Monterey Herald Workers Fightfor TheirJobs
Transcription
Monterey Herald Workers Fightfor TheirJobs
c,g C A L I F O R NI 5q94 A OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE CALIFORNIA LABOR FEDERATION, AFL-CIO Vol. 40; No. 9 October, 1997 583 Monterey Herald Workers Fight for Their Jobs Luther Jackson, executive officer of the San Jose ngered by Knight- | Ridder Inc.'s "bad neighbor policy" at the Monterey County Herald, area labor, community and religious ~C cr (Ar -n 00 4A0 F.3 Newspaper Guild/CWA, speaks to a rally of Monterey Herald employees on September 6. leaders are organizing to stop the media giant's attack on | working families. The news chain, which I also owns the San Jose Mercury News and the Detroit Free Press, acquired the ' unionized Herald on August 24 and promptly fired all employees. Since then, they have forced them to undergo the emotionally wrenching experience of reapplying for their own jobs. Knight-Ridder refused to rehire 25 former Herald workers, including several prizewinning journalists. A total of 60 former employees are no longer at the Herald. The paper stripped current workers of their contractual rights to fair wages and benefits, job security, due process and privacy at the workplace. ' Imported security guards have turned the community paper into a fortress. These guards are from Vance International, the same notorious company that supplied guards in the Detroit newspaper and Pittston strikes. The initial contract proposal from Knight-Ridder would gut the rights of the unions and their members. The unions have filed unfair labor practice charges with the National Labor Relations Board. The roughly 150 Herald workers are represented by the San Jose Newspaper Guild, CWA Local 39098, the Monterey Bay Area Typographical Union Local 651/CWA and the San Francisco Web Pressmen and Prepress Workers' Local 4/GCIU. Knight-Ridder was already nationally known for unionbusting. An NLRB administrative law judge ruled KnightRidder's unfair labor practices at the Free Press caused and perpetuated the Detroit newspaper strike. The Monterey workers are now engaged in a David and Goliath campaign, with considerable help from the com- the Communications Workers of America and the Monterey County Labor Council. munity, Spurred by overwhelming support from a Reader's Com- religious and labor leaders, the unions have launched a successful submittee of civic, scription boycott pledge campaign. g To help out or learn more, call (408) 333-9016. Sacramento acupuncturists may now treat patients in the workers' comp Wrap-Up system. his year's legislative session has ended with a mixture of frustration and victory. To no one's surprise, the Labor Federation's bill to restore daily overtime pay after eight hours, SB 680 (Solis), was vetoed by Governor Wilson. The Assembly's version of the same measure, AB 15 (Knox), will be acted on next year. The only success on daily overtime did not require Wilson's signature for approval. Both Houses adopted SCR 54 (Lockyer) which declares that actions taken by the Industrial Welfare Commission to repeal daily overtime are contrary to the intent of the Legislature. "We'll keep on fighting," promised Art Pulaski, Executive Secretary-Treasurer of the Labor Federation. "The daily overtime struggle is far from over, especially since California voters are clear they want to save the eight-hour day." Business groups waged an extensive last-minute lobbying effort, complete with radio and print ads, to convince legislators to vote against labor's bills. But labor also had many successes. Penalties for minimum wage violations were increased to $250. A new law guarantees some employers must give workers time off for day care activities. Several victories were won in the workers' comp battles. The choice of physician must be made by a workers' comp referee or appeals board, and Employers of agricultural workers will be penalized for failure to pay wages due if the workers quit voluntarily. Building trades unions are rejoicing at their victory over the governor: the Legislature intends to keep the modal rate method for determining prevailing wages. Teamsters were successful in urging the legislature to urge Congress and President Clinton to maintain current truck size and weight standards. Other labor-backed bills are now being reconsidered or will be acted on next year. "We'll be back," promised Pulaski. U Safeway Backs Berry Pickers major effort by West Coast strawberry workers to improve their lives through union organizing picked up key support when the United Farm Workers signed an agreement with Safeway, Inc. The supermarket chain the second largest retail food chain in the country agreed September 15 to back the organizing drive and