Showing posts with label strikers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label strikers. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 21, 2024

From The Front Lines

 

Workers hit the bricks at Cornell University in a historic strike.
The photo is from The Cornell Daily Sun.


A crowd of Cornell workers sing and chant as they march around
the university’s campus on Friday, August 16, days before the union called
 a strike. (Photo: Aaron Fernando) See this article in The Nation.





The workers have set up a petition for supporters to sign.
Please do so at cwa.org/attse-support.



UNITED MINE WORKERS OF AMERICA PRESIDENT
ROBERTS SPEAKS AT A PRESS CONFERENCE FOR
THE PROPOSED SILICA RULE AT UMWA’S DISTRICT 2
OFFICE IN UNIONTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA.
Photo Credit: Department of Labor
Shawn T Moore

New Silica Rule Funding Challenged---
A DIRECT ATTACK ON THE HEALTH AND SAFETY OF COAL MINERS

The U.S. House Appropriations committee voted on July 10, along party lines, to advance a bill that would defund the Department of Labor’s efforts to enforce the new silica rule. The bill, which directs funding for the DOL and MSHA, explicitly states that no money can be used to enforce the silica rule limiting allowable levels of silica dust in mines.

Republican-controlled U.S. House Appropriations Committee approved the fiscal year 2025 funding bill in a 31-25 vote, setting up a vote on the appropriations package by the full House.

“This is an insult to the coal miners who have risked their lives and their long-term health to power our factories and heat our homes,“ said Senator Bob Casey (D-PA). “I am going to make damn sure we continue this funding so that we may keep our promise to miners suffering from black lung disease.

“MSHA’s silica standard was put into place to reduce the amount of deadly silica dust in mine atmospheres, which is crucial for combating the worsening epidemic of black lung disease. It is difficult to understand how certain members of Congress could possibly be supportive of more miners dying a suffocating death as a result of being forced to breathe silica dust,” said President Roberts.

“The actions of those in Congress who support defunding for the new silica rule is a direct attack on the health and safety of coal miners,” Roberts said. “The epidemic of black lung disease is a critical issue that demands immediate action. The union urges all members of Congress to reject this dangerous provision and stand up for the health and safety of our nation’s coal miners.”

“Miners with black lung disease have been fighting for protections from deadly silica dust for decades. The union is grateful MSHA finally took action formulating the new silica standard,” said Secretary-Treasurer Sanson.

“It is disturbing, to say the least, that a handful of politicians, who are supposed to be for the people, have taken actions that are a slap in the face to every coal miner in our nation,” Sanson said. “If this policy becomes law, it will put thousands of miners at even greater risk. Congress needs to do better, and our miners deserve better.”

Monday, August 19, 2024

A 22-month strike journey: From staring sleepless into the darkness at 3 a.m. to finding hope

The following comes to us from the Pittsburgh Union Progress, a valiant effort that needs our full solidarity. This piece speaks in a very meaningful way to what happens when workers are forced out on a prolonged strike. Please donate to help the strikers. 

A 22-month strike journey: From staring sleepless into the darkness at 3 a.m. to finding hope

by Steve Mellon
August 18, 2024


Striking photojournalist Steve Mellon speaks surrounded by other striking
workers and supporters in front of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette building on
the North Shore for a news conference, Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024, after the 
National Labor Relations Board filed for a temporary injunction that would
return strikers to work. (Alexandra Wimley/Pittsburgh Union Progress)

At noon on Sunday, journalists on strike at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette hit another milestone: the start of their 23rd month on strike. That’s one day closer to two years of fighting against unfair labor practices. The strikers, in four unions, had some rare good news this past Wednesday, when the National Labor Relations Board filed in U.S. District Court for an injunction that could put them back to work. At a Thursday news conference/rally, striking photojournalist and Newspaper Guild of Pittsburgh member Steve Mellon spoke about what it’s like to be on strike for so long.

Last night, Region 6 of the National Labor Relations Board filed to enjoin the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette for its many violations of federal labor law.

Here’s a reminder: The Post-Gazette could’ve settled this dispute at any point — even before the strike — by respecting us and our rights as workers and simply following labor law. Failure to do so has consequences.

We’ve fought for 22 months for this moment. Ours is the longest-running strike in the U.S., the longest strike in our union’s history, and the longest strike in the history of this great city of labor. We’ve been proud to stand up for ourselves and each other, but while we’ve waited for the law to be enforced, we’ve borne many costs.

This is what the fight has entailed:

• Twenty-two months of no paychecks.

• Twenty-two months of putting the career you love on hold.

