Showing posts with label Unions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Unions. Show all posts

Friday, June 28, 2024

Some of the faces and news from workers in motion this week

 


Fifty union members from CWA, Teamsters, and SEIU filled the Denver City Council
chambers recently to support an initiative to place collective bargaining rights for city
workers on the ballot this fall!!


“After weeks of tough negotiations, CWA Local 7172 has ratified a tentative 3-year
 agreement with Windstream in Iowa. This agreement includes significant wins for
 our members, such as much-needed wage increases, improved cost-sharing for 
healthcare, and an upgrade path for certain technicians.“



Oregon AFSCME says: We're proud of our Lake Oswego Municipal Employees
Association/AFSCME Local 1546 members who rallied for better wages and fair 
treatment(on June 26). Local 1546 members are the backbone of this community, and
 they deserve to be heard and respected!


#PortlandPride is happening this July 20th and 21st #OregonLabor will
 be marching in solidarity with our LGBTQ+ siblings in the parade and will have
 a booth at the waterfront festival. RSVP to join us! https://fb.me/e/1Z7sVuAI0

We are excitedly preparing for our 24th annual dinner, "Las Voces del Trabajador," which is coming up in less than two months on Friday, August 23rd, 2024, at the Madeleine Church. This special evening will celebrate the resilience and strength of day laborers and domestic workers, featuring reflections on our history, achievements, current progress, and future plans. Our goal is to raise $25,000 to continue building worker power, stability, and transparency

Help us amplify "Las Voces del Trabajador":Buy a Ticket: Tickets are available now! Ensure your spot at this inspiring event by purchasing your tickets today. Link below!

Become a Sponsor: Help our event be a success by becoming a sponsor. Your sponsorship will help us reach our fundraising goal and support our mission. More information below!
Become a Volunteer: We need help with event planning, setup, and cleanup. If you're interested in helping out, please contact karla@portlandvoz.org. Your efforts will make a big difference!

Stay tuned in the coming weeks as we continue to share with you all the work that we have been doing, and highlight stories from our workers! We are excited to celebrate with you and share the progress we've made over the past year. None of this would be possible without your unwavering support. Let's come together to amplify "Las Voces del Trabajador" and continue creating positive change in our community.



It’s a big deal yall. No criminal trial defender has gone on strike since 1994. 
And the ‘94 strike was broken by the founding of BXD as a scab organization to
 break the Legal Aid strike. Historic that@BxDUnion is undoing the harm of founding
 and building power for us all.






Starbucks Workers Union: We’re back at the bargaining table this week! And
 we’ve got a special update from our Trans Rights Action Committee (TRAC).TRAC
 is bringing to bargaining and how we’re fighting for real, written protections for LGBTQ+ 
workers in our contract.


Congratulations to staff at Race Forward, the national nonprofit dedicated to
 "dismantling structural racism by building collective community power and transforming
 institutions," for voluntary recognition of their union with the National Organization of Legal
 Services Workers (NOLSW), UAW Local 2320. Unions are an essential part of racial justice, and advocates for this important issue deserve a say on the job.

Wednesday, June 26, 2024

Co-enforcement, Worker Power, and Re-thinking Labor and Social Movements (Part Two)

Harlan County, Kentucky mine workers take collective action in 1939

(Please see the first post in this two-part series here.) 

It would certainly help matters if all of us came to a new understanding of politics based in our collective working-class experience and a new understanding of solidarity and supporting one another as well. Imagine a powerful pro-worker and pro-union set of laws and rules, a fair legal system, and government agencies, unions and allied organizations partnering on inclusive research and enforcement and penalizing wayward employers. One necessary component of that would be workers running for office and taking positions in government agencies. That day seems far away. We are not yet at a point where we are about the business of building the kinds of solidarity and union growth that directly involves people in taking collective control of our destinies. We have an immediate challenge of impressing on people that when we vote for governors and labor commissioners in Oregon we are voting either for or against co-enforcement and explaining the positives and negatives involved in making that choice.

In the meantime, we struggle with seemingly mundane questions like what constitutes evidence in a wage and hour complaint or in a grievance, what is and isn’t just cause for discipline at work, and how do you know if piece rate pay is being done correctly or not. The questions may seem tedious, but the answers to them can make qualitative differences in worker’s lives. And from how these questions are understood and dealt with come more questions about how workers organize and fight for our rights and what form these fights take and where they might lead. Our challenge is to politicize what seems mundane. The strongest and most experienced advocates for co-partnering between unions and union-supportive organizations fighting for workers’ rights at the conference put forward a few case studies and preliminary responses to how these types of questions can be taken up. Most of these were success stories of one kind or another. All of them raised many questions in my mind.

