Raising Wages Could Cure What Ails America
Transcription
Raising Wages Could Cure What Ails America
Official Publication of the United Industrial, Service, Transportation, Professional & Government Workers of North AmericanSEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION nAFL-CIO The United Worker The United Worker is also available online at www.seafarers.org/aboutsiu/affiliates.asp Volume 41, Number 1 January-March 2015 Raising Wages Could Cure What Ails America AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka has a seemingly simple approach to one of America’s toughest challenges. “The cure for what ails America right now is raising wages, and everything that we do, in one way or another, comes back to that very thing. If something raises wages, I’m for it. If something lowers wages, I’m against it,” said Trumka. Both he and Georgia AFL-CIO President Charlie Flemming brought messages of progress and recent victories for the labor movement when they spoke to the executive board of the Maritime Trades Department (MTD), to which the UIW is affiliated, in Atlanta. Fleming addressed the board Feb. 19 and Trumka spoke the next day. Trumka said the federation’s proworker efforts definitely aren’t confined to union members. “We’re fighting to raise wages for every worker out there,” he said, “and that fight takes many forms. It extends from our efforts to raise the minimum wage, to enact paid sick leave, to support investment for America’s seaports and locks and docks and railways, to our opposition to bad trade deals and anti-Jones Act proposals that would endanger our country’s waterways and further undercut the American middle class. The working class. Our class.” Later, he explained the dangers of a presidential power called fast track, the use of which has rarely been authorized by Congress and is currently being sought by President Barack Obama. “Here’s how fast track works,” Trumka said. “The president’s trade representative goes off in a dark room somewhere with people, comes back with an agreement, lays it down in front of Congress, and they have to vote it up or down. They can’t filibuster it, they can’t do anything but vote it up or down.” Without the chance to introduce amendments or take the time to review the agreement in detail, any number of bad bills could be passed simply because there wasn’t adequate time for a detailed review, Trumka said. He then broke down a complicated economic theory into easy-to-understand language. “Raising wages spurs consumer spending, and remember, our economy is 72 percent driven by consumer spending,” Trumka said. “And that spending increases demand. And whenever we have a demand increase, companies have to hire people to meet that demand. That’s how raising wages creates a virtuous cycle of economic growth and shared prosperity.” Those simple principles are reflected in the AFL-CIO’s “Common Sense Economics” program, a curriculum designed for working families to better understand that the state of the economy is not inevitable, but dictated by public policy. Spreading the Common AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka addresses the 2015 Maritime Trades Department executive board meeting in Atlanta. Sense Economics message is important because, according to Trumka, too many people believe that the economy is fated and immutable. “The economy is not like the weath- er,” he said. “The economy is nothing but a set of rules, and those rules decide the winners and they decide the See Quality of Life, Page 2 New Economic Policy Institute Report America’s Trade Policies Executive Council Demands Calls ‘Right to Work’ Laws Hoax note: A comprehensive report nizations in the country forced to provide all ‘New Track,’ Not Fast Track by Editor’s the respected, non-partisan think tank benefits for free, and banned from requiring The AFL-CIO Executive Council called for transparency and broad reform in the nation’s trade negotiations and policies—especially Fast Track—during the Feb. 23 session of at the council’s winter meeting in Atlanta. The council in its statement on the issue said current trade policies of the United States are undermining the interests of working people and that when decisions about economic policy are made behind closed doors, “…those decisions tend to advance the policy preferences of political and economic elites, not the broad interests of the populace at large….America’s workers, small farmers, small businesses and domestic producers have paid the price.” It also said that the TransPacific Partnership Agreement (TPP) and other trade negotiations currently underway are likely to follow that pattern. Trade negotiations, trade promotion authority (known as “TPA” or “Fast Track”) and economic policy are inextricably intertwined, according to the AFL-CIO. Because “trade” agreements include provisions on environmental policy, labor rights, foreign investment, food safety, anti-trust policy and more, these decisions should not be made behind closed doors—away from the eyes of the people and their elected representatives. Among other reforms, the council said a new trade negotiating authority must: n Ensure Congress approves trade agreement partners before negotiations begin; n Create negotiating objectives that are specific to the trade partners involved and advance a trade model that provides balanced, inclusive benefits for all rather than a corporate-rights agenda; n Ensure an effective check on the executive branch so that it cannot unilaterally determine whether congressional trade objectives have been met after See Federation, Page 4 Economic Policy Institute (EPI) recently illustrated the hoax of so-called right-to-work (RTW) laws. The report’s summary offered this description of whether RTW truly is about freedom: Corporate lobbies advocate RTW with the goal of restricting unions. There are many organizations that, like unions, require membership dues. For instance, an attorney who wants to appear in court must be a dues-paying member of the bar association. One may dislike the bar association, but must still pay dues if he or she wants to appear in court. Condominium or homeowners associations similarly require dues of their members. A homebuyer can’t choose to live in a condominium development without paying the association fees. Yet the national corporate lobbies supporting RTW are not proposing a “right to practice law” or a “right to live where you want.” They are focused solely on restricting employees’ organizations. By federal law, unions are required to provide all their benefits to every employee covered by a union contract. In RTW states, if a non-dues-paying employee has a problem at work, the union is required to represent her— including providing an attorney at no charge if one is needed—the exact same as it would a dues-paying member. Unions in RTW states are the only orga- those who enjoy the benefits to pay their fair share of the costs of creating them. Indeed, employer associations themselves refuse to live by the same rules they seek to impose on unions. In Owensboro, Kentucky, the local Building Trades Council decided to withdraw its membership in the local Chamber of Commerce, but asked if it could still receive full member benefits even though it would no longer be paying dues. Absolutely not, answered the Chamber. “It would be against Chamber bylaws and policy to consider any organization or business a member without dues being paid. The vast majority of the Chamber’s annual revenues come from member dues, and it would be unfair to the other 850-plus members to allow an organization not paying dues to be included in member benefits.” The Chamber’s logic is simple: If it had to provide all its services for free, and dues were strictly voluntary, it might go out of business. This, then, appears to be the true aim of RTW, and may explain why some corporate lobbies continue advocating for it even though it doesn’t add up as economic policy. It appears that the main goal of RTW may be not to create jobs or give workers more freedom, but instead to make it harder for workers to have an effective voice in negotiating with their employer. (Visit epi.org and look for the complete report in a post dated Jan. 23.) Quality of Life Issues Remain Top Priority for U.S. Working Families From the President Why Fast Track is the Wrong Path One of our union’s most important affiliations is our alliance with the American Federation of Labor-Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFLCIO), the nation’s largest labor group. The AFL-CIO has 56 affiliates collectively representing 12.5 million workers. Those affiliates include our parent union, the Seafarers. I’m a member of the AFL-CIO executive council, and we regularly meet in order to examine key issues affecting