has been actively volunteering and teaching other members on how to be active in their Union for many years and is continuing to show the path to other future leaders.

During one of her nights assisting her consumer D has suffered an attack by a assailant who used hateful and discriminatory language. Due to this attack D had to remove herself from the unsafe workplace and is currently out of work to recover. Now D has at risk of losing her home during this time. Caucus Members, Members, and other Union siblings are requesting you to help their beacon of light from this dark moment and show that an injury to one is an injury to all!

Please donate what you can to help D with her recovery and keep her home this winter.

Communications Workers of America Executive Board Statement on the War in Gaza



January 26, 2024


The Communications Workers of America (CWA) Executive Board released the following statement:

We unequivocally condemn the horrifying and inexcusable attacks by Hamas on October 7.

We urgently call for a stop to the ongoing siege of Gaza and strongly support a ceasefire, the release of all hostages, and the opportunity to deliver humanitarian aid.

The loss of life in Israel and Palestine over the past three months has been staggering - over 25,000 people have been killed, many of them children. Thousands of others are missing or injured.

More than 100 Israeli hostages remain in captivity and nearly all Palestinians living in Gaza have been driven from their homes, facing starvation and disease in addition to the constant risk of death or injury due to the ongoing bombardment of residential areas by the Israeli military. As always, it is working people who are most unable to escape the violence of war and who are bearing the brunt of the suffering.

Those who wish to divide us have taken advantage of heightened tensions to fan the flame of hatred, putting CWA members, retirees, and members of our families and communities at risk from antisemitic and Islamophobic attacks.

Though it has been elusive, we must keep hoping and striving for peace. The global movement for economic justice requires solidarity, and solidarity is impossible in the face of war, terrorism, occupation, and repression. We urge elected leaders to come together to bring an end to the violence and set the stage for long-term solutions that bring safety, security, and democracy to the region.

###

Press Contact
CWA Communications
(202) 434-1168
comms@cwa-union.org


Thursday, January 25, 2024

Today In Union History: The Founding Of The United Mine Workers Of America & A Short Labor History Lesson

 


The United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) was founded in Columbus, Ohio on January 25, 1890. Two days after the union was founded the union's convention voted to create what I believe was the first union strike defense fund paid for by assessing union members' wages in the United States. The founding of the UMWA and the creation of that fund marked a turning point in labor and industrial relations in the United States.

Mine workers had tried many different kinds of labor and union organizations by 1890. There had been sick and death benefit funds and lodges, unions restricted to skilled miners, ethically-based organizations, and local organizations that had been secretive and that sometimes engaged in violence. All of these had failed, most often because employers had the upper hand and could divide the workers and use repressive and violent strategies. There were also the problems of local and regional unions calling strikes prematurely or on their own, an absence of unity and an absence of a shared sense of obligation among mine workers, and the introduction of new ways of getting out coal and getting it to markets that challenged the forms of workers' control in and around the mines that mine workers refused to concede on. Coal markets were changing, mining technology was changing, methods of work were changing, mining was becoming more hazardous, and new immigrants who did not speak English as their first language and who had traditions of their own were entering the mines. In almost every coalfield in the United States what happened in the mines was joined to what happened in the communities aboveground, giving a unique shape to mine worker consciousness and mine union organizing.

The parents of the UMWA---the National Progressive Union of Miners and Mine Laborers and the Knights of Labor Trade Assembly No. 135---had been able to rely on autonomous and secretive local organizations. Early union-employer bargaining in the key Ohio-Illinois-Pennsylvania-Indiana mining districts was carried on with union delegates and coal operators assembling and setting wages and working conditions with what their markets could bear first and foremost in their minds. Miners struck, or refrained from working, in order to create scarcities of coal and increases in coal tonnage market prices and returned to work when prices rose. This helped the operators and the industry, such as they were. But by 1890 this was becoming, or had become, ineffectual. The important anthracite coal industry in northeastern Pennsylvania operated under different conditions, and the push by coal operators into Appalachia and the south and the rise of coal mining in the lower Midwestern and western states threatened stability where the union had its base. The operators who had previously cooperated with the labor organizations were no longer willing or able to do so. Local autonomous organizations could not meet these changing times. The old ideas of uplifting union miners on the basis of their skills, high wages and the contributions they made to their communities as citizens were necessarily giving way to forming a union that included all mine workers, regardless of citizenship or skill levels or racial or ethnic considerations, centralizing union bargaining power and strike coordination, maintaining national strike and defense funds, and forcing the coal industry to regulate itself.