The Pilipino Workers Center in Los Angeles is engaged in organizing some homecare workers and using legal enforcement mechanisms and co-enforcement and partnerships with other organizations to win gains with these workers. Their work was described as an attempt to “build a whole new kind of brain trust” and it sounded to me as if they are a kind of hybrid non-profit and union. Here in Oregon, we have Pineros y Campesinos Unidos del Noroeste (PCUN) doing a service center that refers workers to the Northwest Workers Justice Project (NWJP) and state agencies. The NWJP has also partnered with the Carpenters union and BOLI and other state agencies to pursue claims against carpentry contractors working in the underground economy and this work has been particularly successful. The Carpenters union, PCUN, NWJP and the state agencies that are working together deal with language barriers, worker’s fears of retaliation and deportation, and worker pessimism as well as weak laws and employer opposition.

There are hopes that cooperation will develop between the worker organizations, more state agencies, and federal agencies and that targeted enforcement and an inter-agency task force model will develop. There are also hopes that penalties against bad employers will be increased, that enforcement will go deeper and be more effective, and that employers will be forced to pay for trainings by worker advocates that will then lead to deeper labor organizing. Some portion of public funds dedicated to infrastructure could be used to facilitate these changes, and local, state, and federal bodies should not be contracting with companies and their contractors who violate labor laws. These violators should lose their business licenses and registrations and should be shut down. Companies should be held responsible for the behavior of the contractors that they do business with.

State’s attorneys general could be given the power to enforce wage and hour law, as is done in Massachusetts, and union representatives could be deputized, as happens in the construction industry in Multnomah County and the Los Angeles school district. Legal cases brought forward by pro-worker non-profits could be expedited. Companies could be forced to disclose all their locations, contractors and sub-contractors and unions and allied organizations could use this information to map and chart industries and carry organizing forward. Wage theft ordinances might be won, and these might contain liability clauses that go up the chain from the sub-contractors to the responsible employer. Protections for reporting violations can be strengthened and reporters can be anonymous and still have their complaints acted upon. Perhaps one of the most radical hopes or proposals is that there be an established presumption that wage claims and other complaints signal a widespread problem in an industry and that these complaints should lead to selective industrial investigations and co-enforcement tactics and strategies.

Opposition to this comes from several quarters. Employers will claim that they should not be targeted for investigation because certain competitors are bad actors. Employers are making California the center of their efforts to oppose partnerships between government agencies, unions, and worker advocacy organizations. Among their strongest allies are city attorneys and local mayors who won’t take on bad employers and who want exceptions made where and when certain violations occur. The employers and certain government agencies also often resist recognizing the non-profit worker organizations with the claim that they need to protect the confidentiality of workers making complaints (there are legal ways around this) or employers may take a demand by a pro-worker non-profit as a legal demand for union recognition and argue for a union election before the National Labor Relations Board knowing that the workers will not vote for a union. There are continuing fights over the rights and protections that should be accessible to whistleblowers.

Small companies and companies owned by employers of color cannot afford the trainings that corporations have access to. Oregon’s safe staffing law (HB 2697) is already being violated and tested by employers. BOLI wants changes in laws, rules and enforcement that will benefit workers while our Department of Justice is resisting that, making our Attorney General a key decider. Some unions agree not to disclose or be publicly critical of employers after violations have been settled, and some unions will protect industries and employers where strong bargaining relationships prevail and where apprenticeship programs, joint trusts, project labor agreements and arbitration boards protect union-employer mutual interests.

There is a push for increasing workers’ rights and there is pushback from those in power and this process is the fabric of class struggle, but in the daily grind of things there are gray areas and moments when there are moments went separate interests coincide and conflict. It was mentioned at the conference that some workplace organizations have shifted to becoming 501(c)(3) organizations, enabling them to accept money from foundations. Perhaps this gives or will give labor-friendly non-profits and unions the same or similar immediate goals but different long-term interests. Few of us in the labor movement doubt that intensive union organizing that reaches millions of workers and wins working-class battles is needed, but there are different levels of commitment to this within labor, disagreements over if and how this can be done, and different visions over what should follow successful organizing campaigns. If unions come to depend more on allied non-profits to do some of the heavy lifting and help build union density, these will have to be membership-based non-profits, and some kinds of understandings about resource- and power-sharing will have to be agreed to. Labor and pro-worker and social movement-based non-profits will have to restructure and reorient themselves if they’re going to partner with one another and with government agencies to guide union organizing and if the emphasis is going to shift from collective bargaining to extending workers’ rights through law.