America’s working families. We also use those gatherings to spell out the federation’s positions and outline strategies for promoting workers’ rights. At our most recent session, which took place in Atlanta in late February, the dominant topic by far was United States trade policy, and in particular the urgent need to oppose trade promotion authority – known as TPA or Fast Track. This is a vital issue for American workers, whether they belong to a union or not. Michael Sacco Right now, I don’t believe that anyone could effectively argue against the federation’s belief that current U.S. trade policies undermine the interests of workers. As the executive council noted in its statement about Fast Track, when decisions about economic policy are made behind closed doors, those decisions tend to advance the policy wishes of political and economic elites, not the broader interests of workers. U.S. trade policy decisions have been made this way for years, and America’s workers, small farmers, small businesses and domestic producers have paid the price. Unfortunately, there’s no sign that the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP) and other trade negotiations currently underway are likely to make trade policy better from the perspective of workers or the public interest. It’s critical to make the connection between trade negotiations and economic policy. And it seems like common sense that because such agreements include components on environmental policy, labor rights, foreign investment, food safety, anti-trust policy and more, these decisions should not be made away from the eyes of the people and their elected representatives. Modern history tells us all we need to know about where workers’ interests rank in trade deals. Whether those agreements involved Mexico, Korea, Colombia, Guatemala or Honduras we were promised more employment and higher wages. Instead, the results were massive exports of American jobs. It’s no coincidence our trade deficit has spiraled out of control, taking U.S. manufacturing, including about 5 million family-wage manufacturing jobs, with it. It hasn’t been a picnic for foreign workers, either. When Congress supported North American, Central American, and Colombian trade deals, they also assured us the pacts would repair rampant labor rights violations and create decent jobs for our neighbors to the south. But things have only gotten worse, including increased repression, often in the form of violence. Although the solutions, as always, are far easier said than done, the AFLCIO and its affiliates are wisely pouring resources into the fight to protect workers in any and all trade deals. Our goals include instituting effective checks on the executive branch; increasing public and congressional access to trade proposals; and addressing shortcomings in existing trade deals. The federation is working with a broad coalition of allies to defeat Fast Track and instead develop more democratic and inclusive negotiating rules that respect workers. This will involve continuing to educate union members and their families about the negative effects of Fast Track. It certainly will include holding elected officials accountable for their positions on trade. One of our movement’s greatest strengths is our ability to mobilize in grassroots campaigns. We need to tap into that strength by using tactics such as office visits, workplace flyers, rallies, town halls and social media, to make sure that elected officials know that their constituents support a fair trade policy and oppose Fast Track. It’s also completely appropriate to remind our elected representatives that we still have a national economy, not just a global one. That’s why it makes sense to boost federal funding to upgrade and rebuild ports, airports, railroads, roads, schools, water systems and other critical public infrastructure. Strengthening our “Buy American” laws also would lead to job growth and economic gain. This is a crucial fight, and the labor movement will play a vital role in winning for working families. The United Worker January-March 2015 The official publication of the United Industrial, Service, Transportation, Professional and Government Workers of North America, AGLIW, AFL-CIO, 5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs, Maryland 20746. Telephone (301) 899-0675. Direct inquiries to Jim Guthrie, editor. Headquarters: Michael Sacco, president; John Spadaro, national director; David Heindel, secretary-treasurer. Atlantic Region: Kermett Mangram, vice president. Caribbean Region: Eugene Irish, vice president. Great Lakes Region: Monte Burgett, vice president Gulf Coast Region: Dean Corgey, vice president. Midwest Region: Thomas Orzechowski, vice president. West Coast Region: Herb Perez, vice president. 2 Continued from Page 1 losers. And those rules are made by the men and the women who we elect and put in office. And those rules have been rigged against us for far too long.” Trumka also talked about the AFLCIO’s “Raising Wages” campaign, which kicked off on Jan. 7 with the National Summit on Raising Wages held at Gallaudet University. The campaign is poised to spread the message across the country, with smaller summits scheduled later this year in major cities including Atlanta, Philadelphia, St. Louis, San Diego, Minneapolis and Columbus, Ohio. In conclusion, Trumka urged the crowd to continue the multi-faceted efforts aimed at boosting the quality of life for America’s working families. “When [opponents] tell you that we can’t raise wages, you tell them that we can, and we will,” the federation president stated. “When they tell you that we can’t have good pensions and good health care, and good jobs, you tell them that we can, and we will. When they tell you that we can’t have better Social Security or Medicare, you tell them that we can, and we will. When they tell you that we can’t have better ports and harbors, and better roads and bridges, and a better rail system and electrical system, you tell them that we can, and we will. When they tell you that we can’t have stronger unions and more collective bargaining, you tell them that we can, and we will. When they tell you that our best years are somehow behind us, you tell them that our best years are still in front of us, for us and for our kids and for all the workers, and if they can’t deliver that to us, get the hell out of the way. Because we’re coming through, and we won’t stop standing together, fighting together, voting together and winning together.” Flemming, a longstanding member of the MTD-affiliated International Association of Machinists (IAM), said Atlanta and its surrounding counties are experiencing a surge of new unionizing drives and employment opportunities for union members, thanks in part to the state labor federation’s efforts. He also offered a candid look at some of the challenges facing Georgia’s labor movement. “As many of you know, Georgia is a red state. The Republican Party controls all facets of our government. And we’ve had some struggles,” Flemming said, outlining how the most recent elections in the state were very close to favoring the pro-labor candidates, “Those were competitive races, for the first time in over a decade. We thought we had a decent shot at winning; we just didn’t get enough folks out to vote.” He stressed the importance of ensuring that union members vote, noting that the some of the final tallies in Georgia on Election Day were separated by less than 200,000 votes. He also mentioned that there are 100,000 union members and family members across the state who are not registered to vote, which could have turned the tide in some of those close races. Flemming said, “We have a lot of work to do, but it’s possible to turn Georgia, and I honestly believe in 2016 that there’s a real chance that a Democrat could win those races, or at least someone who supports workers.” The Georgia AFL-CIO recently proved that outreach and spreading the message can have great effect on The United Worker Charlie Flemming President, Georgia AFL-CIO a community. In order to encourage voters to pass a referendum that would extend public transportation lines to Clayton County, one of the most economically depressed counties in the region, the state federation teamed up with 24 environmental, religious, labor, and civil rights groups and started a grassroots campaign. Flemming reported that the results of their outreach were impressive, as 74 percent of voters approved the ballot initiative on Nov. 4, with more citizens voting in favor of that transportation tax than for the governor or lieutenant governor. At a cost of a one-cent sales tax, the people of Clayton County voted to give themselves a chance to get better jobs in more affluent parts of the state, thanks in part to the Georgia