Labor News

Massachusetts Contractor Cited and Pays Over $18,000 in Wages and Penalties for Violating Overtime and Prevailing Wage Laws

Union Review - March 18, 2010 - 9:00am

This is a press release from the Greater Southeastern Massachusetts Labor Council from earlier this week announcing that Attorney General Martha Coakley’s Office cited Southampton based Industrial Mechanical Insulation Corporation (Industrial Mechanical) and is president, Robert Buckingham, age 55 of Easthampton, for violations of the Commonwealth’s wage and hour laws.  As a result of the Attorney General’s investigation Buckingham and his company were required to pay over $16,000 in restitution, as well as $2,000 in penalties to the Commonwealth. 

For more labor news out of Massachusetts, check out a new site called MassLaborNews.com.

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Categories: Labor News

Solidarity eXchange Launches a New Web Site for Young Labor and Sweatfree Activists

Union Review - March 12, 2010 - 9:27am

Solidarity eXhange is a grassroots effort to identify, train and support a new generation of Sweatfree sales people. It is an exciting opportunity for young labor activists who want to bring a new generation to buying sweatfree, USA made and union made apparel and other items. Below is a letter from SX that I am posting in full for anyone who is interested in participating. Also, the video with the story explains in detail how this program works -- you should definitely check it out.

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Categories: Labor News

Telephone workers rally for workplace safety

Union Review - March 11, 2010 - 1:26pm

About 75 telecom workers and community supporters rallied in support of a Verizon technician in Lynn, MA who was recently threatened by a supervisor while acting in his capacity as an IBEW Local 2321 steward during a "captive audience" safety meeting. 

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Categories: Labor News

Grassroots labor leaders vow stronger, long-term campaign to support "Medicare for All" approach to health care reform

Union Review - March 11, 2010 - 1:20pm

More than 125 union leaders and activists from 25 states gathered at the National Labor College in Silver Spring, MD last weekend to strategize about next steps at the state and national level to win comprehensive health care reform.  The group is promoting a "single-payer" reform plan that would work like the Medicare program, except improved and expanded to cover everyone.

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Categories: Labor News

Illinois Judge: Verizon’s Proposed Landline Sell Off Too Risky

Union Review - March 11, 2010 - 1:13pm

Verizon's nationwide effort to sell off its land lines and focus on cellular service has hit a legal bump in Illinois—which is good for customers and telecom workers, because their quality of service and jobs are at risk should the debt-laden deal with Connecticut-based Frontier Communications be approved by regulators.

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Categories: Labor News

Shaw's Workers Strike Company in Methuen, Mass.

Union Review - March 10, 2010 - 11:44am

Earlier this week the workers at Shaw's Supermarket's Methuen, Massachusetts distribution center went on strike. The warehouse, which employs about 310 employees, who are members of United Food and Commercial Workers Local 791, distributes perishables to most of the company's 194 New England locations.

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Categories: Labor News

Bunning Put a Face on Obstructionist, Mean-Spirited Republican Party

Union Review - March 4, 2010 - 12:28pm

This was sent in to UR from USW President Leo Gerard.

Sen. Jim Bunning, the Kentucky Republican who single-handedly delayed unemployment benefits for 400,000 desperate Americans and forced an unnecessary furlough of another 2,000, should be a figure regarded with wonderment.

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Categories: Labor News

Temporary Workers Made to Think Twice Before Taking Union Jobs

Union Review - March 2, 2010 - 9:00am

This is being cross-posted from MassLaborNews.com. You can read the original piece here

UFCW Local 1459 gathered with some 70 workers including at least nine other local unions at a Springfield Stop and Shop hiring hall on Friday afternoon. The union and its labor allies held an information picket to draw attention to Stop & Shop's confrontational plan to use replacement workers if there is a strike.

 

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Categories: Labor News

TWU Rallies to Save NASA Jobs

Union Review - March 1, 2010 - 2:35pm

The following report was sent to UR this morning from the Transit Workers Union. This piece also appears at the union's web site here.

The TWU joined community activists, fellow unions, the AFL-CIO, small business owners and elected officials this weekend to save thousands of jobs. The rally in Titusville, Florida was organized by the AFL-CIO in response to the Obama administration's proposed budget cut for NASA's Constellation program, and as part of its campaign for jobs in America.

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Categories: Labor News

Unions call for Science-Based Reductions in Greenhouse Gasses

Global Labor Strategies - February 28, 2010 - 9:43am
Unions call for Science-Based Reductions in Greenhouse Gasses
[Cross-Posted with the Labor Network for Sustainability and Huffington Post]

Over the past couple of years, the American labor movement has become an enthusiastic supporter of expanding “green jobs” that fight global warming. But policies to reduce carbon emissions scientists say are safe have been a harder pill to swallow.  Now, in a significant breakthrough, three significant unions have come out for the science-based emissions targets called for by the IPCC.

As 250 international union delegates arrived in Copenhagen for the global climate summit, a statement by the Transport Workers Union (TWU) and a joint statement by the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) and the Laborers International Union of North America (LIUNA) called for a 25 to 40 percent reduction on 1990 levels for developed countries by 2020.