The changes suggested above, most of which were advocated for by some conference participants, all require changes in how working-class organizations see themselves and how we conceive of and use political power. The state itself---government---will also have to be transformed if it is to be used to build worker power. Something deeper than the New Deal and the historic Protocols of Peace will have to be enacted, but how to do this in ways that build working-class power and provide openings for further political and economic struggles led by workers isn’t clear. Many of the strongest advocates for co-enforcement make their case by referring to the Progressives of the early 20th century and the New Deal, both cited in the first post here discussing co-enforcement, but it should be said that these programs were used in part to manage and deter labor militancy. How do we use co-enforcement to build worker power without worker militancy? Many of the speakers and those attending the conference would probably reject historic Progressivism.    

It is difficult to imagine the Democratic Party as presently constituted agreeing to support and committing to win the changes needed to establish workers’ power locally and regionally, and it's impossible to believe that this could be a bipartisan project. Changing laws, making new rules, increasing enforcement of pro-worker laws, and raising up a generation of researchers, activists, inspectors, and enforcement personnel will require having a worker-friendly and anti-austerity political party in power for decades to come and still having a politically independent labor movement.

Co-enforcement, Worker Power, and Re-thinking Labor and Social Movements (Part One)


This post is inspired by a plenary session and a workshop that I attended at the Labor Research and Action Network (LRAN) conference that was held in Portland on June 20-21.

The plenary session took up the matter of how labor can use co-enforcement strategies in Oregon. That session featured the following presenters and presentations:

• Jessica Giannettino Villatoro, Deputy Commissioner, Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries (BOLI)
• Why the Agency Embraced Co-Enforcement, Big Changes: Laura van Enckevort, Wage and Hour Division Administrator, OR BOLI
• Transforming Day to Day Practices, Setting Sectoral Tables: Kate Suisman, Attorney, Northwest Workers' Justice Project and Liz Marquez, Policy Associate, Pineros y Campesinos Unidos del Noroeste (PCUN)

• Co-enforcement in Practice:

- Adam Jeffries, Proactive Investigations and Enforcement Unit, OR BOLI
- Construction: Trampas Simmons, Special Representative and Jesus Saucedo, Organizer, Western States Regional Council of Carpenters, taking on multiple subcontracting entities
- Childcare: Nat Glitsch, Organizer, ILWU Local 5 organizing in childcare centers

Progress, Challenges and Lessons:

• Moderator: Janice Fine, Professor, Rutgers University School of Management and Labor Relations

The workshop that inspired this post dealt with defining co-enforcement, how to use co-enforcement locally, and how to use enforcement as a means for building worker power. That workshop was led by the following researchers and analysts:

• Janice Fine, Rutgers University School of Management and Labor Relations
• Jeremy Simer, Researcher, SEIU Local 49
• Janet Bauer, Research Associate, Oregon LERC
• Jillian Cruickshank, Policy Analyst, Jobs with Justice
• Tia Koonse, Legal and Policy Research Manager, UCLA Labor Center

This post is a mash-up of what I understood the speakers listed above and certain audience members to say and some of my thinking.

I think that the key underlying assumption shared by most of the speakers was that the strategic use of laws, regulations, and public institutions by unions and pro-labor and pro-worker non-profits can build worker power. There was an optimistic belief that government---the state---can be democratic and user-friendly by workers and our organizations and a more realistic assessment that pro-worker policies often pass through legislative action and rule-making processes without enough thought being given to who is going to do enforcement and what enforcement of these laws and regulations looks like. This lack of foresight and planning is not sustainable and eventually creates working-class distrust and cynicism. These understandings led most of the speakers to support strategic enforcement of laws and rules by unions and allied organizations, better and more research, and alliances between unions and likely partners.

“Co-enforcement” simply refers to unions and union-friendly organizations partnering to enforce the laws and rules that are on the books, and perhaps stretching them in practice to meet their intended purposes. The problem here is that the dominant understanding of government today is that state institutions are supposed to be neutral while workers need laws, policies and enforcement that are not neutral and that help us. It helps to remember that many local, state, and federal agencies were set up in response to working-class demands for protection and redress and that conservatives (with help from many liberals) have been successful in weakening these agencies and redirecting their missions. I think that on this point several of the speakers exaggerated the relative strength of the Progressives who were in power in the early years of the 20th century and the good work done for working-class people under the New Deal of the 1930s, downplayed or were silent on the advances we made under the Kennedy and Johnson and Nixon administrations, and did not address the austerity measures that we saw under the Carter and Clinton and Obama administrations.