AFL-CIO canvassing the county and increasing awareness of the approaching vote, Flemming said. Meanwhile, as a 37-year veteran of the airline industry, Flemming said he is passionate about helping the flight attendants of Delta Airlines – all 20,000 of them – secure union representation. He also noted that nearly 12,000 of those flight attendants are based in Atlanta, and pledged that the Georgia AFL-CIO would do everything in their power to help those workers join a union. Despite the tough political climate in his state, he talked about the recent increase in union contracts and projects that are underway in Georgia. “We have two new stadiums being built here in Atlanta – a football stadium and a baseball stadium,” he said. “The football stadium is costing $1.4 billion; the baseball stadium will cost $650 million. We’re not getting all the work, but we are getting about 60 percent of it. We’re deepening the ports down in Savannah, so there are good opportunities for growth down there, with our brothers and sisters who are longshoremen, as well as some of the truckers.” He also talked about the union jobs in one of Georgia’s fastest growing industries, the film production industry. Atlanta has recently become the third largest production location in the country, with plenty of union job opportunities involved. He concluded, “So, there are a lot of good things going on, and I think our future is bright. We just have to continue to plow the fields. There’s a lot of opportunity.” January-March 2015 Dan Danzi (right in photo above) is pictured with his wife of nearly 15 years, Phyllis, who also works in the Seafarers Management Information Systems Department. In the photo at right, Danzi (left) is pictured inspecting a piece of machinery in the Brooklyn Hall back in the 1960s. With him is a technician from the IBM Corporation. Information Technology Icon Dan Danzi Retires The Seafarers International Union and its affiliates, including the UIW, on Feb. 27 lost the expertise of an information technology pioneer with the retirement of Seafarers Management Information System Director Donato “Dan” Danzi. The Brooklyn, New York native, who signed on with the SIU fresh out of high school, has decided to officially close the curtains on a 53-year career. “I graduated from Abraham Lincoln High School in 1961 but at that time, I had no idea what I was going to do,” said Danzi, who is believed to be the thirdlongest tenured union administrative/ managerial official alive today (only UIW/ SIU President Michael Sacco and SIU Jersey City Port Agent Bob Selzer have been answering the bell for UIW’s parent organization longer). “I started working for the SIU January 8, 1962 as a stock boy … that was 53 years ago this past January 8 and here we are today. “It was the first and only job I have ever had aside from being a paper boy hustling papers on the side in the streets of Brooklyn,” Danzi continued. “I suppose that is a long time on one job, especially nowadays when people jump from job to job just to have a buck or two more in their pockets.” In some ways, Danzi’s career with SIU was more a matter of chance rather than choice. The youngest of three boys in his family, Danzi had three uncles who worked in the printing business in Brooklyn. Each enjoyed positions of authority, working as managers and supervisors. “Both of my oldest brothers worked with my uncles for a while after they graduated from high school,” recalled Danzi. “So when I graduated, I asked my mother: Hey mom, can you talk to Uncle Frank or Uncle Willie to see what they could do to get me in? She was really hesitant in responding and said I‘ve already asked for Joe and I’ve already asked for Anthony, so I can’t keep asking and asking.” It was that ever so slight bit of uncertainty on his mother’s part that charted Danzi’s course toward the SIU. “That’s really what made me take a three-month business course about IBM Machines that I happened to read about in the paper,” Danzi said. “I really did not learn much during the class, but they later sent me to an agency that referred me to the SIU office in Brooklyn. The rest I suppose is history. “So if I had not went for that (the three-month course) I probably would have stayed in my mom’s face to see if she would give in and ask my uncles to see if they could get me in,” he said. “I may well have winded up in the printing business.” Danzi said when he came aboard with the SIU, all union data was kept on paper reports which were generated on punch cards. “At that time we were using about 100 cases of paper per month, so it was January-March 2015 my job to order that stuff, stock it and make sure that we always had enough supplies on hand to get our work done,” he recalled. As time passed, he began moving up the progression ladder, taking on more responsibilities and learning more about technological equipment along the way. “I first learned about the peripheral equipment and how it functioned,” Danzi said. “I had a couple of wonderful guys – Phil Leonti and Frank Paladino – who took me under their wings and taught me what to do, when to do it and why. So I owe them a lot. “They looked out for me from the very first moment that I walked through the door at the Brooklyn hall,” he said. “Without them, I’m sure my career would not have been as rewarding as it has.” While not providing a blow by blow account of his early to intermediate years with the union, Danzi gave the impression that those days were characterized by loads of fond memories; so much so that he made a career decision and decided to stick around. “I guess I decided to stay with the SIU at the point that I had about nine or 10 years in,” he said. “I had a good job, I loved going to work, it was convenient and the people that I worked with were fantastic. “I did have a couple of opportunities at that time to get jobs in other unions,” he continued. “Other people were interested in me and I could have made about eight or nine thousand dollars more a year which was actually a lot of money at that time. But I already had nine or 10 years in with the SIU and I had just gotten married. So I decided to take the stability rather than venture into the unknown. “I’m proud that I stayed because the journey has been just incredible,” he added. Danzi said that perhaps the most challenging period of his career came when (he does not remember the exact month and year) a fire destroyed much of the union’s Plans Office Building. “When the building reopened in the aftermath of the fire, there was no room in the building to house the data center nor any place to do our work,” he said. “So we found another union in Manhattan that had the exact same configuration as we had in terms of equipment. “They had free space in their facility for work to be done during the night shift,” he said. “So every single day, I would fill my car trunk up with the day’s production and drive to Manhattan via the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel to get that work done. I had my second shift guy work there. “This went on for quite a few months and then we took the old SIU Gym on 20th Street and converted it to our data center,” he recalled. “All and all, it was quite a time because we were wondering how we were going to do pension checks and paychecks for our members and staff…. We were extremely lucky that we found the work space with that union and were able to keep on trucking. “I thought it was pretty amazing that that union allowed us to use their space and equipment to keep our production rolling,” he continued. “I was one of several in the data center during the hall’s last few years in Brooklyn. I was responsible for the whole department Members of the SMIS Department joined retiring director Dan Danzi (second from left in row two above) for this farewell photo. In the front row (from left) are Sarah Johnson, Johnnie Gorman, Lauren Tellez, David Hankins and Glenn Lewis. The second row consists of Brian Horton, Danzi, Betty Beaumont and Phyllis Danzi (Danzi’s wife). In the back row are John Sacco, Fred Long, David Cruz, Ravi Natarajan, Jordan Biscardo and Lee Schmidt. The United Worker during that time.” The SIU moved out of the union hall in Brooklyn to its current headquarters in Camp Springs, Maryland, in 1982. “But the data center stayed behind because they did not have facilities for it here,” Danzi said. “I brought the data center with me pretty much on my back when I came in 1984. “I was workings night hours at the time because the day shift had other responsibilities, developing new procedures and operations methodologies, things like that,” he continued. “So the only time available to run the production environment that was available was on second and third shift…. Those were the hours I was stuck with, so I tried to teach