Since the UMWA's founding the union has struggled with an industry that resists both voluntary and imposed regulation, even when that resistance costs lives, resources, money, and long-term industrial survival. The 19th century mine worker traditions of local union autonomy and action, even when these sometimes undermine regional or national solidarity, have never completely disappeared, either. Behind these mine worker traditions stand other traditions, also still somewhat in place, of worker control in the mines and community involvement in mine worker unionism. The UMWA has had to operate within these divergent and conflicting traditions. Employer and state violence and repression followed the union's early and most determined efforts to win justice in the coalfields, and union members and their supporters have responded as well with dramatic and defensive actions that often aroused the conscience of people of good will and eventually won progress. The Ludlow Massacre, the Lattimer Massacre, and the West Virginia Mine Wars were perhaps the most dramatic events that forced the union to toughen up and to often take a hard line in organizing, but these events came with the times in which they occurred. Dramatic struggles resurfaced in the coalfields in the 1960s and 1970s, in the mid- and late-1980s, the early 1990s, and most recently in 2021-2023 with the Warrior Met Coal strike in Alabama. The Warrior Met Coal strike was Alabama's longest strike.

A legacy of fighting back exists in the UMWA, and a shared and certain knowledge of the human costs of working non-union holds on as well. The union's presence in the coalfields has made the difference between life and death in the mines.

Boys working in Pennsylvania's anthracite mines 


Some of the 500-plus dead in the Monongah mine disaster of 1907


Strikers and their families in Ludlow, Colorado



The UMWA reached for an all-encompassing industrial unionism and became the foundation of modern mainstream industrial unionism. The union built strong relations of solidarity between Chicano and Mexican and Mexican American mine workers, Black mine workers, and white mine workers in most of the union's districts, but anti-Asian and anti-Chinese racism among mine workers limited the union's anti-racism. Other industrial unions that the UMWA helped birth went further. The UMWA led the fight against black lung disease, but with the recent loss of union density in mining black lung is making a terrible comeback. The union pioneered in institutionalizing healthcare in Appalachia, and in union pension and health and welfare programs nationally, but coal industry economics and some stubborn and corrupt corporations and politicians---and, regrettably, some corrupt union officials and staff---have done much damage to these programs.

Has the UMWA failed? No, not at all. That a small group of miners coalesced behind a shared and optimistic vision of effective industrial unionism in 1890 and built a union that has lasted 134 years is in itself a tremendous victory. The UMWA has withstood repression and violence brought against it by hostile employers and anti-union politicians. The union went through a particularly tough period following the First World War, a period that saw the UMWA nearly dissolved as internal factionalism and widespread unemployment in the coalfields and anti-union court rulings and legislation took a hard toll, but rebounded to lead the labor upsurge of the 1930s. It was at that point of crisis after the First World War that John L. Lewis took control of the UMWA, and his presence and leadership defined much of the labor movement into the late 1950s. To this day there are mine workers and others in coalfield communities who hold his memory dear.

Internal corruption wounded the union in the late 1940s and 1950s, but the mine workers and their allies who fought for mine safety, black lung prevention and benefits, pension rights and union democracy supported the Miners for Democracy campaign and a widespread strike movement that brought Arnold Miller to the presidency of the UMWA. Miller's election and the movement around him represented a great advance for labor. The election of Rich Trumka to the presidency of the UMWA in 1982 (and later to leadership in the AFL-CIO), the A.T. Massey strike (1984-1985), and the Pittston coal strike (April 5, 1989 to February 20, 1990) also opened new possibilities for labor in the United States. Women miners and mineworkers fought their way into the industry, found a home in the UMWA, and as union members opened the doors for other working women. Their work is still being celebrated. Improvements in mine safety are due almost entirely to the UMWA's work.

The UMWA has been built from the mine workers and the foundations of the union are in the coalfields, but the union represents many occupations that are unrelated to mining. If you are not a union member, and if you and your coworkers want a union, consider the UMWA. There is also an Associate Member program for friends of the UMWA that builds solidarity and provides some great benefits.  

The UMWA has not failed. The best is yet to come.

Cecil Roberts, President of the UMWA
                            

Wednesday, January 24, 2024

Union Density in 2023---A report from the Oregon AFL-CIO

The following report has been issued by the Oregon AFL-CIO. This is an important and short read. Perhaps the messages from the numbers given here are that the enthusiasm we're feeling is justified but that this is not a moment to rest and that there are systemic barriers to building our labor movement that have to be---and can be---overcome.