Perhaps it is that in many regions of the world, including the United States, many traditional functions of government have either been taken over by corporations or abandoned. The rising corporate model is not the traditional one of reinvesting some profits in producing goods and services but of moving away from direct ownership of production and distribution and instead holding onto profits and banking them, causing a dangerous expansion of the financial sector. More companies connect consumers to services and service providers and charge fees and make profits from doing that rather than through production and distributing goods and services that they own. Under such new conditions enforcement and co-enforcement come up against special challenges.

Whether I’m right or wrong here, I agreed with the speakers who made it clear that we need to go beyond umpires and adjudicators and get into real enforcement. Oregon is unique in that we are one of only 5 states where commissioners of labor are elected. Oregon’s Bureau of Labor and Industries has a wage and hour division, a civil rights division and apprenticeship programs oversight. Workers’ comp and insurance, workplace safety and health, the Employment Department, business licensing and oversight, and the Construction Contractors Board are separate from BOLI.

Frontline state and agency staff dealing with workers’ rights and benefits need up-to-date training and support to meet today’s demand. So do union staff and members and the folks working in organizations allied with unions. Still, the problems these people face go beyond training. The will to fight hard for workers’ rights requires in the first place an understanding of the contours of class struggle and resources. Jessica Giannettino Villatoro pointed out that we have under-resourced wage and hour investigators here in Oregon handling over 200 claims a year when they should be handling 85 or fewer. They are trained in laws, policies, and enforcement, and they benefit from their contact with people working in pro-worker non-profits, but they and their non-profit activist colleagues do not learn the fundamentals of class struggle as a cohort.

Other conference speakers pointed out that complaints, by themselves, don’t empower workers or our organizations. The policy analysts, investigators and enforcement agents work in a fragmented and underfunded system that cannot bring lasting justice as it is. The system that we have now---including workplace inspections and enforcement, passing worker-friendly laws and doing good rule-making, and even union organizing and contract negotiations and grievance handling---is weak or broken. We need to think of this as one system and not as separate silos to understand what is going on around us and make real change.

When conference speakers spoke about labor winning more of our fights these days and an upsurge in the number of strikes I wondered why it doesn’t feel like we’re winning much of the time. Why are the strikes that are taking place not more politicized and why don’t they seem to be helping to give us a ride into a victory at the polls in November? Working-class cynicism is fed by weak laws and policies and under-resourced enforcement, laws and standards that hamper union enforcement, and at least 30 years of concessions-based bargaining by unions and related losses in union power.

This cynicism is not unreasonable, but many workers still maintain a fundamental but fragile hope in the system despite their pessimism. What happens when these hopes are dashed? Can unions and social movements grow quickly enough and win enough fights to disprove the cynical arguments that unions lack power and presence in worker’s lives? Will there be a more-or-less unified working-class vote in November, and which way will that vote go? Graham Trainor, President of the Oregon AFL-CIO, said in his address to the conference that one in five or one in six workers in our region are union members, that unions are winning our battles, and that “We can’t be afraid to lead with a progressive agenda.” These remarks show that the labor is making quantitative and qualitative advances. But what are the practical connections between relatively high union density and progressive politics under current conditions? How do we define winning our battles under these changing conditions? And whose progressive agenda makes the cut?

Employers know all of this and don’t have much reason to fear penalties or repercussions for their inevitable bad behavior or condemnation for intervening in the political process and the courts. They may be frustrated by sometimes having to work with so many different agencies and deal with a system that tends to be one-size-fits-all, but in the long run the faults in the system and the top-heavy nature of the system works in favor the worst actors among the employers and provides incentives for employers to cross the line.

Combining state resources that affect workers’ salaries, working conditions, and benefits under one umbrella might help create real enforcement of pro-worker and pro-labor laws and rules. It might also lead to strategic enforcement in certain areas and leave workers not covered by the decisions on strategic enforcement out in the cold. Imagine a situation where, say, farmworkers get justifiable strategic attention from state agencies, unions, and union allies but home construction workers or university workers are not included in strategic planning and enforcement. That would be divisive in the first place, but I believe that we would then see corporate money and financing go into areas of the economy where enforcement is weak or non-existent and a new crop of corporate bottom feeders arise.