Sean Sweeney, director of the the Cornell University Global Labor Institute, who worked with the US labor delegation to be fully engaged in the UN process at the Copenhagen conference, said:

“The statements are a clear sign that U.S. unions want to bring scientific necessity into alignment with job creation and green economic development. Many other unions are also moving in this direction. Engaging with unions overseas has also helped U.S. unions to see support for climate protection is also an act of international solidarity.” 
 
 Unions and targets 

Both union statements gave support to the more limited climate protection measures proposed by President Barack Obama on the eve of the Copenhagen summit.  They also endorsed the climate legislation introduced by Senators Kerry and Boxer. But they argued that reductions to address the climate emergency must go substantially further.  They noted that President Obama’s commitment of 17 percent reduction on 2005 levels is only 4 percent below 1990 levels, which have been widely used as a benchmark in international scientific discussions.
The SEIU-LIUNA statement points out this means extreme, perhaps impossible reductions will be necessary later to meet the targets science says are necessary.  

“To reach an 80% reduction by 2050, the scientific consensus, with an only 4% reduction by 2020 means that there must be a 76% reduction over the last three decades or roughly 25% per decade.  We find it difficult to justify backloading this obligation in a way that shifts the burden of reducing carbon emissions from ourselves to our children and grandchildren.  Accordingly, we would support more aggressive carbon emission reduction policies.”

It said that “an aggressive and science-based approach to emissions reductions” is “absolutely necessary” for “achieving a sustainable environment.”

Until now few if any US unions and neither of the major labor federations, the AFL-CIO and Change to Win, have supported specific emission reduction targets or even gone on record for the principle of making the reductions called for by scientific consensus.   This is largely because only a few unions with a direct stake in the issue, notably in the energy and manufacturing sectors, have opposed such measures.

Their stand brings these three unions in line with the position of the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC), an organization that represents national union federations with membership of 175 million workers in 155 countries.  It organized the international trade union delegation to the Copenhagen conference and strongly supported the IPCC targets.

An article published by the BNA reported that the AFL-CIO had issued its own position paper at the Poznan climate talks supporting ITUC concerns for “decent work, green jobs, industrial regeneration, border adjustment mechanisms and worker adjustment mechanisms” but failing to indicate support for the targets and timetables at the core of the ITUC position.  The BNA reported that, “U.S. labor unions balked at backing ITUC's position, given fears that deep cuts would ‘devastate’ heavy manufacturing in the United States as well as the coal and steel industries.”

Labor’s traditional approach to climate policy was largely shaped by industries in the manufacturing and energy sectors.  That is likely to change, however, as a result of the changing sectoral center of gravity with organized labor.  According to a recent study by the Center for Economic and Policy Research, barely one union member in ten works in manufacturing.  An even smaller proportion work in fossil fuel production.   

Today the overwhelming majority of union members are in services and the public sector.  But they have barely begun to weight in significantly on climate policy.  If the new statements by the transport, service, and laborers unions are any indication, they are likely to favor stronger climate protection with more stringent emission reductions.  This reflects not only the interest of their members in a livable world for their children, but the fact that the great majority of potential green jobs are in the building, transporation, public, and service sectors. 
 
Why targets matter for green jobs

Both statements emphasized that emissions reduction targets were important to the green jobs agenda.  According to the SEIU/LIUNA statement, “A clear science-based target will drive a massive increase in the generation of green jobs, pubic mass transit, renewable energy, green manufacturing, energy-efficient construction and building retrofits, as well as in other sectors.”  

The statement went on to describe strong targets as critical to provide incentives for creating green jobs.  “The more ambitious the target, the stronger the political signal to private investors and innovators who wish to serve the green economy.”

It also argued that absence of strong targets could have the opposite effect.

“A weak target slows green job growth, serves as a drag on the global effort, and will not serve climate stability over the long term.  Jobs that conserve energy, fight sprawl and congestion, and retool and re-equip our industries according to green and sustainable principles are the wave of the future for the US and with world.”

The TWU statement adds that a science-based approach to emissions reductions will be good for our economy and for working families.  “With the US suffering over 10 percent unemployment and falling living standards, we need to fulfill the promise of green jobs sooner, not later.”

The statements called for a “just transition” to the green economy to provide full protections for workers negatively impacted by climate policies.  The TWU statement notes that the transition to a low carbon economy must be pursued in a way that is “fair to workers and supportive of impacted communities.”  According to the SEIU/LIUNA statement,  “Workers in energy intensive industries should not be asked to shoulder a disproportionate burden.”

Why union positions matter 

Union positions can make a big difference on climate legislation.  Coal and manufacturing unions have played a significant role in provisions in current legislation that are favorable to their industries.  CQ says AFL-CIO support is essential to passing any climate change bill;  Jason Grumet, director of the National Commission on Energy Policy, says, “If you don’t have organized labor, you can’t get something through.” Strong union support for science-based target could play a significant role in strengthening current legislation.