Yesterday, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) released its annual report on union density. The report shows that national union membership grew by 139,000 in 2023. Union membership in the private sector increased by 191,000 members, and the majority of new members are under the age of 45. The increases in membership are part of a strong resurgence of organized labor which also resulted in over 900,000 union members winning double-digit wage increases through new contracts last year.

In Oregon, we saw a decrease in our density numbers as well and it’s important that we understand and communicate clearly about what impacts these figures:

We are seeing higher rates of vacancies in public sector employers, with nearly one-fifth of state positions vacant as of April 2023.

We have a high rate of employment in Oregon, with July 2023 seeing Oregon’s non-agricultural employment surpass 2 million workers for the first time in state history.

While union organizing efforts were 10% higher in Fiscal Year 2023 than the previous year, the rate of workers joining labor unions was not as high as job growth and numerous vacancies in the public sector.

Additionally, the BLS report does not include workers who have yet to bargain a first contract which discounts a significant portion of newly organized workers.

As Oregon Labor, we know that numbers are only one part of a complicated story. We have seen a resurgence of support and enthusiasm for unions that has not been seen in generations. With organizing and collective bargaining victories already stacking up in 2024, the Oregon Labor Movement is poised and ready to carry the momentum we built last year to make this year even stronger for working people.

In 2023, unions in Oregon garnered attention and fueled inspiration among workers statewide through a series of strikes, successful organizing drives, and victorious contract negotiation campaigns. These efforts, which President Trainor acknowledged, not only bolstered the labor movement across the state but also established a precedent for solidarity and collective action, leaving a lasting impact on the workforce. The achievements of Oregon unions sparked a renewed sense of empowerment among workers, fostering a culture of activism and advocacy for improved working conditions.

To learn more about the annual BLS data, as well as see statistics and high water marks that the report does not include, please visit our website to read our latest press release on this topic.

In Solidarity,

Graham Trainor
President, Oregon AFL-CIO
He/Him/His

Tuesday, January 23, 2024

A historic win for immigrant and agricultural workers & an ask for solidarity



The Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC), with support from the Campaign for Migrant Worker Justice (CMWJ), just concluded a two-year organizing campaign resulting in a collective bargaining agreement covering workers at an agricultural packing shed at Battleboro Produce in North Carolina! This is an unprecedented win for immigrant workers in the deep South.

The contract guarantees overtime pay, an 8% wage increase, union business paid leave, bereavement pay and more. Workers are now officially part of the Farm Labor Organizing Committee, AFL-CIO and will have union representation and a collective voice.

“We have benefits now, we have rights and representation!”-a new FLOC union member at Battleboro Produce

This is a historic victory extending union representation to a workforce that is predominately immigrant women. Our strategy and mission is to build immigrant power, fight for workers’ rights, and hold those in power accountable. This requires being both a community and labor union. By organizing the women at Battleboro Produce, we are not only strengthening workplace protections and directly increasing wages, but we are organizing households and entire communities.

Read more in-depth about the innovative methods we're using to organize immigrant workers in the deep South and how this worked at Battleboro Produce.

Thank you for your continued support in the fight for justice. Donate today to support us in building worker power.

A sheet metal worker says his union has given him “countless blessings”


SMART, the International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers union, has a great organizing program and a cutting-edge website. A post went up there on January 17, 2024 that I want to share with you.

The union has a program called Belonging and Excellence for All (BE4ALL). This sounds like an exciting program and the union's website describes it as a "targeted approach to ensure that all members, particularly those from historically underrepresented groups, experience" the union's "universal goals" of "an environment of welcoming, belonging and excellence for all of our members." I believe that we need these programs and I wish that they had been in place when I was coming up.

The BE4ALL program recently ran a quarterly contest, which asked SMART members to answer the question: Why are you proud to be a SMART union member? The website reports that the winner of this contest is a union brother named Matthew Beckham from Georgia. Brother Beckham's short essay is so thoughtful and well-written that I want to share it with you. Here it is.




“My story is short and sweet: By joining the union in 2007, I have had doors opened to me that would have never been opened if I wouldn’t have taken the leap of faith and cleaned my act up by seizing such a great opportunity for myself and my family. I am currently a safety manager for the best and biggest mechanical contractor in the state of Georgia, McKenney’s. My calling has led me down a safety path, where I have the opportunity to help my brothers and sisters get through problems and challenges in our industry.

“My daughter is the recipient of one of the 2023-2024 scholarship awards from SMART. She has been selected out of 130 other candidates and is the winning one for zone three. She is currently a freshman at Faulkner University in Montgomery, Alabama.