Photo from Northwest Public Broadcasting


Sunday, March 17, 2024

A Short Union News Update From The Working Families Party

The Working Families Party provided this short and interesting union news update in a fundraising appeal:

Check out some of the biggest labor updates of the past few weeks:

After years of union busting, Starbucks has finally agreed to work with Starbucks Workers United and move towards negotiating fair contracts! They have also agreed to provide credit card tipping options in union stores — a benefit they’d previously withheld from stores that had voted to unionize. While there’s still plenty of work to do before a contract is set, this change from the corporation is thanks to the determination and organizing work from union members who did not back down when faced with closing stores, firing union activists, and more.1

Animators with the Nickelodeon Animation Studio have ratified their first contract since unionizing in late 2022. Workers across 2D, 3D, and production specialties banded together and won a comprehensive contract that includes minimum staffing requirements to protect jobs, significant wage increases, and bereavement leave. Other members of The Animation Guild have recently joined entertainment crew members from IATSE (the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees) in a negotiating committee to get the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP) to improve pension and health plans for industry workers.2 IATSE is in the middle of its own labor fight with AMPTP, with a potential strike coming later this year. This comes after last year's history-making joint strikes of union actors with SAG-AFTRA and writers with the WGA, which ended with major union wins and increased wages and job security from the AMPTP. Jimmy Kimmel shouted out union workers in the industry during this week's Academy Awards ceremony and assured union workers: "We will stand with you."3

In a historic vote, the Dartmouth men’s basketball team became the first college sports team in the United States to vote to unionize, with a landslide 13-2 vote. The labor of college athletes often brings huge revenue to their colleges, with Division 1 football and basketball teams producing $7.9 billion during the 2022-2023 school year alone. But these athletes have not been considered employees, and so they’ve received no monetary compensation, with many having to take additional jobs just to get by. In a union, these athletes can bargain for pay, better health care to pay for injuries sustained while playing on their team, and more. The fight continues as Dartmouth tries to overturn this election entirely, but we stand by these athletes as they continue building power together.4

Workers at Missouri Toyota and Alabama Mercedes auto plants started their own campaigns to unionize and join the United Auto Workers Union, which won its own major contracts with the Big Three auto companies following strikes last year. They’re joining a major union push, with public campaigns at other plants for Volkswagen and Hyundai and over 10,000 signed union cards for the UAW in recent months.5

More than 3000 Harvard non-tenure track faculty members filed for official union recognition,6 followed shortly after by the Harvard Union of Residential Advisors,7 which includes hundreds of the university’s tutors, proctors, and house-aids. These groups are fighting for job security, fair compensation, and workplace protections and equity.

In Washington, the legislature voted to allow the state's legislative staffers to collectively bargain, paving the way for these workers to negotiate a contract that meets their needs. This is a reminder that while we support the workers organizing on the ground, we also need to keep fighting to elect leaders at all levels of government who will have unions' backs.8

Sources:

1. The Starbucks Workers’ Union Has Finally Broken Through, Jacobin, February 29, 2024

2. TAG-Unionized Nickelodeon Animation Workers Overwhelmingly Ratify New Contract, Animation Magazine, March 5, 2024

3. Jimmy Kimmel Says “We Will Stand With You” to IATSE Members Amid Strike Threat at Oscars 2024, The Hollywood Reporter, March 10, 2024

4. Dartmouth basketball team votes to join the first college athletics union, CNN, March 5, 2024

5. “We keep Toyota running”: Workers at critical Toyota plant launch campaign to join the UAW, United Auto Workers, March 6, 2024

6. Group of More Than 3,000 Harvard Faculty Files for Union Recognition, The Harvard Crimson, March 5, 2024

7. Harvard Resident Tutors, Proctors File for Union Recognition, The Harvard Crimson, March 7, 2024

8. WA lawmakers approve union bargaining rules for legislative staff, CrossCut, March 8, 2024

Friday, February 16, 2024

Catch up with some labor news

Portland Democratic Socialists of America has the following labor solidarity items posted:

Dealing with Difficult Supervisors - A Steward's Workshop
Wed. Feb. 21, 4-5:30pm (zoom)
This workshop has limited capacity and is for stewards and elected officers who work with stewards - not staff. Please register only if this applies to you.
REGISTER: https://labornotes.org/events/2024/stewards-workshop-dealing-difficult-supervisors-february-2024

Healthcare Workers for Ceasefire
Rally & Deliver Demand to Sen. Wyden & Rep. Blumenauer
Fri. Feb. 23, 4pm
911 NE 11th Ave.

Several labor organizations are promoting these important upcoming Black History Month events:

Coalition of Black Trade Unionists: Black History Month Events
Ongoing throughout February both on Zoom and in person in Portland
The Oregon Coalition of Black Trade Unionists (CBTU) cordially invites you to join us for a month-long recognition of Black excellence in conjunction with the Pacific Northwest Labor History Association, Portland Rising, Oregon AFSCME, and AFRAM/SEIU Local 503. 

