January 29, 2009
- Next
Months Critical for Employee Free Choice
- Southern
California Locals Condemn Verizon's Use of
Contractors
- Senate
GOP Puts Hold on Solis Over Support for Employee
Free Choice
- Execs Use
Taxpayer Bailout to Fight Employee Free Choice
- CWA Leads Fight in Florida to Preserve Telephone
Service Quality & Jobs
Next
Months Critical for
Employee Free Choice
CWA is making a big difference in the fight to win
Employee Free Choice. "We're just inches away from
making this happen," CWA President Larry Cohen said.
As corporations announced another 90,000 job cuts,
devastating tens of thousands of working families, only
the Employee Free Choice Act can restore the bargaining
rights and worker purchasing power that are essential to
economic recovery.
In a conference call with CWA field staff, held with
CWA's Executive Board, Cohen reviewed the campaign and
talked strategy.
"We have a strong bipartisan majority in the House.
In the Senate, we have majority support for passage of
the bill but we need 60 votes to end debate and move to
a vote on the bill. The Senate is our battleground and
our focus must be on those senators from key states who
need to hear from us everyday," he said.
That means letters, telephone calls and e-mails to
Senators' offices, setting up meetings with members of
Congress and their staffs, having members and locals
write letters to the editors and op-eds to local
newspapers to counter the Chamber of Commerce and other
opponents, and building more support among our allies –
small businesses that have signed on with us, the Sierra
Club, the NAACP and others, he said.
Bill Evitt, District 2; Linda Hinton, D4, and Kevin
Mulligan, D7, outlined action already underway in the
districts to ensure that every possible member of
Congress is on board and sponsoring or supporting the
Employee Free Choice Act.
In Virginia, for example, every local in the state is
participating in a letter writing and telephone campaign
to Senators Jim Webb and Mark Warner, to make sure "both
go in the right direction," Evitt said. Local members
and leaders also have had some good success in getting
letters to the editor published in several newspapers;
that campaign will continue.
In District 7, CWA, working with the State AFL-CIO,
already has reached out to the state's new Senators,
Democrats Mark Udall and Michael Bennet, as well as
three new House members, on Employee Free Choice,
Mulligan said. "This campaign is not just about lobbying
and media, but is very focused on member education and
mobilization," he said.
Activists have identified the 10 largest worksites in
Colorado – where more than 80 percent of members work –
and have education plans underway so that everyone knows
why Employee Free Choice is important and what to do to
help get it passed, Mulligan said. CWA and other unions
will be bringing cell phones and lap top computers to
worksites and union meetings so members can call, email
and write their representatives.
In District 4, CWAers are focusing on key senators,
including Ohio Republican George Voinovich and Wisconsin
Democrat Herb Kohl, as well as on some House members who
have yet to sign on as cosponsors, Hinton said.
Throughout the district, "we're getting folks educated,
working with them to call their members of Congress."
In North Carolina, newly elected Senator Kay Hagan
has been hearing from members of Locals 3601 and 3505,
and a group of local presidents will meet with Hagan
during the February recess. Hagan won election because
of the hard work of union members and supporters
throughout North Carolina.
In every district, CWA and other unions are arranging
congressional meetings with members over the President's
Day recess in mid-February and are building a program of
member education and mobilization.
For more information, go to
http://www.freechoiceact.org/cwaresources.
For the Employee Free Choice you have the choice of a
powerpoint or PDF version.
http://files.cwa-union.org/efca/20090126_EFCA_Powerpoint_Public.ppt (PowerPoint
version) or
http://files.cwa-union.org/efca/20090126_EFCA_Powerpoint_Public.pdf (PDF
version)
Southern California Locals Condemn Verizon's Use of
Contractors
On January 10, 2009, Verizon started the New Year on
the wrong note with its most experienced and loyal
employees in the Long Beach, California area when it
decided to use contractors to avoid having to pay CWA
members premium pay rates.
"Prior to the action, we notified the company that we
had a long list of workers who were volunteering to work
in the safe and professional manner our customers
deserve," said Gregg W. Gibson, President of CWA Local
9586. Instead, he said the company chose to avoid using
its most qualified workers "just to save a couple
bucks," clearly showing its disregard for workers, our
union and customers, he said.
 |
|
CWAers from southern
California locals protest Verizon's decision to
hire contractors for premium pay workdays,
threatening service quality to customers and
robbing members' paychecks. |
Dozens of CWA members from Locals 9586, 9588, 9575,
9510, 9400, joined by members of the Southern California
Council demonstrated their displeasure with the company
on Jan 16th.