“To summarize this with grace: Neither myself nor my family would be where we are today if it wasn’t for my local union. The union life has given me countless blessings, and I wear it daily with pride, integrity and humility.”

  





Sunday, January 21, 2024

Graphics from SEIU's Red Hot Worker help make our points

This is why we unionize. Be sure to follow us here at 
@unionproudwarrior to support all things pro worker and pro union.


 

CFA members will be on a system-wide strike in coalition with our 
Teamsters Local 2010 @ibtlocal2010 members January 22–26!



Saturday, January 20, 2024

Solidarity needed in Eugene! Home health and hospice nurses at PeaceHealth Sacred Heart Home Care Services in Lane County have issued a strike notice.

 


After a year of negotiations, forty bargaining sessions and countless hours of effort, home health and hospice nurses at PeaceHealth Sacred Heart Home Care Services in Lane County have made the difficult decision to issue a strike notice to PeaceHealth’s corporate executives.

From Feb. 1 – Feb. 14, nurses and allies will be on the picket line pushing back against PeaceHealth’s inadequate bargaining proposals which have led to record turnover and job vacancies, care delays and pay inequities.

Donate to the strike relief fund here: https://ow.ly/neE050QsKCV
Support SHHCS Nurses here: https://ow.ly/zHIe50QsKCU
Learn more about the strike and their situation here: https://ow.ly/7QTo50QsKCW

PeaceHealth executives in Washington are abandoning local patients and putting their own profits ahead of patients’ needs … AGAIN. From heartlessly closing University District–leaving Eugene without a hospital–to handing corporate executives multimillion dollar raises during the pandemic, PeaceHealth’s corporate executives are cutting your health care again so they can cash in.

Thankfully, your local ONA nurses at PeaceHealth Sacred Heart Home Care Services are standing up to fight back!

A lesson for all of us: Massachusetts Teachers Are Making Waves and Winning Demands With Illegal Strikes

This report from Barbara Madeloni in the January 13, 2024 issue of Truthout (and previously published in Labor Notes) reminds us that nothing is given to workers without a hard struggle. We often benefit from activism that was established decades or centuries ago, but we also benefit from people who do "good trouble" on a regular basis today. The courageous West Virginia teachers who inspired the national Red For Ed movement started organizing their modern movement back in the 1960s and 1970s and struck in 1990, an illegal (and successful) almost-statewide strike that was enabled by a dramatic strike wave carried on by many diverse groups of workers. Practical union solidarity has many ingredients. Two of them are solidarity of workers across the board and a willingness to challenge the laws when they do not build justice.

Striking Andover teachers gathered on the Town Common in Andover, Massachusetts, on November 13, 2023.SUZANNE KREITER / THE BOSTON GLOBE VIA GETTY IMAGES


This story was originally published by Labor Notes.

A wildly successful, illegal three-day strike by the Andover Education Association in November has reverberated statewide for educators in Massachusetts.

The lowest-paid instructional assistants got a 60 percent wage jump immediately. Classroom aides on the higher end of the scale got a 37 percent increase.

Members won paid family medical leave, an extra personal day, fewer staff meetings, and the extension of lunch and recess times for elementary students.

Andover is 20 miles north of Boston, and the strike involved 10 schools.

For 10 months and 27 bargaining sessions, the Andover School Committee had insisted that none of these demands was possible. But by the end of the first day of the strike, they had ceded many items. By day three, they agreed to almost all of the union’s demands.

Public school workers can’t legally strike in Massachusetts — but Andover’s is just one of a series of school unions that have struck over the last four years, defying the ban, and in some cases paying heavy fines as a result.

The Massachusetts Teachers Association is pushing for legislation that would legalize public sector strikes after six months of bargaining.

Opening Up Meetings

The wins at Andover come after years of building rank-and-file power and democracy within the Andover Education Association (AEA).

When President Matt Bach and his slate won leadership in 2019, they startled the district by refusing to meet privately with the superintendent, insisting that all meetings would include at least one member.

The new leaders opened up union meetings and budgets. They shared union budget details, including that coffers had been significantly depleted by leadership travel to conferences. They encouraged discussion of critical issues, and the union started organizing building by building.

The first big fight was at South Elementary School, where a bullying principal was targeting teachers. The new union leaders sent out a survey about the school climate, but the recently deposed union leaders alleged that those asking for the survey were themselves the bullies.

Siding with the former union leaders, the district began an investigation and interviewed dozens of teachers. Instead of being intimidated, members got angry and organized a rally to call out the bullying. Under this pressure, the principal and the head of human resources were removed by the superintendent.