February 22, 2024 at 6:30pm: Labor History Workshop (In Person at Oregon AFL-CIO)
February 29, 2024 at 7:00pm: Movie Night (In Person at SEIU Local 503)


Click here to learn more about these exciting events!

There is this:




The International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE) just picked up some bragging rights:


Approximately 34 in-house audio and video workers at Allianz Field, the home
stadium for Major League Soccer’s Minnesota United FC (MNUFC) ratified their
first contract Tuesday — bringing an end to eight months of contentious negotiations
 for the newly unionized crew.


Ford workers got this fixed:




We have this good news:



This is historic:

 first union contract, making them the first farmers market workers in the country to 
secure a collective bargaining agreement.



During a week of spectacular protest actions the following came from the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA:

Alaska Airlines Flight Attendants Authorize Strike, Raising Stakes in
 Contract Talks



Senator Jeff Merkley @SenJeffMerkley 18h Solidarity with the @afa_cwa, @APFAunity, and
@transportworker workers walking out of major airports across the country this week. Flight
attendants are essential workers who support billions in profits for the airline industry. They
must be paid well with a strong #ContractNow!



A cautionary note:



An apology: I am unable to accurately credit most of the sources for the items given above  because of problems with my filing. Most likely came from the AFL-CIO or the unions listed.   

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 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.”

  





Thursday, December 21, 2023

New York City union sheet metal worker saves coworker's life


International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers (SMART) Local 28 apprentice Shanae Kemp is a hero and deserves recognition, props and honor for saving a life at work. “Whether you're a carpenter, a plumber, we see each other every day—we’re brothers and sisters,” Kemp says. “So we’re the only family that we really have at that moment. So it’s important to build those bonds because you never know, that person could save your life.”

Wednesday, December 13, 2023

"Retail Janitors Clean Up After Holiday Shoppers. They Don’t Get Time Off for Themselves."

The following is an excerpt from an article by Sarah Lazare that appeared in Jacobin on December 11. A link to the article is provided at the nd of the excerpt Many of us will shop at Cabela's and other big box stores for holiday gifts without thinking about the many kinds of retail workers who work to keep the stores clean and in order. As the article points out, their working conditions can change through union organizing. 

For Elbida Gomez, the winter holiday season is not marked by cheer or family time, but by an exponential increase in her workload — cleaning bathrooms and store offices, taking out the trash, mopping entrances, and wiping up food from the floor of the employee cafeteria.

The forty-three-year-old mother of two says she is one of just two people whose primary job is to clean the Woodbury, Minnesota, location of Cabela’s, a big box store chain that sells hunting, fishing, and camping goods. Foot traffic increases as patrons do their holiday shopping. Parents line up with their children to take a photograph with Santa Claus. The floor gets covered in chocolate, candy wrappers, and footprints, and, once the snow comes, the store entrance is perpetually coated in salt and sand, she says.

“There is little time and a lot of work,” says Gomez, who has done janitorial work since she moved to the United States from Honduras around fifteen years ago.

But in a sector where she is — quite literally — tasked with sanitizing the holiday experiences of other families, she is denied the opportunity to relax and rejuvenate with her own. Gomez does not get paid holidays from her employer, Carlson Building Maintenance, which is contracted to clean Cabela’s. Her vacation time is paltry, she says, and management has made it clear that she is discouraged from taking consecutive days off during the holiday crunch, when her labor is needed most. While her store is closed on Christmas, she does not get paid for this holiday, she says. And, crucially, she still has to work on Christmas Eve, despite its central importance to her family.

Some unions have joined incarcerated workers and local community partners in demanding justice. Let's all do it.




Certain unions took a huge step yesterday and I hope that more unions and the AFL-CIO will follow their lead and undertake similar initiatives in all 50 states and Washington, D.C.

The AFL-CIO has announced that "(O)n Tuesday, the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union-UFCW (RWDSU-UFCW) and the Union of Southern Service Workers (USSW), who are members of SEIU, joined incarcerated workers and local community partners to file a class-action lawsuit in response to the systemic exploitation and forced labor of Alabama’s incarcerated population. The suit, strongly supported by the AFL-CIO, outlines how the Alabama Department of Corrections denies Black Alabamians parole at twice the rate of their White counterparts in order to maintain a cheap labor force through wrongful detention. And though Black Alabamians are only a quarter of the state’s residents, they make up over 50% of the incarcerated population."

The AFL-CIO announcement went on to say that "Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey and state Attorney General Steve Marshall are named as defendants in the lawsuit and are accused of acting as knowing architects of a “modern-day form of slavery” scheme that generates $450 million annually for the state, all on the backs of unpaid incarcerated workers. In a virtual press conference, AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer Fred Redmond said, 'Fighting to abolish forced labor is a priority for the AFL-CIO and the American labor movement. And we won’t rest until this corrupt, immoral scheme ends for good.'"