other guys various techniques, practices and how to run other jobs. I ended up training two guys on the late shift.” Despite those early challenges, Danzi not only endured, he thrived. What’s more, he played a pivotal role in making the SMIS department the highly efficient technological operation it is today. Just how significant Danzi’s leadership has meant over the years perhaps was captured by Johnnie Gorman, his co-worker of 30 years, when she described him as hard-working, dedicated and the constant exhibitor of a positive attitude. “These are only a few of the many positive attributes he shares with us every day,” Gorman said. “It’s impossible to measure what Danny has meant to the Seafarers all these years. “This is a bittersweet moment,” she concluded, “saying good bye to a friend and coworker who has meant so much.” “My entire time with the SIU has been a real joy,” Danzi said. “Over the span of my career, I have worked for three SIU presidents. There was Paul Hall, Frank Drozak and Mike Sacco. “All of them were and are great men, all very driven and highly intelligent. But I’d have to say that Big Mike is my favorite. He’s done one hell of a job leading the SIU and it has been simply great working for him. The same goes for the entire executive staff, especially Maggie Bowen, my supervisor.” When asked to share the most momentous day of his career, Danzi fired back without any hesitation. “January 8, 1962 (his arrival date in the Brooklyn hall) was the best day of my life,” he said. “It ended up bringing me my kids and it brought me, my wife of nearly 15 years, Phyllis. It was just an incredible day. “Because if it, I have four daughters (two from previous marriage). “I have Jeanine who lives in North Carolina; my youngest daughter is Danielle who lives in Riverside, Connecticut; my oldest step-daughter Heather who lives in South Dakota; and, my youngest step-daughter Allyson who lives in Texas.” 3 Trade Deals Could Taint Obama’s Pro-Jobs Legacy Editor’s Note: President Barack Obama delivered a major address on the economy, jobs, manufacturing, trade and Fast Track March 18 in Cleveland, Ohio. Following is Ohio AFL-CIO President Tim Burga’s response to the president’s address President Obama has enacted policies that have benefited Ohio’s economy and helped strengthen our middle class. His decision to rescue the auto industry has meant the world to many local economies across the state, saving thousands of familysupporting, middle-class jobs. It was the right decision at the right time, a decision made for all the right reasons. The president has also protected our jobs, particularly in manufacturing, by placing tariffs on countries such as China and South Korea for illegally dumping products in the U.S. However, his stance, stated again today in Cleveland, to gain “Fast Track” trade authority from Congress to negotiate a “Trans Pacific Partnership” pact presents the same flawed approach to global trade that has cost the U.S. and Ohio hundreds of thousands of good jobs. Trade can be beneficial and create jobs. It can also be harmful and destroy jobs. The U.S. and Ohio’s import/export deficits represent lost jobs and less than full employment, which means downward pressure on wages. Because of poorly crafted Federation Wants New Track in Trade deals that occur without input from Congress and its constituents, Ohio has lost significantly more jobs than it has gained form trade. We’ve seen the harm and are still looking for the benefits from the global trade pacts of the last two decades. The president and Congress should work together to create a new model for global trade that places an emphasis on raising wages and shared prosperity. Any trade deal must also confront reality and stop currency manipulation from countries party to global trade deals to gain market advantage. To date, issues like this have gone unaddressed—a problem that will only worsen in a deal with no regard for state, regional and local interests that would otherwise be considered in an open and democratic trade negotiation. This president has consistently sided with Ohio workers on some of the most important and politically risky decisions that have come before him. It would be a shame for him to abandon that allegiance now, and potentially roll back the gains that have been made though his steadfast advocacy for the American worker. I call on the president and all members of Congress to hold a free and open process in considering the biggest trade deal in history, one that will cover a quarter of the world’s population. Anything less would be antithetical to the legacy the president has built so far. Union Members Receive Tonnage Bonus Money Continued from Page 1 an agreement has been negotiated, or whether agreements should qualify for expedited consideration; and n Ensure Congress has effective opportunities to strip expedited consideration from trade deals that fail to meet congressional objectives or fail to incorporate congressional and public participation. To advance this agenda, the AFL-CIO commits to working with a broad coalition of allies to defeat “Fast Track” trade authority and instead develop more democratic and participatory trade negotiating procedures that lead to fairer and more balanced trade deals that put people and the planet over profits. Among other initiatives, the council says the AFL-CIO is committed to: n Continuing to educate our members—and all workers—about the negative effects of Fast Track trade deals and that there is a better way; n Demanding greater transparency and inclusiveness in creating U.S. international economic policies, consistent with democratic principles; n Expanding our fair trade coalition to include civil rights leaders, people of faith, small business people, seniors and veterans; n Ensuring that the U.S. trade and economic policies reflect the progressive reforms needed to make U.S. producers and their employees more competitive in the global marketplace; and n Fighting to defeat any trade agreement that fails to prioritize the needs of working families and advance shared prosperity in the global economy. Scott Boatright (left) and Tony Brown (right) will tell you that working hard, in this case going above and beyond one’s normal duties, really does pay off. In December, each received tonnage bonus checks in the amount of $4,487.75 for reaching certain productivity milestones during the calendar year which runs from November to November. Both are UIW members at Jacksonville, Florida-based and union-contracted Portus Stevedoring, LLC. Presenting them with their checks is SIU Asst. VP Archie Ware (center) who also serves as UIW Representative. NLRB Issues Rule for Resolving Representation Disputes A new rule issued by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) is good news for workers, according to the head of America’s largest labor federation. The NLRB has streamlined the process for resolving representation disputes with the new rule, published on Dec. 15 and taking effect on April 14. This final rule amends the existing representation-case procedures in an effort to simplify the process. AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka stated, “The modest but important reforms to the representation election process will help reduce delay in the process and make it easier for workers to vote on forming a union in a timely manner. Strengthening protections for workers seeking to come together and bargain collectively is critical to workers winning much-deserved wage gains and improving their lives.” The SIU is one of the AFL-CIO’s 56 affiliated unions, which collectively represent more than 12.5 million workers. SIU President Michael Sacco is the longest-serving member of the federa- 4 tion’s executive council. The NLRB defines its role in resolving representation disputes as the following: “Representation petitions are filed by employees, unions and employers seeking to have the NLRB conduct an election to determine if employees wish to be represented for purposes of collective bargaining with their employer. The board will investigate these petitions to determine if an election should be conducted and will direct an election, if appropriate. “In most instances, parties agree on the voting unit and other issues. If parties do not agree, the NLRB’s regional office holds a pre-election hearing to determine whether an election should be conducted. The NLRB’s regional office conducts the election and, if necessary, holds a post-election hearing to resolve challenges to voters’ eligibility and objections to the conduct of the election or conduct affecting the results of the election. Parties can seek board review of regional determinations made before and after the election.” The board majority opinion was that the rule would