Lawn Chair Day

In the return to work mid-pandemic, AEA members refused to enter the school buildings for a professional development day until their safety could be assured. Instead they set up lawn chairs and their computers outside.

This action was deemed a strike by the state. The members were unprepared for an actual strike, so they returned to the buildings the next day. However, the action secured them a new air filtration system and helped lead to the resignation of the superintendent.

When the district received American Rescue Plan Act funds in the midst of the pandemic, AEA insisted that some of those funds be used to pay bonuses to the lowest-paid workers in the district, including cafeteria and other workers not in the union. The district balked, so the union worked with the community to bring the question to the Andover town meeting, which in some towns in Massachusetts is the town’s governing body. The goal: let the residents decide if they wanted to use the funds as bonuses.

School lawyers insisted that the motion was illegal and the issue was between the union and the district. At the town meeting, though, the community voted to support the motion as an advisory decision. (The district re-opened negotiations, and the issue remains unsettled.)

Opening Up

BargainingEach of these actions added a layer of educators ready to take on the district during contract negotiations. But not everyone was convinced.

Kate Carlton, a special education teacher at Doherty Middle School, told me she kept the union at arm’s length, because of negative past experiences with unions.

She said she didn’t believe the dire reports sent by Bach during the pandemic negotiations: “The language in his emails, I was like, no way. This is charged language, opinionated words. It cannot be that bad.”

Carlton started to attend negotiations to see for herself. “I heard and saw the way our town talked about teachers and what we do,” she said. “I was watching them and thinking, your child uses special ed! Your child uses special ed and you don’t respect what educators do? Feeling the ugliness. Then they speak out of the other side of their mouths and write these emails about how much they value us.”

Dan Donovan, a 15-year science teacher, was reluctant at first to join the strike vote — but changed his mind after he, too, witnessed negotiations. “It was informative to see how our side wanted to discuss and reason and go through things and we were just talking to a stone wall,” said Donovan. “When the School Committee sends out a press release or an email, they say one thing, but when you go to the bargaining session it is clear what is really going on.”

“The Price Is Right”

The School Committee resisted having union members in the room during bargaining — and the room could not hold the 100 to 200 members who wanted to attend each time.

While the union could have filed an unfair labor practice charge alleging that the district was not allowing the union to choose its own bargaining team and not meeting in a mutually agreed-upon space, it took an organizing approach instead.

Fifty members sat in the room as negotiations took place. Then the union would call a caucus and meet with those members and more who were in the auditorium next door. After discussion, a new group of 50 members would return, and negotiations would continue. Every time the union called a caucus, new members swapped in.

After one session when the School Committee objected to this swapping, members got more fired up than ever. Bach said enthusiasm was so great, “it was like ‘The Price is Right.’ People were rushing to be the ones to get in the room.”

Top Tip: Listen

What moved members to strike? Everyone I spoke to said members witnessing bargaining was central, but what made the most difference was listening.

Carlton identified members in her building who she knew had had issues with the union in the past. “I just say, ‘Hey, can I talk to you?’ I’m not going to tell them what to do. I am going to listen.”

Beth Arnold, a high school math teacher who was on the bargaining team, said the creation of communication teams of 10 members to one leader in the high school allowed people to engage in more conversations with each other, to hear from voices other than “the loudest,” and not rely just on emails or the word of the leadership.

When she talked with members about the illegality of the strike, and their fears, Arnold emphasized that the choice to strike was a shared decision — not one to make alone.

Passing It On

The strike wave among Massachusetts educators started in April 2019 with the Dedham Teachers Association. It was the first teachers strike in Massachusetts since 2007.

The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court has ruled that even using the word “strike” constitutes “inducing, encouraging or condoning a work stoppage by public employees.” Union leaders who do so risk fines — personally and as elected leaders — and even jail time.

The Dedham educators voted to strike on a Thursday, were out one day, and had a tentative agreement in time to return to work Monday. They faced minimal fines.

The Brookline Educators Union struck in May 2022. They were out one day and were willing to pay a $50,000 fine imposed by the school district on the union.

The wave built with Haverhill, Malden, Woburn, and now Andover. Melrose Teacher Association members authorized a strike, but won all they demanded before they could walk out.

Some unions faced fines of up to $50,000 a day; others did not. In Woburn the community held a bake sale to help pay the fine. Some people paid $100 a cookie.
“Nothing Different About Us”

Educators in Massachusetts are not only seeing each other strike and win, but also teaching each other how to do it.