• Twenty-two months of getting in your crappy old car in the morning and praying to God the red “check engine” light doesn’t come on because you don’t have the money for repairs.

• Twenty-two months of waking up at 3 a.m. and staring into the darkness and asking yourself some disturbing questions. “If I’m not a working journalist, then who am I? If I can’t provide for my family, for my partner, for myself, then what am I worth?”

• Twenty-two months of continually telling your spouse, your partner, your kids, “This strike won’t last forever; life will return to normal soon.”

• Twenty-two months of telling your family, “Let’s just get pizza tonight instead of going to a restaurant” because your bank account is at a low point.

• It means getting together with your family, your partner, and saying, “Look, we’re going to have to change our vacation plans again this year.”

When you go on strike, your spouse, your partner, your kids — they go on strike with you. They, too, feel the shattering of family routine, they feel and experience the anxiety that hits when your income plummets. They see the anger you express when people you thought you knew, people who you considered friends, betray all of those progressive principles they’ve spoken about in the past and cross a picket line.

• Striking has meant standing on picket lines in the cold rain at 1 a.m., tired and stressed, getting yelled at and pushed around by police, standing inches from the grill of a rumbling truck, with a PG manager telling the driver to go ahead, “Go ahead and put it into gear, these shitheads will move.” And of course we didn’t move.

OK, enough about the costs. Let’s talk about what we’ve accomplished. It’s a long list:

• We’ve learned how to take care of each other. The day the strike began, a handful of us got together to anticipate strikers’ needs — financial needs, transportation needs, physical and mental health care needs. And then we organized ourselves and worked together to meet those needs.

• We organized to raise money so people could pay their rent, make their college loan payments, keep food in the refrigerator. We organized fundraising events at Bottlerocket in Allentown, with music from the Pittsburgh Labor Choir, the extraordinary vocalist Phat Man Dee and our own Rick Nowlin.

• With the help of supporters like Allie Petonic and our great friends at the United Steelworkers headquarters, we held bake sales. We spent hours texting supporters and making phone calls. And when people sent donations, we wrote hundreds and hundreds of thank-you notes.

• When we saw that mental health was becoming an issue several months into the strike, we reached out to mental health experts and asked their advice. How do we help these people we’ve come to love and respect in this difficult time?

• We’ve learned how to talk to our families about the strike and the sacrifices it has entailed. Those have been difficult conversations. How do you explain to your children and your partner the importance of taking painful blows now so that you and your colleagues, and those who follow you, can have a better future? How do you convince yourself to keep up the fight as the days and weeks and months drag on?

We remind ourselves: Our children, our partners, our families and our friends are watching us, they’re listening to what we say and weighing it against what we do. How we square those two things in this moment will be our legacy.

• We’ve made so many good friends, people who understand what it means to take a stand, to pay a price to hold onto something you believe is so important: having a voice in the workplace. These are people who know that the only reason workers in this country have decent pay and health care, time off and safe workplaces is because workers have fought for those things.

I mentioned standing on picket lines in some very uncomfortable circumstances. We have done this, over and over, and when we’re standing on the line and look to our right and then to our left, we see our steadfast allies. Baristas, environmental activists, members of other unions, members of the LGBTQ+ community, musicians, and some people who simply have balls and like standing with others who are taking a stand.

This is a great city, folks. It’s filled with people of great courage, people willing to sacrifice their time and their money and their energy to stand by us, knowing that they themselves will get nothing tangible out of it. All they’ll gain is the knowledge that they’re giving a little juice to a cause and a people they believe in. These are people who reject the transactional nature that defines a lot of relationships in this country. I know no better people. And this gives me hope.

RELATED STORY: ‘We’ll see them in jail potentially if we have to’: PG unions hold news conference about injunction filed in their strike

RELATED STORY: A start to the end of the strike? Feds file for temporary injunction to return Pittsburgh news unions to work

Wednesday, August 7, 2024

AFL-CIO: Workers at Crooked Media Stage Walkout Over Union-Busting


Top Cut:

Dozens of workers at Crooked Media, the media company that produces popular political podcast “Pod Save America,” participated in a one-day walkout on Monday to pressure the company to reach a fair contract.

Why It Matters:

Represented by Crooked Media Workers Union, an affiliate of Writers Guild of America East (WGAE), staff have been engaged in negotiations with management for more than a year. In a show of cohesive solidarity, more than 95% of the union’s 61-member bargaining unit signed the pledge to walk out and distribute leaflets outside Crooked Media’s office in Los Angeles. Workers are asking for fair and competitive salary minimums, annual cost-of-living adjustments, safeguards against layoffs, and other company policies that reflect the company’s nominally progressive values. Last week, WGAE filed an unfair labor practice charge against the company for unilaterally excluding multiple staff members from the bargaining unit in an attempt to undermine the union’s ability to uphold workers’ collective bargaining rights.