modernize the process of administering the National Labor Relations Act, making its procedures more transparent and consistent, while also cutting down on unnecessary litigation and delay. With the passing of this rule, the board will be better able to protect employees’ rights by answering questions of representation fairly and quickly. The final rule was approved by NLRB Chairman Mark Gaston Pearce and Members Kent Y. Hirozawa and Nancy Schiffer. Board Members Harry I. Johnson III and Philip A. Miscimarra had dissenting views. Chairman Pearce said, “I am heartened that the board has chosen to enact amendments that will modernize the representation case process and fulfill the promise of the National Labor Relations Act. Simplifying and streamlining the process will result in improvements for all parties. With these changes, the board strives to ensure that its representation process The United Worker remains a model of fairness and efficiency for all.” According to the agency, the changes implemented by this rule include: n Provides for electronic filing and transmission of election petitions and other documents; n Ensures that employees, employers and unions receive timely information they need to understand and participate in the representation case process; n Eliminates or reduces unnecessary litigation, duplication and delay; n Adopts best practices and uniform procedures across regions; n Requires that additional contact information (personal telephone numbers and email addresses) be included in voter lists, to the extent that information is available to the employer, in order to enhance a fair and free exchange of ideas by permitting other parties to the election to communicate with voters about the election using modern technology; and n Allows parties to consolidate all election-related appeals to the Board into a single appeals process. January-March 2015 Walmart Workers’ Raise Shows Collective Actions Work Editor’s note: One of the UIW’s most important affiliations is its alliance through it’s parent organization, the SIU - with the American Federation of LaborCongress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO), the nation’s largest labor group. The AFL-CIO has 56 affiliates collectively representing 12.5 million workers. UIW President Michael Sacco is the longest-serving member of the federation’s executive council, which met in Atlanta in late February. The council approved numerous statements that spell out its positions on various issues and outline strategies for promoting workers’ rights. Excerpts from one of the most significant and timely statements are reprinted here. The full statement is available on the AFL-CIO website. Raising Wages – It’s Time For Action Workers at Walmart – our nation’s largest private sector employer – on Feb. 19 used collective action to win a raise for more than 500,000 of their co-workers. The fact that workers forced Walmart to raise wages shows that America has reached a turning point. Working people are sending a clear message to our economic elites: “We deserve more.” We refuse to just accept a society where the wages of the top 10 percent rise and the bottom 90 percent fall, where two families – the Kochs and the Waltons – have more wealth than almost half the country combined. Today we commit both to our goal and our plan of action. Raising wages is about fighting inequality by raising all workers’ wages, and it’s about workers’ right to organize and bargain with our employers to raise our wages without fear of reprisal or dismissal. But raising wages is really about much more than that if we are to build an economy centered on improving the lives of the people who do the work. Creating a raising wages society requires a comprehensive program of action, each part of which is grounded in our collective voice. It begins with re-establishing work – and workers – at the center of the American economy. In a raising wages society, Wall Street will not write the rules of the economy. From offshoring jobs to corporate-based trade deals and risky investment schemes, Wall Street and the wealthiest 1 percent – and even more the wealthiest 0.01 percent – have shaped our economy for generations. Under pressure from Wall Street, employers have failed to uphold the promises they made to workers regarding retirement benefits. Far too many employers have failed to pay into retirement funds to keep the funds solvent. Millions of workers who exchanged wage increases over the years for the simple promise of retirement security are now finding that security in jeopardy. But it does not have to be this way. Indeed it cannot continue to be this way because an economy built on wage suppression and radical inequality does not work. This type of economy produces weak growth, financial bubbles and financial crises, and political instability. And there is another choice – a choice that will produce prosperity. We can build a full-employment economy where workers’ wages rise as we create more wealth. We can ensure that the public investments we must make – from education to infrastructure – are well funded and shared equally. And that the bookends of the raising wages economy – childcare and secure retirement – are guaranteed for all. Raising wages means better lives and opportunity for all. That has to mean addressing racial injustice and economic exclusion. Raising wages means addressing social and economic problems with infrastructures and resources rather than with criminalization and mass incarceration. Justice at work and justice in our communities are intertwined and both must advance for either to grow. Collectively, these elements will build January-March 2015 the final, critical element: political accountability. Raising wages is the workers’ common voice, and, when unified, will establish a standard of accountability that no political leader can evade. But all this will only happen if we make it happen. If we tell the truth about what has happened to our economy. If we take on the fights that will determine whether wages in America continue to decline. If we bring those fights to the streets of our communities. And if, in the end, we hold those who seek elected office in our country accountable for the only question that matters: Are you for an economy where workers’ income rises as we produce more wealth? Or are you building an economy where those who do the work must live on the crumbs left over from the meals they have made but others have eaten? Telling the Truth Every working person needs to know the facts. The AFL-CIO has launched Common Sense Economics to get these facts into the hands of working people. Wages for the bottom 70 percent have been flat since the late 1970s, while almost all the gains from the increasing productivity of our workforce have flowed to the top 10 percent. Wage stagnation is not the inevitable outcome of immutable economic forces. Wage stagnation is the result of wealthy and powerful people, big corporations and Wall Street designing a global economy where wages stay low. The rules are rigged because they rigged the rules. But it hasn’t always been this way, and it doesn’t have to be this way. At the national, state and local levels we can bring back government that enforces rules that provide for an economy where wages grow and where the wealth we produce is shared fairly; that protects workers; and that favors democracy in the workplace. And we – the labor movement, our allies and each of us as individuals – will speak about these truths, about the fights we take on, about the victories and gains we achieve – in the same way, using a common raising wages narrative. Whether we are negotiating for a pay increase at the bargaining table or mobilizing for a paid sick leave ordinance in city hall, we must recognize that each of these battles is part of one overall raising wages campaign – and we must all think and speak about them in the same way. Fighting the Fight In the next few months, the labor movement will fight five big fights over the basic structure of our economy – over whether we live in a low-wage or a raising wages society. We will fight to defend and expand our rights at work – the right to organize, the right to a living wage, the right to overtime, the right to equal pay. And millions of us will bargain in thousands of workplaces across this country to raise our wages. In cities across the country we will pass paid sick day and fair scheduling legislation. And we will mobilize support for federal legislation that strengthens protections for workers who speak out and take action with their co-workers to improve their wages and working conditions and brings remedies for workers who face retaliation for exercising their rights in line with other workplace laws. More and bigger changes