Barry Davis, president of the Haverhill Teachers Association, which struck in October 2022, says the lessons were first forged in the Merrimack Valley bargaining council, an informal network of six teacher locals that meet regularly to share contract issues and organizing strategies. After the Haverhill and Malden strikes, organizers from those locals reached out to or were contacted by members of other locals.

“We’d go out and talk to members in these locals, and they realized that we were just like them, that there was nothing different about us that made us able to strike,” Davis said. “When you are a third grade teacher with three kids, and a third grade teacher with three kids shows up to tell you how to do this, you realize much more is possible.”

AEA members have been transformed. “I don’t recognize these people,” said Bach shortly after the strike.

Originally Donovan said that he would do anything to support the union, except break the law. Now he says, “I’ve come around. Not all laws are just, and that is an unjust law. Teachers deserve the right to strike for just wages.”

This story was originally published by Labor Notes.


The views expressed here are not those of the Marion-Polk-Yamhill Central Labor Chapter or those of the Oregon AFL-CIO.

Rally to support Salem-Keizer classified school staff on Monday, January 29

 


Friday, January 19, 2024

Three Upcoming Labor Events In Portland (One is by Zoom)

READY-TO-STRIKE: Break the Dam! We are the Tide! (Portland Community College Federation of Faculty and Academic Professionals)
Fair Contract Now! Invest in Educators! Invest in Students!
Sun. Jan. 28, Noon
Terry Shrunk Plaza, 431 SW Madison St.
RSVP: https://tinyurl.com/FFAPjan28



Rally with New Season Labor Union (NSLU)
Living Wages, Fair Attendance and Discipline Policy
Tues. Jan. 30, 11:30am-1:30pm
Corporate HQ, 1300 SE Stark
DONATE: https://www.gofundme.com/f/new-seasons-labor-union-solidarity-fund


Investigating Grievances - a Labor Notes Steward's Workshop
Tues. Jan. 30, 5-6:30pm (zoom)
*Limited to stewards and officers who work with stewards
Grievances are a lot more than what you write down on a grievance form or what gets said in a grievance hearing. Some of the most important work that goes into winning a grievance happens before you even file, and pays off big time if a grievance ends up going to arbitration.
RSVP: https://labornotes.org/events/2024/stewards-workshop-investigating-grievances-january-2024

AT&T Non-Union Retail Store Workers Are Organizing

Click on the post to make it larger and clearer, please. Salem-Keizer also has non-union AT&T retail stores. Is anybody busy organizing out there? 
 

Union Workers Win Extraordinary Settlement Against Kimbal Musk’s Big Green


 
January 19, 2024


After blatantly and unlawfully terminating workers for forming a union, Musk’s nonprofit ordered to reinstate workers and recognize their union

DENVER, Colo. – In an extraordinary ruling, the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado has ordered Kimbal Musk’s nonprofit Big Green to reinstate workers whose positions were eliminated in 2021 in a blatant attempt to thwart the workers’ desire to form a union. Following the precedent set in the NLRB’s Cemex decision last year, United States District Judge Gordon P. Gallagher of the District of Colorado has further issued a bargaining order, compelling Big Green to recognize the workers’ union and bargain a union contract.

Big Green is a nonprofit organization founded by multi-millionaire Kimbal Musk, brother of Elon Musk, that built and operated “learning gardens” at schools to teach children about healthy eating and agriculture. Staff became concerned about racism in Big Green’s operations but experienced retaliation when they attempted to raise their concerns through the organization’s proper channels, including its Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Council. When the DEI council was disbanded, the workers’ dedication to the organization’s mission and the schoolchildren that they served led them to organize as a union.

On June 28, 2021, a majority of the program coordinators and program managers at Big Green demanded recognition for their union, the Denver Newspaper Guild-CWA Local 37074. Big Green management responded with a campaign of intimidation, surveillance, and retaliation against the very employees who brought the learning gardens to thousands of schoolchildren.

On September 13, 2021, days after facing off with their workers in a pre-election hearing before the NLRB, Big Green laid off the entire 10-person bargaining unit, claiming that the sudden layoffs were part of an organizational restructuring. Coming in the early weeks of the school year, the layoffs left teachers at 650 schools with a gap in their lesson planning as learning garden events were canceled without notice.

“It is very validating to see the law affirm that I did the right thing. I was shamed and threatened by leadership within Big Green for exercising my right to organize,” said Colleen Donahoe, an unlawfully terminated program coordinator in Indianapolis, Ind. “Regardless of the remedy, I’m glad to see them held accountable for betraying their staff and abandoning the schools we worked with.”