The US will also face an enormous number of climate related policy decisions in the near and more distant future, ranging from what provisions should be in international treaties to national policy on fuel efficiency standards to sidewalks and bicycle lanes for local streets.  Organized labor can be a significant player in all of them.  It can also play a big role in how those policies are actually implemented in industries and workplaces.  And it can help educate its sixteen-and-a-half million members about what climate change means for them and their children and what has to be done about it.

The SEIU/LIUNA statement concludes, 

“Our nation stands at the threshold of a dramatic transformation toward a clean, green and sustainable economy.  Ambitious reduction targets for 2020 and beyond can help drive this transformation.”

The new union statements supporting science-based targets could be the start of a significant trend that could put organized labor in the forefront not only of the green jobs movement but also of the broader movement to protect the climate.  Support for targets and strong policies to implement them will position labor as a progressive social force and a leading player in the emerging movement for sustainability.  According to Joe Uehlein, former director of the AFL-CIO Center for Strategic Campaigns and a founder of the Labor Network for Sustainability:

"This is an opportunity for all of labor to step up to the plate for what science says is necessary to protect the planet. That’s what we have to do if we want our society to be sustainable. That isn’t only good for the planet – it’s good for labor."

Q&A with Manufacturing Business Expert Richard McCormack and Leo Gerard

Union Review - February 28, 2010 - 9:28am

 

President Leo Gerard of the USW sat down for a discussion with Richard McCormack, the editor and publisher of Manufacturing & Technology News, a publication he created in 1994. This entry is their full discussion.

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Categories: Labor News

Spirit Pilot Contract Negotiations End: Strike Looms

Union Review - February 23, 2010 - 11:18am

Spirit pilots, represented by the Air Line Pilots Association, Int’l (ALPA), concluded mediated talks with the company on February 18 without any progress toward a new contract. The pilots have been negotiating for three-and-a-half years and in federally mediated talks for over six months. The end of scheduled talks may result in the pilots calling a lawful strike should the group be released to seek self-help from the National Mediation Board.

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Categories: Labor News

A Few Weeks in Union Review

Union Review - February 21, 2010 - 9:51am

The Weekly Round-Up is updated just about every Sunday. It is where we post all of the stories that appeared on the site in the last week or so for anyone to revisit, comment, etc. This one is for the last 20 days.

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Categories: Labor News

Tell Whirlpool: Keep It Made In America—Save Our Jobs

Union Review - February 20, 2010 - 10:48am

This piece was written by James Parks from the AFL-CIO. The orginal is here.

The Whirlpool Corp. makes a big deal of its concern for the environment and the poor. But now, the company is about to throw 1,100 workers at its Evansville, Ind., refrigerator plant onto the streets and move their jobs to Mexico, where labor and environmental laws are weaker.

You can show solidarity with the Whirlpool workers, most of whom are members of IUE-CWA, by signing an online petition urging Whirlpool to reverse its decision and Keep It Made in America: Save Our Jobs. Click here to sign the petition.

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Categories: Labor News

IUPAT Member Saves Lives At Austin Plane Crash

Union Review - February 20, 2010 - 9:23am

An IUPAT member working at the Austin, Texas building -where the plane crashed this week- sprung into action shortly after and ended up saving the lives of five people. The following is a statement of the president of the International Union of Painters and Allied Trades.

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Categories: Labor News

Teachers call on board, administrators to hear their budget solutions

Workday Minnesota - February 18, 2010 - 1:40pm
ST. PAUL - St. Paul teachers are brainstorming and ldquo;creative budget solutions and rdquo; to help the school district manage an expected budget shortfall of $25 million for the next school year, according to the president of their union.
Categories: , Labor News

IBEW’s holiday lights display raises $50,000 for charity

Workday Minnesota - February 18, 2010 - 1:40pm
ST. PAUL - Minnesota and rsquo;s first Holiday Lights in the Park display, sponsored by the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers and King of Kings Church in Woodbury, raised $50,000 for four charities.
Categories: , Labor News

Minnesota Union Women's Leadership Retreat set for April 2009

Workday Minnesota - February 18, 2010 - 1:40pm
Minneapolis - Women active in their unions and ndash; and those interested in getting active in labor organizations and ndash; will learn new skills at the Minnesota Union Women's Leadership Retreat April 22-24, 2009.
Categories: , Labor News

SEIU members make their voices heard at Legislature

Workday Minnesota - February 18, 2010 - 1:40pm
ST. PAUL - Recently, 200 members from local unions of the Service Employees International Union came to the state Capitol to speak with legislators about the slowing economy and what that means for working Minnesotans.
Categories: , Labor News

Unions mourn the passing of longtime activist Lucy Robinson

Workday Minnesota - February 18, 2010 - 1:40pm
ST. PAUL - Saint Paul and rsquo;s labor community is mourning the loss of Lucille (Lucy) Robinson, retired member of AFSCME Local 22. Her death, on Feb. 2, saddened the hearts of all who knew her as one of the kindest hearts of all.
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