are needed to fix our broken labor law system and restore workers’ freedom of association, but strengthening remedies for workers is an important and immediate first step. At the federal level, we will fight to raise wages for the government’s own workforce. The federal government is the nation’s largest employer and its actions set a standard for other public and private employers. We will fight for economic policies that put full employment and wages that rise with productivity ahead of Wall Street profits. We will fight for increased federal investment to fix our crumbling infrastructure, which will create jobs and increase productivity, all of which will raise wages. We will fight against financialization in all its forms – from tax breaks for corporations that outsource jobs to student debt peonage – and we will fight for taxing financial speculation and expanding Social Security. We will stop Fast Track and fight any trade policies or trade deals that undermine our democracy and favor multinational corporations over working people in the U.S. and around the world, We will fight against the marginalization of any of us – from mass incarceration to the scandal of 12 million undocumented immigrants without rights and without a path to citizenship. When some of us have no bargaining power, all of us lose. We will fight in the states to keep right wing politicians, acting on behalf of their corporate and Wall Street patrons, from rolling back fundamental economic and social protections that we have won over many decades of struggle. All of these fights are about policy decisions that together make up the structure of an economy built on wage stagnation. They are not separate fights. They are one fight, and that fight is about raising wages. Raising Wages in Our Communities Raising wages has to happen in the places where we live and work. In the weeks and months to come, working people in 10 of America’s major metropolitan areas are going to be putting the pieces together to turn these cities into raising wages communities. Over the past year, the AFL-CIO and numerous affiliated unions already have launched raising wages initiatives with The United Worker local unions and coalition partners in several southern cities (Dallas, Houston, Atlanta and Miami) and now have begun to undertake initiatives in additional cities: St. Louis, Philadelphia, Columbus, San Diego, Minneapolis/St. Paul and Washington/ Baltimore. We call on state and local bodies in these cities, union affiliates, community partners, and progressive allies to identify the current and potential raising wages campaign opportunities in organizing, bargaining, legislation, and politics – and to treat these opportunities as interconnected components of a single nationwide initiative to raise wages – and to do so using a common narrative. We pledge to collaborate with and assist each other in carrying out these raising wages campaigns. The AFL-CIO will work with our state and local bodies, our union affiliates, community partners and progressive allies in these cities to bring new energy, to help pool resources and to offer coordination among coalition partners in the raising wages campaigns they undertake – and to help spread the truth that a high-wage community is a better community to live in. Together we can make it happen. Holding Leaders Accountable Accountability means we expect policymakers and candidates to take concrete action to build a raising wages economy. And we demand they stop changing the subject away from economic inequality and wage stagnation and stop proposing Band-Aids that do not really solve the problem. These are the standards by which leadership will be judged. Accountability starts with presidential politics. In January, we held a national summit on raising wages. Between now and the end of 2015, the AFL-CIO and our state partners will hold raising wages summits in the first four presidential primary states: Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada, and South Carolina. The first will be in Iowa this spring. Each summit will bring together diverse voices to discuss how we can implement a comprehensive agenda to increase workers’ bargaining power, raise wages and living standards for the vast majority of workers, and hold policymakers accountable. This has to be a conversation about every aspect of leadership – policies, political strategies, and staffing choices. But accountability does not stop there. As we go into raising wages fights on Fast Track, on the right to organize and bargain, on the power of Wall Street, accountability on the question of raising wages must be our watch word at every level of the labor movement and we must demand it at every level of government – from town councils to state legislatures to the halls of Congress. And raising wages does not mean: will you throw us crumbs from the table? It means: will you take on the fight to ensure that those who create the wealth get to share in it? Why We Must Win America is a country built on the idea that hard work should be rewarded. The labor movement’s contribution was to show that if you want hard work to be rewarded, people have to come together to make it so through collective action and solidarity. This is and always has been the only effective path towards social and economic justice in America. The most important thing now is to raise our expectations and demand more. We know things do not have to be the way they are. We know who is responsible for the theft of our wages. We know the work we do has dignity and value, and we deserve to be paid more for doing it. We deserve to share in the wealth we all create together. We deserve more from our economic and political elites. We deserve a better and more functional democracy. We must and we will raise wages. 5 AFL-CIO Creates Racial and Economic Justice Commission “America’s legacy of racism and racial injustice has been and continues to be a fundamental obstacle to workers’ efforts to act together to build better lives for all of us,” said the AFL-CIO Executive Council in a statement announcing the creation of a Labor Commission on Racial and Economic Justice. The statement, released Feb. 25 during the council’s winter meeting in Atlanta, acknowledged “an ugly history of racism in our own movement” and added: “Yet at the same time the labor movement has a proud history of standing for racial and economic justice. When we have embraced our better selves we have always emerged stronger in every sense. And whenever we have succumbed to the temptation to see some working people as better than others, we have always ended up weaker.” Pointing to today’s dramatically increasing economic inequality, decreasing union density and growing instability for the majority of Americans, the council said, “The need for all workers to strengthen common interests in achiev- ing economic justice is clear. “At the same time our different experiences organized around race, gender identity, ethnicity, disability and sexual orientation often challenge and complicate this shared experience. If we are to succeed as a movement, the full range of working peoples’ voices must be heard in the internal processes of our movement. To be able to stand together we have to understand where all of us are coming from.” The council pointed to the unemployment rate for African Americans—10.3 percent, more than twice as high as that for whites—the criminal justice system and educational inequities that are large parts of a “world divided in many ways by color lines. “At the same time working people share a common experience of falling wages and rising economic insecurity. To build a different, better economy we need power that can only come from unity and unity has to begin with having all our voices be heard, on all sides of those color lines. We have to start by acknowledging our own shortcomings and honestly addressing issues that are faced by the communities in which our members live—both the problems and the solutions. We have to find a way to see with each other’s eyes and address the facts and realities.” The Labor Commission on Racial and Economic Justice will: n Facilitate a broad conversation with local labor leaders around racial and economic disparities and institutional biases, and identify ways to become more inclusive as the new entrants to the labor force diversify; n Engage in six to eight labor discussions around the country, with local labor leaders, constituency groups and young workers addressing racial and economic issues impacting the labor movement and offering recommendations for change; and n Attempt to create a safe, structured and constructive opportunity for local union leaders to discuss issues pertaining to the persistence of racial injustice today in the workforce