“Crooked Media has failed to live up to its values with its anti-union negotiating tactics,” WGAE President Lisa Takeuchi Cullen said. “This work stoppage is the direct result of leadership’s refusal to agree to fair terms with their workers after a year of bargaining. It is time for Crooked Media’s leadership to come to the negotiating table ready to make a deal that allows staff to turn their full attention back to the critical elections happening in less than a hundred days.”

Benefit Show for Postdoc Workers United Strike Fund on Saturday, Aug. 10

 From Portlnd Jobs with Justice:

Solidarity with Postdocs Workers United at OHSU who have voted overwhelmingly to STRIKE for a fair contract! Researchers have been fighting for living wages, dignity & respect for nine months, while OHSU has spent this time telling Postdocs they cannot possibly pay Postdocs any more than the federal minimum. It's time for OHSU to save research from stagnant hiring by providing fair pay! Stay tuned for more updates to support Postdocs as they keep up the pressure!

Benefit Show for Postdoc Workers United Strike Fund

strikes

Saturday, August 10th / doors 7pm The Snug (6806 NE Broadway)
Free admission

Contribute to the Hardship Fund: https://gofund.me/6b11c3f6

Leaflet patients and nearby businesses (through 8/12): https://tinyurl.com/OHSUPostDocs


Friday, August 2, 2024

Scenes, Words, And Links From Around Our Movement

 



A strike is a last resort. No one wants to go on strike. We’re up against, frankly, an existential threat to our profession in the form of A.I. As you’ve probably heard from other entertainment strikes, A.I. is a huge concern. It’s especially a huge concern for our professions, for voice actors and movement performers. We have to take a stand because the protections that our employers have put across the table are woefully insufficient and are going to put a lot of people out of work.

Ashly Burch

Actor & SAG-AFTRA Interactive Media Negotiating Committee Member


U.S. Rep. Ayanna Pressley, D-Mass., left , takes a selfie with her colleague 
U.S. Rep. Summer Lee, D-Swissvale, PA. and dozens of supporters during a rally
 for Vice President and presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Kamala 
Harris on the South Side of Pittsburgh on Wednesday, July 31, 2024.
 (Steve Mellon/Pittsburgh Union Progress) See this article and please support the


Sheriff Sid Hatfield (right) and Deputy Ed Chambers (left) were assassinated
 in broad daylight on the steps of the McDowell County, West Virginia Courthouse
 by anti-unionBaldwin-Felt company gun thugs on August 1, 1921. The assassinations
markeda tragic turn in the West Virginia Mine Wars, but the gun thugs did not have



(Steve Mellon/Pittsburgh Union Progress)
“Wholly peaceful” picketing strikers at the Post-Gazette were 
legally allowed to picket on company property, the Pennsylvania Superior Court
 court says in dealing out the latest of a string of legal losses to the company.


At Portland Expo Center, Machinists union members at Boeing’s Gresham
 parts plant lined up to cast strike votes and collect gear like the red union
 T-shirts, above. The back of the shirt features a rattle snake coiled around the
 Machinists’ gear logo and the motto, “Will strike if provoked.” Photo and text


According to an AFL-CIO press release, members of The
Bronx Defenders Union–UAW Local 2325 (BxD Union) last week voted to ratify
a historic two-year contract with their public defender nonprofit employer, one month


South Florida Sun Sentinel Workers Won Their Union Election by
a Unanimous Landslide--Photo from the AFL-CIO.





 of Flight Attendants (AFA) at Alaska Airlines has won a tentative agreement 
on a new union contract that contains many advances for the workers. Voting 
on the tentative agreement has been complicated by an extension on talks 
regarding the proposed merger of Alaska Airlines and Hawaiian Airlines. 
The union's strong campaign for a fair contract at Alaska Airlines was timed
 in part in synch with the merger talks, but with the unexpected extension of 

Friday, July 26, 2024

A Great, New, And Necessary Union Resource From Strikers In Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

The Pittsburgh Union Progress is published by people who have been on strike from the Pittsburgh (Pennsylvania) Post-Gazette since October 2022. They are demanding that the Post-Gazette provide affordable health care and follow labor law. They will love it if you can subscribe to their publication (it's free) and donate to their strike fund.