“This settlement is a wake-up call for top-down organizations to value workers who are on the ground every day,” said J.P. Miller, one of the unlawfully terminated program coordinators. “In nonprofit programming, workers are exploited, overworked, and underpaid. Obviously, this applies to the for-profit sector even more so, but our hope is that this decision will have a meaningful impact in the ongoing movement for workplace reform and labor rights.“

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Two Inspiring Union Videos From MLK Day


 


Wednesday, January 17, 2024

Sara Nelson & Hamilton Nolan to speak in Portland on February 18

I am not a fan of writer Hamilton Nolan, but I am probably in a minority in that among left-of-center Labor folks who are familiar with his work. I am a strong supporter of  "Sara Nelson, the fiery and charismatic head of the (CWA) flight attendants’ union" and I want to urge people to attend this event at Powell's Books in Portland on Sunday, February 18 at 3:00 PM. What follows is a media release from Powel's about the event.)





Sunday, February 18 @ 3:00 PM
Powell's City of Books


The Hammer: Power, Inequality, and the Struggle for the Soul of Labor (Hachette) is a timely, in-depth, and vital exploration of the American labor movement and its critical place in our society and politics, from acclaimed labor reporter Hamilton Nolan. Inequality is America’s biggest problem. Unions are the single strongest tool that working people have to fix it. Organized labor has been in decline for decades. Yet it sits today at a moment of enormous opportunity. In the wake of the pandemic, a highly visible wave of strikes and new organizing campaigns have driven the popularity of unions to historic highs. The simmering battle inside of the labor movement over how to tap into its revolutionary potential — or allow it to be squandered — will determine the economic and social course of American life for years to come. In chapters that span the country, Nolan shows readers the actual places where labor and politics meld. He highlights how organized labor can and does wield power effectively: a union that dominates Las Vegas and is trying to scale nationally; a successful decades-long campaign to organize California's child care workers; the human face of a surprising strike of factory workers trying to preserve their pathway to the middle class. Throughout, Nolan follows Sara Nelson, the fiery and charismatic head of the flight attendants’ union, as she struggles with how (and whether) to assert herself as a national leader, to try to fix what is broken.

The Hammer draws the line from forgotten workplaces in rural West Virginia to Washington’s halls of power, and shows how labor solidarity can utterly transform American politics — if it can first transform itself. A labor journalist for more than a decade, Nolan helped unionize his own industry. The Hammer is an urgent on-the-ground excavation of the past, present, and future of the American labor movement. Nolan will be joined in conversation by Sara Nelson, International President of the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA.

Please note: Signed preordered books will be shipped to you and are not available for pick-up in the store the night of the event (but if you're planning to attend, don't worry! Signed editions are usually available at the events). Also, we are sorry but we can not accommodate personalized inscriptions, or guarantee the signed books are first editions. Thanks for your understanding.

Two Important Labor Solidarity Calls from Portland Jobs With Justice (AND A VICTORY!)

The first post below regarding the academic student employees at Washington State University reached us this morning. I posted it just a few minutes ago and while I was working on another post word reached us that "THE STRIKE IS OFF ! WSU-CASE has a Tentative Agreement with WSU Administration!"

This is indeed good news and it shows what labor solidarity and a credible strike threat can accomplish. It's almost counter-intuitive. You may well avoid a strike if you help build solidarity among your coworkers, have a credible strike threat at hand that even management can see, win support from other union members and then from the public, and have good issues that everyone can identify with. It's much more about what happens between us and our coworkers every day and much less about what happens behind closed doors.

I'm going to leave the post up to draw attention to the union's victory.




More than a thousand academic student employees at Washington State University walked off the job today, after 11 months of university administration's unwillingness to offer a contract which supports fair wages, improved health care, paid parental leave, and more. Join WSU CASE-UAW (Coalition of Academic Student Employees-UAW) and UAW Local 492 down at the Vancouver branch of WSU to support workers on strike! Follow along on Facebook here, on Twitter here. And sign up for picket shifts here!

WSU entrance, 14100 NE Salmon Creek Ave., Vancouver WA

Beginning today, for as long as it takes! 7am - 5pm




Doughnut Workers United Blue Star will vote in their union election today! Following the election, you can join DWU Bluestar tonight, at 7pm, at Workers Tap in Portland.

10% of all sales will support the GoFundMe set up to aid the active union supporters who were furloughed during the unionization effort.

Join the fundraiser tonight and/or contribute directly here!