and in their communities, and to ensure that the voices of all working people in the labor movement are heard. Photo Identification Correction The photo above was published on Page 3 of the October-December 2014 Edition of The United Worker. In the caption which accompanied this photo, we misidentified the individual pictured at the far right as Gloria Ricks; in fact it is Debbie (Toni) Wills. Pictured with Wills (from left) are Chianta Taylor (previously misspelled as Chianti), Shop Steward Cynthia Jones and Chief Shop Steward Tiffany Blake. All are UIW members at UIW/SIU Headquarters in Camp Springs, Maryland. They were photographed prior to voluntarily manning phone banks at AFL-CIO Headquarters in Washington, D.C., during a get out the vote effort for the Nov. 4 mid-term elections. We apologize to all concerned (Ricks, Wills and Taylor) for any inconvenience our mistakes may have caused. UIW Directory HEADQUARTERS 5201 Auth Way Camp Springs, MD 20746 (301) 899-0675 ANCHORAGE, ALASKA 721 Sesame St. Suite 1C 99503 (907) 561-4988 BALTIMORE, MD 2315 Essex St. 21224 (410) 327-4900 JERSEY CITY, NJ 104 Broadway Ave. Jersey City 07306 (201) 434-6000 6 3/15 COLUMBUS, OHIO 2800 South High St. P.O. Box 07770, 43207 (614) 497-2446 NEW ORLEANS, LA 3911 Lapalco Blvd. Harvey LA 70058 (504) 328-7545 ST. CROIX, USVI P.O. Box 7630 Sunny Isle 00823 (340) 773-6055 HONOLULU, HI 606 Kalihi Street 96819 (808) 845-5222 NORFOLK, VA 115 3rd St. 23510 (757) 622-1892 ST. LOUIS, MO 4581 Gravois Ave. 63116 (314) 752-6500 HOUSTON, TEXAS 1730 Jefferson St. 77003 (713) 659-5152 OAKLAND, CA 1121 7th St. 94607 (510) 444-2360 JACKSONVILLE, FL 5100 Belfort Rd. 32256 (904) 281-2622 PHILADELPHIA, PA 2604 S. 4th St. 19148 (215) 336-3818 ST. THOMAS, USVI 201-3A Altona & Welgunst Suite 101 St. Thomas, USVI 00802 (340) 774-3895 JOLIET, IL 10 East Clinton St. 60432 (815) 723-8002 PINEY POINT, MD P.O. Box 75, 20674 (301) 994-0010 The United Worker TACOMA, WA 3411 S. Union Ave. 98409 (253) 272-7774 WILMINGTON, CA 510 N. Broad Ave. 90744 (310) 549-3920 January-March 2015 White House Acts to Close Retirement Advice Loophole The Obama administration on Feb. 23 took the first step to close a loophole in the rules that govern Wall Street brokers and financial firms that provide retirement investment advice. That loophole can drain away thousands, or even tens of thousands, of dollars of hard-earned savings from a single retirement account. According to the AFL-CIO, the “Retirement Advice Loophole” allows Wall Street brokers and financial firms with major conflicts of interest to provide investment advice that serves their own interests instead of what’s best for their clients. Obama ordered the U.S. Department of Labor to submit a proposed rule to strengthen financial advisers’ fiduciary responsibilities and crack down on these practices. AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka said the new rules are “long overdue” and a “good first step.” Under current rules, he said, Wall Street firms can “create and distribute investment products to elevate a financial adviser’s paycheck over the best interests of workers and retirees.” For example, they can sell financial products that pay large commissions but hurt their clients with unnecessary fees, poor returns or excessive risks. Millions of Americans are affected by this loophole every year without even knowing it, and it is draining away their retirement savings. Right now, some advisers are required to put their customers’ interests first while others are not—and it is often extremely difficult for workers and retirees to know which type of adviser they are dealing with. “Americans are worried about hav- ing a secure retirement, especially as they face increasingly complicated choices about how to save and invest their hard-earned dollars,” said Trumka. “When they turn to professional financial advisers to help navigate their complex choices, they should be able to have confidence that the advice they get is in their best interest—and not driven by sales commissions and high fees that can deplete their retirement accounts like a slow leak in a tire.” Wall Street and the financial industry are adamantly opposed to reforming the rules. Two years ago, they lobbied hard for a House bill aimed at derailing any new Labor Department investment advice rule, and chances are that they will be spending big money to do the same thing in 2015. New Jersey AFL-CIO, 16 Unions Celebrate Victory Judge Orders Christie to Obey the Law, Fund Pensions A New Jersey Superior Court Judge has taken Gov. Chris Christie to task in a ruling that forces him to contribute his share to the New Jersey state pension system, just as public workers have been doing all along. Judge Mary Jacobson in late February ruled in favor of the New Jersey State AFL-CIO and 16 unions who sued Christie for violating his own 2011 pension reform law by intentionally shorting the system. The judge ordered Christie to make a $1.6 billion payment to the pension system this year. According to New Jersey AFL-CIO President Charles Wowkanech, publicsector workers accepted steep increases in their health care and pension costs in 2011 in exchange for a promise that the state would start paying what it owed. Retirees gave up cost of living adjustments in exchange for the security of knowing their benefits would continue to be there. Public workers have never skipped their contribution. The governor is the only one who has not lived up to the deal, said Wowkanech. It’s as if he is intentionally trying to bankrupt the system to force public workers into 401(k)s. Christie’s lawyers argued that the 2011 law, which the governor initiated, promoted and signed, was unconstitutional. It was an argument that bewildered virtually everyone, including the judge, and proved beyond doubt that Christie has no credibility on the issue. Now he’s at it again, stated Wowkanech. In an otherwise empty budget address, the governor proposed “… wait for it …” putting the squeeze on public worker benefits again. As New Jerseyans can clearly see, the governor has been blinded by his own political ambitions and hasn’t been acting in the state’s best interest for a very long time, the state federation president said. “Christie touted the 2011 pension reform law as a landmark achievement that would ultimately save the state pension system,” Wowkanech concluded. “Instead of blaming public workers for a problem they didn’t create, we’re asking that the governor live up to the law he signed and fully fund pensions.” Gone But Not Forgotten JESUS ARCE Brother Jesue Arce, 53, passed away Oct. 4. Brother Arce joined the UIW in 2008 while working at Juanita’s Foods. He resided in Compton, California. WAYNE ABELL Brother Wayne Abell, 63, died Dec. 19. He signed on with the union in 2000 and worked at AMG Resources. Brother Abell called Baltimore, Maryland, home. born in Mount Sterling, Ohio and called London, Ohio home. Pennsylvania. JOHN EBY Pensioner John Eby, 75, passed away Nov. 20. Brother Eby was born in Shamokin, Pennsylvania, and became a UIW member in 1973 while employed at Paulsen Wire Rope. A military veteran, he began collecting retirement stipends from the UIW in 1993. Brother Eby called Coal Township, Pennsylvania, home. MICHAEL WIDE Pensioner Michael Wide, 73, passed away Dec. 7. A native of Sunbury, New Jersey, Brother Wide donned the UIW colors in 1981 while working at Paulsen Wire Rope. He went on pension in 1993 and resided in his native city and state. Brother Wide was a military veteran. ROBERT BERGHAIER Pensioner Robert Berghaier, 88, died Oct. 28. Born in Maple Shade, New Jersey, Brother Berghaier was a military veteran. He came under the union umbrella in 1962 while working at Victory Refrigeration. Brother Berghaier started receiving his pension in 1988 and resided in Chalfont, Pennsylvania. JOSEPH KIMMERLE Pensioner Joseph Kimmerle, 80, passed away Nov. 14. A military veteran, Brother Kimmerle was born in New York. He joined the UIW in 1984 while employed at the Petro-Diamond Terminal Co. Brother Kimmerle began collecting stipends for his retirement in 2001. He lived in Long Beach, California. TIMOTHY COOKE Pensioner Timothy Cooke, 74, passed away Dec. 8. A native of Virginia, Brother Cooke joined the UIW in 1980 while working at Plymkraft. He went on pension in 2002 and made his home in Yorktown, Virginia. STEVE MCCOMAS Pensioner Steve McComas, 58, died Dec. 14. The Ohio native donned the union colors in 1985 while working at UIW-contracted Franklin International. Brother McComas began receiving retirement stipends in 2011 and resided in Columbus, Ohio. AUDREY DILLON Pensioner Audrey Dillion, 95, died Dec. 7. Sister Dillon signed on with the union in 1970 while working at UIW-contracted Church & Dwight. She began receiving her