support basic human rights for 20,000 California berry ickers. With Safeway's action, more than 50% of the stores in eight of the largest US retail food markets have for- - CALIFORNIA LABOR NEWS Published monthly by the California Labor Art Pulaski, Executive Secretary-Treasurer mally supported strawberry workers' rights. U Bob Welcome New Affiliates! We extend warm greetings to the Labor Federation's three newest affiliates: Bakery, Confectionery and Tobacco Workers Local 315 in San Diego; Letter Carriers Branch Local 183, Santa Rosa; and OPEIU Local 45 in San Jose. Welcome aboard! PAGE 2 PAGE .1 Balgenorth Mary Bixler Bergan Tony Sherri Chiesa A. Clary Wayne Val Connolly Miguel Contreras Jerry Cremins Michael J. Day Donald R. Doser Billy Joe Douglas Steve Edney Federation, AFL-CIO Tom Rankin, President VICE PRESIDENTS Jim R. Green Jack McNally Ted Hansen Loretta Mahoney Owen Marron Day Higuchi Dolores Huerta Larry Mazzola E. Dennis Hughes Sonsa Moseley Janett Steven T. Nutter Don Hunsucker Ken Orsatti Dallas Jones Oscar Owens Jack L. Loveall Lee Pearson Luboviski Edward C. Powell Barry Gunnar Lundeberg Mike Quevedo, Jr Ophelia McFadden Humphries Michael Riley Richard C. Robbins John L. Smith Yolanda Solari Archie Thomas Leo Valenzuela Paul Varacalli Armando Vergara William Waggoner Nancy Wohlforth Al Ybarra Judith Barlsh, Editor California Labor News (ISSN 0008-0802) is published monthly by the California Labor Federation, AFL-CIO, 417 Montgomery St. Suite 300, San Francisco, CA 94104. Periodicals postage paid at San Francisco, CA. POSTMASTER: Please send address changes to California Labor News, 417 Montgomery St. Suite 300, San Francisco, CA 94104-1109. Subscriptions $10 a year, corporate rate $20. Phone (415) 986-3585. Fax (415) 392-8505. warnJqM"" "maaNo .nWmP aunni NEWS LABOR NEWS CALIFORNIA LABOR I OCTOBER OCTOBERI1997 Telling the Truth about the Anti-Worker Initiative ohn Molina, employee an at Ameri- can Income Life and member of OPEIU Local 277, has been spending his weekends outside supermarkets. When he finds people who are thinking of signing the AntiWorker Initiative, he gets mad. "I tell them not to sign, and warn them that it's a fraudulent initiative. It's a smokescreen for corporate interests," he says. John and hundreds of other union members statewide have formed Truth Teams to inform people about the Anti-Worker Initiative. Coordinated by central labor councils, the Truth Teams visit petition-circulaters at their favorite sites: CostCo, Target and Safeway stores throughout California. would have destroyed the Truth Team members hand out flyers to shoppers and ask them what they know about the initiative they're about to sign. Molina reports that when he explains the true nature of the ballot initiative, almost no one public schools, lost after teachers unions waged an extensive public education wants to sign it. The Anti-Worker Initiative of "campaign finance reform" to mask its true purpose: taking organized labor out of the political process for the November 1998 elections. The initiative would make it much harder for unions to raise and spend-money on politics. The authors of the initiative are Orange County extremists who backed the Voucher initiative in 1993. Vouchers, which campaign against it. uses a veneer " OMt z OZra ..* Now the Pbtbm authors of AntiWorker Initiative are trying to keep unions from spending money on such issues in the future. U theA.-_ HANDLE I I II- '111r I NEWS FROM THE FIELD Labor Councils End BART Strike Another Big UPTE Win at UC breathed a Bay Area commuterstrains startof relief when the sigh ed running again. After a five-day strike, behind the scenes intervention by Bay Area labor councils and the California Labor Federation bring BART management helped and striking unions SEIU 790 and ATU 1555 to agreement and helped win a contract for workers. Two thousand health care professionals at five University of California medical centers voted recently to join University Professional and Technical Employees CWA Local 9119. The victory to 10,000 the number of UC brings workers represented by the local. The newest members will have union contracts at the Los Angeles, San Francisco, Irvine, San Diego and Davis campuses. Included are clinical social workers, psychologists, pharmacists, lab techs and nuclear medical techs. "Attempts to three of the medprivatize ical centers were a motivating factor," said Jelger Kalmijn, president of the local. great Fr Building Trades Stop ABC II Plans by the Associated Building Contractors to undermine union apprenticeship programs in Contra Costa county were thwarted last month when representatives from the county Building Trades L Councils, as well as area Iron, Carpenters, Electrical and Painters locals, persuaded