"This is just the beginning if Verizon doesn't change
its decision and refuses to provide the best possible
service to customers," Gibson said.
Senate GOP
Puts Hold on Solis Over Support for Employee Free Choice
Senate
Republicans are vowing to hold up
the vote on Labor Secretary nominee Hilda Solis because
she supports the Employee Free Choice Act.
"If there was ever a time the
nation needed a strong secretary of labor, this is it,"
the New York Times said in an editorial. "And yet, for
the past several days, at least one Republican senator
has been using a parliamentary procedure to hold up the
confirmation of Congresswoman Hilda Solis (D-Calif.),
President Obama's choice for labor secretary."
The editorial said that Employee Free Choice and a
labor secretary who backs it "would be a good thing,
because strong labor unions help to push wages up by
bargaining for more of the pie to go for workers' wages,
rather than for bonuses and profits for executives and
shareholders.
"The delay in confirming Ms. Solis isn't because the
Senate needs to know more," it concluded. "It's a way
for Republican senators to score tough-guy points with
business constituents who are driven to distraction by
the thought of unions."
Solis, the daughter of a Teamsters shop steward, has
been a champion of workers for more than 15 years,
starting in the California legislature and continuing in
Congress, where she strongly supported the Employee Free
Choice Act in 2007.
Solis is a longtime advocate of workers' rights,
supporting the fight of CWA translators and interpreters
for fair treatment and workers at the Chinese Daily News
who wanted union representation. She co-authored the
Green Jobs Act that became part of the 2007 energy bill.
The bill authorized $125 million for workforce training
programs targeted to veterans, displaced workers,
at-risk youth and the poor.
Solis backers have created two Facebook groups in
support of her nomination: They are "Americans for Hilda
Solis as Secretary of Labor" and "1,000,000 Strong for
Hilda Solis as Secretary of Labor." Sign-up for both
groups is available to any Facebook member.
Execs
Use Taxpayer Bailout to Fight Employee Free Choice
Just days after getting a $25 billion taxpayer
bailout, Bank of America hosted a conference call to
round up business opposition to the Employee Free Choice
Act. Among those on the call was another recipient of a
taxpayer bailout, AIG, which got more than $40 billion
from working families and other taxpayers.
But the loudest voice belonged to Bernie Marcus, the
founder of Home Depot, who launched into a rant calling
Employee Free Choice "the demise of a civilization."
"This bill may be one of the worst things I have ever
seen in my life," he said, explaining that he could have
been on "a 350-foot boat out in the Mediterranean," but
felt it was more important to engage in this fight.
Marcus said corporations should be donating millions of
dollars to prevent America from turning "into France."
"As a shareholder, if I knew the CEO of the company
wasn't doing anything on [EFCA]... I would sue the son
of a bitch... I'm so angry at some of these CEOs. I
can't even believe the stupidity that is involved here,"
he carried on.
Read the story and hear some of the audio at the
Huffington Post, which reported the story in late
January.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/01/27/bank-of-america-hosted-an_n_161248.html
Of course, the Employee Free Choice Act will help
restore an economy that every economist, analyst and
government official admits is in free fall. Employee
Free Choice is all about restoring workers' bargaining
power and expanding the middle class, so that workers
can bargain for good wages that will in turn increase
purchasing power and create more jobs.
Even Bank of America grudgingly admitted that there's
something to that idea. In a research document about the
call, Bank of America officials noted that Employee Free
Choice "increases the likelihood that retailers would be
unionized, which could drive higher labor costs at
retail, but would increase the spending power of lower
income consumers as this would be a de facto wage and
benefit increase."
CWA Leads Fight in Florida to Preserve Telephone
Service Quality & Jobs
With the support of a coalition of retiree and
consumer advocacy groups, CWA beat back an effort by
seven telephone providers, including AT&T, Verizon and
Embarq, to persuade the Florida Public Service
Commission to allow the companies to lower
quality standards and service to six million customers
in the state.
The companies wanted to deregulate service by
changing the definition of "basic" telephone service and
by lengthening the amount of time customers must wait
before the company responds to service and installation
calls.
Following CWA's intervention, the commission reversed
an earlier recommendation that would have allowed
companies to double response time for repairs,
installation and service calls.
During the hearings, Gail Marie Perry, Chair of the
CWA Council of Florida, heard a Verizon representative
state the company would be able to "get rid of eight
people" if the service installation interval was
lengthened.
Supporting CWA was the Public Service Commission
Public Council, which represents consumers' interest,
the Florida's Attorney General's office, the AARP, and
the Florida Consumer Action Network. |