Tuesday, January 16, 2024

Congratulations to Wells-Fargo workers in Daytona Beach who just went union! What about Salem-Keizer?

REI workers are organizing for union representation nationally. We have REI.

Starbucks workers are organizing nationally. We have lots of Starbucks stores.

Healthcare professionals are organizing across Oregon. Salem Hospital is non-union.

Wells Fargo workers are organizing around the United States. We have Wels Fargo banks and a large Wells Fargo center.

Amazon workers are organizing nationally. We have an Amazon facility.

There are plenty of union organizing opportunities in Marion, Polk and Yamhill counties. If you are interested in forming a union, contact the Oregon AFL-CIO. If you work for one of the employers mentioned above, hit the link to connect with the union that is active in your sector. 



Top Cut:
Bankers and tellers at a Wells Fargo branch in Daytona Beach, Florida, voted last week to join the Communications Workers of America’s (CWA’s) Wells Fargo Workers United. This is the second-ever successful election at the megabank.

Why It Matters:
Momentum around organizing Wells Fargo branches is building quickly across the country. Just weeks ago staff at a branch in Albuquerque, New Mexico, became the first to win a union election, and workers in Wilmington, Delaware, filed for a union election soon after. Despite Wells Fargo’s anti-union attacks, these workers are fighting to secure a meaningful voice on the job to improve conditions for themselves and their customers.



Note: the reference to The Onion in the graphic above refers to on-going union activism at The Onion, a satirical and often hilarious on-line publication. This is almost new territory for union organizing. And despite what looks like glum numbers above, note that worker activism at Wells Fargo has won over $205 million for workers in just a short period. If you set out to organize a union in Marion, Polk or Yamhill counties you will have support.

The graphic, photo and news story come from the AFL-CIO Daily Brief.

Monday, January 15, 2024

On this day and every day carry the message on!




 

The Graduate Teaching Fellows Federation at the University of Oregon have declared their intent to strike on January 17...

This post came via the Oregon AFL-CIO:




The Graduate Teaching Fellows Federation at the University of Oregon have declared their intent to strike on January 17 if a fair contract is not reached. Last year, we saw a wave of strikes sweep across the Pacific Northwest and nationally. Everywhere workers picketed, unions and workers stepped up in solidarity to support the workers on strike.

The GTFF strike in Eugene is no exception, and it’s time for Oregon Labor to come together and help these hard working graduate employees win a fair contract. Without the labor of GTFF members, the University of Oregon simply cannot function effectively. By supporting GTFF, we can help send a message that the community in Eugene and across the state stands behind graduate employees.

Make sure you’re checking the GTFF website and following them on Facebook and Twitter/X for the latest news about the strike.

Here’s how you can help:

Sign Up to Walk the Line with GTFF

Click Here to Sign Up for a Picket Line Shift and please encourage others to join

Check-in at Strike HQ (609 E. 13th Ave. in Eugene)

Feel free to contact Miche with questions (971-998-8794)

Bring a donation with you! Click Here for a list of goods GTFF members need

Attend the Rally on January 19 in Eugene

Stand with the Graduate Teaching Fellows Federation in their fight for a fair contract at a rally on Friday, January 19 at the EMU Amphitheater at the University of Oregon at 3:00pm. Speakers include AFT President Randi Weingarten! Click here to download a flier to help promote the rally.



The Portland Jazz Composers Ensemble and Musicians Union Local 99 have a great event coming up!

This announcement came via the Pacific Northwest Labor History Association and the Portland Jazz Composers Ensemble:


PJCE's first large ensemble show is happening February19th at The Hallowed Halls
Union Makes Us Strong amplifies workers’ voices and modern labor issues in a free concert!

Join PJCE and Musicians Union Local 99 for a concert exploring the past and present of Oregon’s labor movements through newly commissioned jazz compositions and arrangements performed by PJCE’s 12-member ensemble and guest vocalist Marilyn Keller.

The free event will include premieres of compositions and arrangements by Kerry Politzer, Jasnam Daya Singh, Ryan Meagher, Lars Campbell, and Caroline Miller. Presented as part of the 2024 Biamp Portland Jazz Festival, the music will touch on the causes of timber, health care, and farm workers, among others.

Please RSVP here to make sure you have a spot at the show- we expect this one to fill up fast.

WHEN: Monday, February 19th
WHERE: The Hallowed Halls, 4420 SE 64th Ave, Portland
TICKETS: Free to attend with RSVP

More info about the composers and ensemble members can be found on our website. We can't wait to debut these new pieces for you!