For generations the AFL-CIO and most of mainstream labor has supported the construction of more prisons, even when construction was not viable and exploited prisoners and their families and the communities the prisons were built in. We have tended to look at jails, prisons and other forms of incarceration only through the eyes of corrections and probation officers, construction workers who want the work building prisons and and jails, sometimes as part of our fight against privatization. We have not analyzed or come to grips with some other realities.

The incarcerated are mostly working-class people. Their numbers include many union members who were putting in a full day of work but still living from paycheck to paycheck and trying to get by in a system in which the odds are stacked against them. We have union members who are houseless, members who are veterans who face certain risks that others do not face and a lack of social supports to help them, Black members who are more likely than whites to be singled out for scrutiny and harassment by the police and others, many young members who come from cultures that are at odds with law enforcement, and many members who have been hurt on the job and who have been prescribed painkillers and have become addicted and who self-medicate. All of these union siblings can end up in jails or prisons quite easily.

The numbers of the incarcerated are growing, their plight and the exploitation they experience is getting worse, these are working-class people, there is a disproportionate effect here on communities of color, and mass incarceration and exploitation and racism work against building a strong labor movement.

Many unions have connections to service programs for our union siblings before they end up in jails or prisons or psych wards, and these program do great work, but I am not aware of any unions using our resources to defend or support our members while they are incarcerated or support their families. The question of the civil rights of the incarcerated does not touch our unions in positive ways. We took a big step a few years ago when a few building trades unions began helping some incarcerated union siblings be apprenticeship-ready when leaving prison. For that matter, when we are a part of CTEC and other programs in the schools we are building a school-to-union or school-to-democracy pipeline and not aiding and abetting the school-to-prison pipeline so many young people get stuck in. All of those programs are potentially part of a map for us.

If the announcement above is accurate, and if Labor doesn't drop the ball, a great step is being taken here, and one that we should build on and link to our good programs that help some of the incarcerated enter apprenticeships and that aid our members before they end up in the prison pipeline. We need one unified approach that helps everyone more forward.


Image taken from a report by Mansa Musa that appeared on The Real News


(These are not the opinions of the Marion-Polk-Yamhill Central Labor Chapter or the Oregon AFL-CIO.)

Tuesday, November 28, 2023

Some Upcoming Events & Labor Solidarity News

Important event announcement: The Labor Solidarity Project will be hosting an outstanding event this Thursday, November 30, at 6:00 PM (PST) featuring Dr. Diana Johnson, discussing her work on multiracial coalition building in Seattle during the final decades of the 20th century. Dr. Johnson is Associate Professor of History and Ethnic Studies and the Chair of the Ethnic Studies Department at California State University, San Bernardino. She received her MA and PhD from the University of California Davis and specializes in the history of race and ethnicity in the United States, political activism, and oral history. She recently published her first monograph, Seattle in Coalition: Multiracial Alliances, Labor Politics, and Transnational Activism in the Pacific Northwest, 1970-1999 with the University of North Carolina Press in 2023. This work chronicles the history of Black, Native American, Chicanx, and Asian American labor and political activists stemming from Seattle. More specifically, she examines how activists built coalitions across ethnic, regional and international lines, challenging racial inequalities, capitalist labor systems, and globalization. At Cal State San Bernardino, Dr. Johnson primarily teaches courses in systemic racism, immigration in America, and racial activism during the 1960s and 1970s. The Zoom link is https://washington.zoom.us/j/93515461794

Also:



From the Marion County Democrats located at
 245 High Street NE in Salem.

AND:

IATSE Local 488 will host a film worker flea market and maker fair in Portland’s Old Town District to benefit film crews who are still recovering from the strike. It will feature items used in local TV and movie productions, plus original art and crafts made by IATSE Local 488 members. It is open to the general public and will include live entertainment, raffles, and special guests. 
Read more here.
Vendor sign up here.
December 9-10 from 10am - 6pm
Goldsmith Blocks Building (412 NW Couch St)

AND:

Don't forget to order your 2024 labor history calendar from the Pacific Northwest Labor History Association!


Some Labor Solidarity News

AFL-CIO: The Oregon Labor Dispatch of November 17, 2023 has a link to a press release issued by AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler on November 16 applauding "President Biden’s announcement today of the Presidential Memorandum on Advancing Worker Empowerment, Rights, and High Labor Standards Globally, a framework that will reshape how U.S. government agencies conduct international diplomacy by putting workers’ rights and standards at the center." The press release argues that this is a "game changer for workers in the U.S. and around the world" and says that "We need a global economy that puts working people at the center, and we look forward to collaborating with the Biden administration to implement and execute the strategy with our partners and allies at home and abroad."