pension in 1984. Sister Dillon was BONITA RETALLACK Pensioner Bonita Retallack, 63, passed away Jan, 11. Born in Pennsylvania, Sister Retallack signed on with the UIW in 1972 while working at A&E Products. She started receiving retirement stipends in 2014 and made her home in Mount Carmel, January-March 2015 LAURA WELLS Pensioner Laura Wells, 71, died Feb. 4. Sister Wells came under the union umbrella in 1972 while working at Bron-Shoe. She began receiving compensation for her retirement in 1972. Sister Wells mad her home in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. New UIW Pensioners Valli Brigner Bron-Shoe Co. Lancaster, Ohio Jamie Cervantes Juanita’s Foods Wilmington, California Jose Chevez Guzman Paulsen Wire Rope Carson, California Donna Delozier-Price Franklin International Columbus, Ohio Sharon George A&E Products Frackvile, Pennsylvania Julia Graham Dew Management Services, Inc. Humble, Texas Gerald Grimes A&E Products Ringtown, Pennsylvania Kongmi Husted Severson Group, LLC Joshua Tree, California Hattie McClain Plymkraft, Inc. Newport News, Virginia Leon Montgomery American Casting & Manufacturing Corp Hempstead, New York Thomeson Murray Crown Cork & Seal Houston, Texas Lynette Ramon Mastertime Co., LTD Kingshill, U.S. Virgin Islands Mary Tulko A&E Products Shenandoah, Pennsylvania Martine Varenick A&E Products Shenandoah, Pennsylvania Joseph Vargas Victory Refrigeration Philadelphia, Pennsylvania BOBBY WILSON Pensioner Bobby Wilson, 76, passed away Dec. 14. Brother Wilson launched his union career in 1983 while working at UIW-contracted Progressive Driver Services. A native of Virginia, he retired from the union in 2001. Brother Wilson lived in his native state in the city of Hampton. EARL YOUNG Pensioner Earl Young, 75, died Feb. 6. Born in Louisana, Brother Young donned the UIW colors in 1976 while working at union-contracted Crown Cork & Seal. He went on pension in 2005 and lived in Flowery Beach, Georgia. The United Worker 7 Official Publication of the United Industrial, Service, Transportation, Professional & Government Workers of North AmericanSeafarers Intrnational Union, AGLIWDnAFL-CIO Volume 41, Number 1 The United Worker January-March 2015 Information Technology Icon Dan Danzi Retires Page 3 USPS Members, Activists NLRB Judge Finds T-Mobile From Other Unions Unite Guilty of Labor Law Violations To Save Postal Service In recent years, the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) has been under attack from conservative lawmakers in Congress and elsewhere who are trying to privatize the constitutionally required service to benefit wealthy campaign donors with the support of anti-government extremists, according to the AFL-CIO. The men and women who work at the USPS, and their unions, however, are fighting back. Activists at the American Postal Workers Union (APWU) are pursuing an aggressive agenda, said David Morris in a recent article on AlterNet. Morris is co-founder of the Institute for Local Self-Reliance and directs its initiative on The Public Good. He pointed to APWU President Mark Dimondstein’s embrace of activism: “We’re not afraid of the streets. We’re not in the streets enough. We need to picket, march, sit-in—not leave it to lobbying or one-on-one negotiations.” He often pointedly praises the actions of postal workers who 55 years ago this March took their future into their own hands by defying union leaders and staging an illegal strike against low pay and benefits and poor working conditions. The strategy is a well-thought out one, said Morris. One strategy is internal: instilling a renewed sense of individual activism in the APWU. Dimondstein envisions a “cultural shift from a service model to an organizing model of unionism.”...“We need to retool, to retrain people to see the union as themselves. We need to encourage workers to take their grievances directly to the boss, in groups, not just file paperwork and wait for union officials to service them. We need more of a movement, a sense of connection to the larger community, which will give postal workers hope and confidence.” The other three strategies are external. One involves an active working partnership with the other three postal unions. (National Postal Mail Handlers Union, National Rural Letter Carriers’ Association, National Association of Letter Carriers)....The second external strategy is to expand the partnership to non-postal unions....The third external strategy is to broaden the partnership to private as well as public unions and to build “a grand alliance between the people of this country and postal workers.” The other related unions, such as the National Association of Letter Carriers (NALC), are also part of the fight, particularly with the new Grand Alliance to Save Our Public Postal Service: “This new alliance is a good complement to the one the NALC and the other postal unions have been working closely with over the past 18 months,” NALC President Fredric Rolando said, “a group made up of postal union and mailing industry stakeholders with a mission to advance in Congress a multi-point postal strategy that includes a comprehensive solution to pre-funding, freedom to offer new products, fair treatment on pension valuations, strengthened service standards and a moratorium on plant closings.” A judge at the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) yesterday found T-Mobile U.S. guilty of engaging in nationwide labor law violations against workers. The unprecedented ruling comes after a rare move last year by the NLRB consolidating multiple complaints against T-Mobile U.S. for illegal actions and policies in Albuquerque, N.M.; Wichita, Kan.; Charleston, S.C., and New York City. At issue were illegal corporate nationwide policies that block workers from organizing or even talking to each other about problems at work. Workers throughout the T-Mobile U.S. system were subjected to and effectively silenced by these illegal policies; the judge’s order to rescind them covers 40,000 workers. Communications Workers of America (CWA) President Larry Cohen said: This decision exposes the deliberate campaign by T-Mobile U.S. management to break the law systematically and on a nationwide scale, blocking workers from exercising their right to organize and bargain collectively. This behavior can only be changed by a nationwide remedy to restore workers’ rights. Deutsche Telekom, the principal owner of T-Mobile U.S., has claimed that its U.S. subsidiary follows the law. Now we have the official word: T-Mobile U.S. is a lawbreaker. Bonn, the headquarters of DT, no longer can hide behind the false statements made by T-Mobile U.S. executives. These behaviors would be almost unimaginable in Germany or any other democracy in the world. The decision by NLRB Judge Christine Dibble focused on T-Mobile U.S.’s illegal employment policies and restrictions that prohibited workers from discussing wages with each other or criticizing working conditions or seeking out assistance to blow the whistle on unlawful behavior. The decision finds that the corporate policies “would chill employees in the exercise of their…rights” or would be construed “as restricting [an employee’s] rights to engage in protected concerted activities, including unionizing efforts.” Judge Dibble found that T-Mobile U.S.’s Wage and Hour Complaint Procedure, for example, “tends to inhibit employees from banding together.” She writes that the corporate procedure’s requirement that an employee notify management of a wage issue first, “in combination with the threat of discipline for failing to adhere to the rule, would ‘reasonably tend to inhibit employees from bringing wage-related complaints to, and seeking redress from, entities other than the Respondent, and restrains the employees’…rights to engage in concerted activities for collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection.” Carolina Figueroa, a T-Mobile U.S. call center worker from Albuquerque, said: We are happy and relieved. We are finally being heard. My co-workers and I at T-Mobile U.S. will have the right to speak out against unfair treatment and should not be muzzled or retaliated against—and with today’s decision, the company has to declare this to all of its employees nationwide. Holiday Gathering in Baltimore UIW Representative Elizabeth Brown (seated at table second from right in the background), who also serves at SIU Port Agent, welcomed more than 20 guests to the annual Christmas Party at the Union Hall in the Port of Baltimore. In addition to members of her staff and a host of merchant mariners from the SIU, guests included Seafarers Entertainment and Allied Trades Union Rep. William Korte (seated at table to the right of Brown) and Shop Steward William Wright (standing far right) from UIW-contracted AMG Resouces.