You can read more about the strikers and their on-going strike here

This is an excellent publication. Yes, there is a great deal of local and regional news that may not interest everyone who reads our blog, but right off the bat I was taken by an article about an eagle that has been nesting in an abandoned steel works, an article about a company that is trying to create a factory culture that is safe and inclusive for people with autism and other special needs, an especially important article on rail safety, and a thoughtful article on how regional union political action is affected by Teamsters President Sean O’Brien's recent address the Republican National Convention. These kinds of articles touch the lives of people everywhere and are also the kinds of articles that should inform our union activism. This is democratic and participatory journalism done as journalism should be done. I wish that our Mid-Willamette Vally Labor Solidarity Alerts could reach the high bar being set by The Pittsburgh Union Progress. 


Striking workers of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and supporters hold signs and listen
to a speaker during a rally, organized by the Newspaper Guild of Pittsburgh, in front
of the headquarters of C-SPAN in Washington, D.C., to demand that the company
removes Allan Block, chairman and CEO of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, from its board 
of directors, Wednesday, March 8, 2023. (Alexandra Wimley/Union Progress)

Tuesday, June 18, 2024

Today was historic! Oregon's biggest nurse's strike is underway!



Providence Strike Day 1🌟Nurses across Oregon came out in full force for the first day of our six-unit strike! We kept the energy up and made it clear: we are here to show you what a fair contract means to us! #WeAreONA #RecruitRetainRespect #ProvStrike #SafeStaffingSavesLives


Text and photos/graphics above come from the Oregon Nurses Association. Today's Oregon Public Broadcasting story on the strike is here



This KGW clip has some good footage but comes across as supporting Providence:


Tuesday, February 13, 2024

Support the striking PeaceHealth home health and hospice nurses!

Photo from Timothy Welp

I participated in the rally and strike picketline held by the Oregon Nurses Association (ONA) last Saturday at PeaceHealth in Eugene. It was a great opening event for the strike. The home health and hospice nurses at PeaceHealth came to the action with strong public and political support that was evident during the rally. A February 8 program that ran on Oregon Public Broadcasting helped give the workers credibility and boost support for them. 

It was quite helpful and inspiring to hear State Representative Travis Nelson, State Senator (and candidate for Secretary of State) James Manning, local political and community leaders, a representative from Senator Merkley's office, and  Congresswoman Val Hoyle speak in support of the strike and the union. State Representative Nelson has a particular understanding of the issues involved given that he once worked for the company and is a nurse as well as a valued political leader. State Senator Manning is a hometown hero and leader for good reason and never fails to be on the picketlines and at the rallies when asked to be there. Congresswoman Hoyle held a sign proclaiming "People Over Profits" while she spoke, and by holding that sign she demonstrated the relative strength of a coalition that I hope can win this strike and others and help carry us through to a victory at the polls in November.

There were nurses from other ONA-represented units, Teamsters, AFSCME members, members of other unions, and socialists present with the ONA strikers on Saturday. I attended as an active member of the National Writers Union, an associate member of the United Mine Workers, and as an active participant in the Marion-Polk-Yamhill Central Labor Chapter. The local political and communitity leaders who spoke testified to the progressive and forward-looking nature of that forward-looking coalition that we are all a part of.

All of that said, it was the nurses and their ability to lead on the picketline that kept things together and moving forward on Saturday. They spoke with urgency and soul. Please go to the Oregon Nurses Association Facebook page and see the video posted on February 10 to hear the speeches and see the ONA members in action.

I understand that strikes and rallies are abstract to people until they show up and participate in them, and for that reason we need union members to lead and be disciplined and carry a message that speaks directly to people who have not been previously engaged. This is how we begin to make positive change and good trouble. I believe that active ONA members will gree with me here. The union certainly embodies that spirit, and that was made clear to all last Saturday and on the February 8 radio program.  

The national AFL-CIO has spotlighted the strike in a helpful Daily Brief post today. That post gives a very helpful summary of the ssues that led to the strike and says the following:

The 14-day strike began Saturday and comes after months of negotiations following the expiration of the nurses’ previous contract in April 2023. Historically, these nurses have received equal pay compared to their counterparts at PeaceHealth hospital, but management’s latest proposal offers a lower compensation to home care and hospice nurses than those working in the hospital.

While PeaceHealth's corporate executives received multimillion-dollar wage increases during the pandemic, they continue to refuse to offer home care nurses fair wages and a contract that addresses record turnover and job vacancies.

“We are not asking for more, we are not asking for special treatment, we just want equality. The way it has always been,” said ONA member and hospice nurse Heather Herbert.


Photo from the AFL-CIO Daily Brief.
  
The AFL-CIO post also has a link to a petition for union and strike supporters. A version of that petition is here. Please sign! ONA is doing a great job on the picketlines and the workers will welcome your active suppoprt.