the Vallejo City Council to vote to4-3 to table ABC's application OCTOBER 1997 lease a building on Mare Island for the purpose. The entry level "regional trainfor industrial and ing" program works jobs would have dampublic established union aged long programs in the apprenticeship area. If ABC tries to re-submit the "labor will be back in application, force to oppose it," said Greg Feere, Contra Costa Building Trades Council secretary-treasurer. Tree Trimmers Go Union Electrical Workers Local 47 at Diamond Bar signed up the last of Inc.'s tree trimmers in Asplundh, California. The additional 210 workers do line clearance work on S. California Edison's high power lines and complete the unionization of the tree-trimming company. On the Waterfont The ILWU shut down all West Coast ports for one day in September as part of a worldwide demonstration of support for dockers from Liverpool, England. The British unionists were fired when cross picket lines they refusedthetotrend toward privatiprotesting zation and casualization of longshore work among the world's ports. A similar protest ininJanu-' ary shut down 100 ports 27 countries. CALIFORNIA LABOR NE WS CALIFO'RNIA LADOR NEWS -a - S 0 0 October 4: Common Sense Eco0 nomics training session, City Col0 lege, S.F. Call: (415) 267-6550. S October 6: Brazilian Presidential 0 Candidate Lula at UC Berke0 0 S 0 0 S S speaks ley. Call:(510) 643-6815. October 8: Executive Council California Labor FederaMeeting, tion, Biltmore Hotel, L.A. October 10: San Joaquin & Calaveras labor council Golf Tournament, Lockeford Springs. Call (209) 948-5526. * October 14: Training session on 0 0 0 0 S 0 0 financial reporting and elections, San Diego. Call (415) 986-3585. October 21: Training session on financial reporting and elections, Hollywood. Call (415) 986-3585. October 22: Training session on financial reporting and elections, Oakland. Call (415) 986-3585. S 0 October24-26: AFL-CIO OrganizInstitute, Asian/Pacific Islander 0 ing Recruitment. Redwood City. Call 1- 800-690-0666. 0 0 S November 14-16: AFL-CIO Organizing Institute, Latino Recruitment, Los Angeles. (ai above) November 14-16: W. Hemisphere Workers' Conference against NAFTA and Privatlztiop, S.F. Call (415) 681-5868. PAGE 3 Los Angeles says "No More NAFTAs!" September 16, the Clinton administration proposed legislation granting "fast track" authority negotiate trade agreements for the next seven years. Under fast track, Congress must vote on trade agreements without amending them and with severely limited time for debate. Fast track also prevents the President from including labor and environmental protections in future trade agreements. In Los Angeles, labor leaders announced a campaign to defeat fast track at a press conference in front of the L.A. Jeans Company, which moved to Mexico after NAFTA passed. Above, Maria Escobar, a UNITE member who lost her job when her employer relocated production to Mexico in the wake of NAFTA, denounces the Clinton administration's trade proposal. On to UNIONS WIN IN COURT New Workplace Safety Standard Must Be Stronger alifornia unions have succeeded in state's strengthening the pioneering workplace safety standard to prevent repetitive motion injuries. A judge ruled on September 5 that the state's new ergonomics standard is too narrow and must be extended. In a major victory for California workers, Sacramento Superior Court judge Ford agreed with a petition filed by Courtroom Round-Up PAGE 4 the California Labor Federation that California's ergonomics standard violated state law. As revised by the judge, the new standard will protect more workers in more work- places against crippling repetitive strain injuries like carpal tunnel syndrome. California is the first and only state in the country to pass regulations to minimize repetitive motion injuries. The new rules, which took effect July 3 after passage by California's Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board, ask employers with a track record of repetitive motion injuries to institute procedures to monitor problems, train employees and fix the problems that caused the injuries. In an oral ruling, the court agreed with the Federation that the regulations must apply to all workplaces. As originally written, the standard exempted worksites with fewer than 10 employees, which excluded workers in 79% of employing units in the state and over a million and a half California workers. The court also struck a loophole allowing employers to avoid following the new rules by claiming safety measures cost too much. judge rejected attacks safety standard by the trucking industry, which The on the would have invalidated the new law altogether. M NEWS LABOR NE CALIFORNIA LABOR WS OCTOBER OCTOBER I997 1997