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January 28, 2010
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CWAers Mobilize for Verizon West
Talks
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Cohen: How the Citizens United
Decision Harms Our Democracy
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President Obama Promises to
Fight for Health Care Reform
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Update on Biden Task Force
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AT&T Technician from Georgia
Local Killed in Cable Winding
Accident
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CWA Joins Save the Children to
Help Children, Families in Haiti
CWAers Mobilize for Verizon West
Talks
CWA members in California will show
Verizon West they're ready for
contract negotiations at a march and
rally on Feb. 1 in Thousand Oaks,
Calif.
The contract covering about 5,200
CWA members expires March 13. CWA
District 9 Vice President Jim
Weitkamp said CWAers are mobilizing
and standing together for a fair
contract.
Cohen: How the Citizens United
Decision Harms Our Democracy
CWA President Larry Cohen made a
strong case that the Supreme Court's
decision last week allowing
corporations and unions to use
unlimited treasury funds to make
"independent expenditures was just
wrong.
"A corporation isn't a person. But
the U.S. Supreme Court, in its
Citizens United decision, had no
problem granting corporations the
First Amendment rights that citizens
enjoy. This decision will allow
corporations to dominate the
political process, just like they
are able to dominate the workplace,
undermining laws that are supposed
to protect worker bargaining and
organizing rights."
Read the op-ed by Cohen and UAW
President Ron Gettelfinger. Or
look for it Feb. 2 in The Hill
newspaper,
www.thehill.com.
President Obama Promises to Fight
for Health Care Reform
In his State of the Union message,
President Obama pledged to keep up
the fight for health care reform.
The President said: "Here's what I
ask Congress: Don't walk away from
reform. Not now. Not when we are
so close. Let us find a way to come
together and finish the job for the
American people."
Update on Biden Task Force
Just ahead of the State of the Union
message, President Obama and Vice
President Biden announced some new
programs for working and
middle-class families, part of the
work of the Task Force on the Middle
Class that Biden heads.
Biden said the new programs were put
together following last year's
series of meetings with workers and
families who told the Vice President
and administration officials about
specific help they needed. They
include:
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Nearly doubling the Child and
Dependent Care Tax Credit for
middle-class families earning
less than $85,000 a year and a
$1.6 billion increase in child
care funding for families
struggling to enter the middle
class.
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Limiting a student's federal
loan payments to 10 percent of
income above a basic living
allowance.
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Creating a system of automatic
workplace IRAs, requiring all
employers to give the option for
employees to enroll in a
direct-deposit IRA.
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Expanding tax credits to match
retirement savings and enacting
new safeguards to protect
retirement savings.
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Expanding support for families
who must balance work with
caring for elderly relatives.
AT&T Technician from Georgia Local
Killed in Cable Winding Accident
CWA is investigating the accidental
death of Local 3212 member William
Britt Hunt, 39, an AT&T technician
from Summerville, Ga., who was
killed Jan. 13 when he became
entangled in wires being rolled up
by his truck's spindle.
"This is a truly tragic event," CWA
Safety and Health Director Dave
LeGrande said. "CWA is trying to
determine exactly what happened and
why, and we will present our
findings and recommendations to AT&T
and to union leaders and members."
The federal Occupational Safety and
Health Administration is
investigating, as is AT&T. As part
of CWA's probe, LeGrande is asking
telecom locals to provide
information about what kind of
training and follow-up members get
with regard to cable winch equipment
and cable trucks, and whether one or
two technicians are typically
assigned to cable-winding
operations. Locals can email
LeGrande at
legrande@cwa-union.org.
CWA Joins
Save the Children
to Help Children, Families in Haiti
CWA is partnering with Save the
Children to raise money for critical
supplies for Haiti earthquake
survivors, particularly children,
many thousands of whom now are
orphans.
"Any amount you can afford will help
save lives," CWA Executive Vice
President Annie Hill said. "Our
contributions will help Save the
Children deliver food, water,
shelter materials, medicines,
hygiene kits, and other essentials
during the first critical weeks of
the post-disaster period.
Donations can made online
here.
Or you can download a donation form
and mail a check. Donors are asked
to put CWA in the
"Company/Organization Name" field
online or on the printed form.
Hill said CWA chose Save the
Children "because it has worked
continuously in Haiti since 1978,
and after last week's earthquake
began an immediate large-scale
relief and recovery effort." Once
immediate needs are met, donations
will continue to help Save the
Children sustain long-term recovery
programs that address the health,
education and well-being of Haiti's
children. |