A report in In These Times claims that the AFL-CIO recently intervened to "squash" a resolution passed by the Olympia, Washington-based Thurston-Lewis-Mason Central Labor Council (TLM CLC) supporting a ceasefire in Palestine/Israel .


An article in the Pacific Northwest Labor Press dated November 16, 2023 meanwhile highlighted remarks made by Hannah Winchester, political action committee co-chair at Oregon Federation of Nurses and Health Professionals, at a Portland rally supporting a ceasefire. The article noted that "Over a dozen local unions have also signed on to a labor letter calling for a ceasefire, including the Oregon Education Association and Portland Association of Teachers."

Oregon AFL-CIO: Please visit the Oregon AFL-CIO blog and read the Oregon Labor Dispatch to keep up with what the Oregon AFL-CIO is doing. The strike map on the blog shows no strikes currently underway in Oregon, but it is important to keep an eye on this. An October 31 post on the blog predicted more strikes in Oregon as the Auto Workers moved to settle their contracts with the Big Three automakers. Another post on that date provided links to the State Federation's Legislative Scorecard and to the Federation's overview of the last Oregon legislative session and highlighted officeholders and politicians who the Federation regards as friends of working people. This is important reading, so please take a look.

The November 17, 2023 Labor Dispatch report provides a list of short labor news items and action items. The list includes an invitation to our upcoming holiday party (December 9, 9:00am -12:00pm, Ken Allen AFSCME Labor Canter, 1400 Tandem Ave NE in Salem), an announcement concerning the  University of Oregon Labor Center Collective Bargaining Institute to be held on December 3-8, at the University Place Hotel in Portland, and a solidarity action supporting Multnomah County dentists. "The dentists stand united, asking for the opportunity to provide patients meaningful care, in an environment that allows enough time to do the work," says the post.

Alphabet Workers Union: A group of Google contractors, some of whom have worked on Search and Google’s artificial intelligence chatbot Bard, have voted to unionize. A news report claims that "Following the filing for unionization, the group, which included 120 writers, graphic designers and coordinators, among others, were told more than half the team would be laid off, according to the Alphabet Workers Union, which alleged the layoffs were an act of retaliation." See this article for details. The Alphabet Workers Union frequently works with the Communication Workers of America

Communications Workers of America: An interesting article in The New Republic highlights bank workers who are opting to organize with CWA.

CWA's Call Center Workers United are on strike at Maximus, or were the last I heard. This is an important strike given the needs to organize call center workers and take on racism and the conditions that divide these workers. Please go to the website, get on their email alert list and follow through with the light asks that the union is putting out.

Steelworkers (USW): The Fall 2023 USW@Work publication ran two very important articles. One article on two-tier wage systems put it well when saying that "Unscrupulous employers often look for ways to divide union members, whether by age or job classification or other factors, and multi-tiered wage and benefit systems can play into bosses’ hands by helping them to serve that purpose." The article also said that "Success in eliminating tiers has come from workplaces large and small, improving lives and building solidarity for thousands of members. In the paper industry, one of the largest employers of USW members, workers achieved a series of strong contracts that cut tier systems, including in the union’s master agreement with International Paper, and Local 1013 and Local 1853 at Georgia Pacific."


Another inspiring article in the United Steelworkers publication covered the recent USW International Women's Conference. Amanda Buda, a delegate of Local 412 at the University of Guelph in Ontario, is quoted in the article as saying, "There are a lot of people here that are in the same boat and in very similar situations. If I have any advice, it's that you don't know what you don't know. It’s always best if you have any type of question to reach out and ask a current union member how they did it, because there's always an answer and information that will benefit you in the long run.”

Trade Unions for Energy Democracy: Trade Unions for Energy Democracy (TUED) recently issued an important report on developments in Argentina that will likely affect global privatization and the fight to hold on to public services and resources in many countries, including the U.S. There is much talk in TUED and elsewhere about a Global Green New Deal. We should become familiar with these ideas because they are affecting us, our work and our unions.  

Photo from UE News 

United Electrical Workers Research and Education Fund (UEWREF): The UEWREF and the United Electrical Workers proudly reported winning $6.5 million in bonuses for Durham, North Carolina city workers as part of their on-going organizing in the South and in workplaces with majority-Black workers. The Durham victory was won through direct action on the job in a right-to-work and racist environment. UEWREF is in need to funds to keep the ball rolling, so please contribute if you can.