October 1, 2009
- Stop the
Tax on Health Care! Join the Fight Now!
- CWA: U.S. Telecom Policy Should Promote Open
Internet and Investment
- UPTE One-Day Strike Gets Support of Thousands
Across UC System
- Health Care: $100 a Month in Canada vs. $1,100 a
Month in the U.S.
- Two CWAers Elected Co-Presidents of Pride at
Work
- Vermont AT&T Mobility Retail Workers Join CWA
Stop
the Tax on Health Care! Join the Fight Now!
 |
|
CWAers are making sure that
our senators get the message: Don't tax our
health care. |
The bill produced so far by the Senate Finance
Committee is a disaster for working families and
retirees.
Here's the worst of it: a 40 percent tax on employer
health plans that cost $8,000 or more for individual
plans and $21,000 or more for family coverage. This bad
idea will hit active and retired CWAers hard. It also
will hurt workers and families in rural communities,
where a single private insurance company has just about
cornered the market, and workers in high-risk
occupations. It's bad public policy.
CWA's research department figured out exactly what
this means: Over 10 years, on average, the tax would
cost $21,400 per worker with family coverage, $8,500 per
worker with single coverage and $23,800 for a
pre-Medicare retiree.
It doesn't take a rocket scientist to know that
companies are not going to pay this tax, they're going
to cut benefits. This will make our country's health
care crisis worse, not better.
CWA and the labor movement are fighting back and
everyone needs to stand up for what's right. Here's what
you can do right now:
Call your senators. Give your name, city and state.
Tell him or her that we need health care reform, but
taxing health care is the wrong way to go. What's
better: all employers should provide health care and the
wealthy, individuals who earn more than $280,000 and
families earning $350,000, should pay their fair share
too.
More on the campaign at
www.healthcarevoices.org.
CWA: Telecom Policy Should Promote Open
Internet, Investment
CWA reaffirmed the need for U.S. telecom policy to
combine the goals of ensuring an open Internet with
encouraging investment in a 21st century broadband
system, in response to a new initiative announced by FCC
Chairman Julius Genachowski.
CWA supports Genachowski's proposal to develop rules
to protect an open Internet, but also called on the FCC
to move forward in setting rules and policies that will
encourage investment, ensure reasonable network
management, safeguard transparency, promote media
diversity and lead to the growth of good jobs in the
telecommunications industry.
That's the only way the United States can regain its
standing among industrial nations as a leader in
broadband technology, CWA said.
In the past, the U.S. missed several opportunities to
promote the build out of broadband networks. This is
more important than ever, if the U.S. is going to
encourage investment in next-generation networks and
boost our lagging economy. Get more info at
www.speedmatters.org.
Currently the U.S. ranks 15th in the world in terms
of broadband penetration and 28th in terms of broadband
speed. CWA's Speed Matters campaign will continue to
focus public attention on what the U.S. must do to
ensure that all Americans have access to the promise of
high speed Internet.
UPTE One-Day Strike Gets Support of Thousands Across
UC System
 |
|
Thousands of workers,
students and faculty support UPTE-CWA Local 9119
members in unfair labor practice strike at UC
campuses.
|
 |
UPTE-CWA members at the University of California held
a one-day unfair labor practice strike that turned into
a huge day of action, with thousands of students and
faculty members supporting the fight against devastating
budget cuts on campuses statewide.
"The administration may have never seen a coalition
of students, faculty and staff as strong as ours," UPTE
leaders said. "With a united voice we sent a clear
message to UC President Mark Yudof, the UC regents and
ultimately the governor that their policies are not
acceptable."
UC management has threatened CWA members with
temporary layoffs, unilaterally increased health care
costs, cut other benefits and has refused to bargain
fairly over core issues, CWA Local 9119 officers said.
The local has filed unfair labor practices charges
against UC to force it bargain fairly.
The UC system was hit hard by cuts in state funding,
but Yudof has mismanaged those reductions by
implementing "illegal, unilateral cuts to the
university's core research and educational functions"
while giving UC executives raises of up to 30 percent,
or $52,000 a year, said CWA Local 9119 President Jelger
Kalmijn.
The strike was supported by the University of
California Students Association, the Coalition of
University Employees and other unions representing UC
workers, and faculty and graduate student groups. CWA
Local 9119 represents 9,000 technical and research
workers.
Health Care: $100 a Month in Canada vs. $1,100 a
Month in the U.S.
It's a tale of two CWA members, a father of two
working for ABC in the United States, a father of three
working for the CBC in Canada.
Chip Catherine, a member of NABET-CWA Local 52031,
pays $1,100 a month for health insurance that only
covers him. Colin Preston, a TNG Canada member, pays a
monthly tax of $108 to cover his entire family. It's
deducted from his check just like Social Security is
here. He never worries about co-pays or deductibles and
never fears losing his coverage because of a
pre-existing condition.
These and other CWA members are featured in the
Sept.-Oct. issue of the CWA News in mailboxes soon and
online at
www.cwa-union.org.
Chip and Colin's families, employers and salaries are
remarkably similar. But as a daily hire at ABC, Chip
isn't eligible for benefits. He struggles to pay his
huge insurance bill and isn't even sure it will pay off,
because he had a heart attack in 2008 and fears the
insurance company will use his "pre-existing condition"
to deny coverage when he needs it most. Chip's family is
covered by his wife's policy through her hotel job, a
policy that won't cover him because of the heart attack.
In Canada, for just about $100 a month, Colin and his
family gets excellent health care. He and other CWA
members in Canada say their system isn't perfect, but
it's far better than living with the fear and potential
financial ruin that American workers face.
Two CWAers Elected Co-Presidents of Pride at Work
Two CWAers are the new co-presidents of the national
Pride at Work organization, an AFL-CIO group that fights
for the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender
people.
The new co-presidents are Stan Kiino, a
representative for AFA-CWA's United Airlines Council 11
in San Francisco and a graduate of CWA's Minority
Leadership Institute, and Donna Cartwright, a
Baltimore-based writer who was a member of The Newspaper
Guild-CWA until her retirement from the New York Times.
Cartwright is among the first transgender officers of a
national LGBT organization.
Delegates to the AFL-CIO convention last week issued
a bold call for full inclusion and participation of LGBT
workers in American society and union movement by
unanimously passing a resolution calling for "A
Diverse and Democratic Labor Movement."
Vermont AT&T Mobility Retail Workers Join CWA
The more than 300 workers at AT&T Mobility who have
chosen a CWA voice just in the four weeks are more proof
that workers want the Employee Free Choice Act.
Most recently, in Vermont, 78 percent of 81 AT&T
Mobility retail store workers chose CWA representation
and Local 1400 through majority sign up. The workers
were assisted by local activist Darlene Stone and Ralph
Montefusco, a local organizer with the Alliance@IBM/CWA.
Since Aug. 21, 230 workers gained CWA representation
through majority sign up at AT&T Mobility in Washington
State, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and Idaho, and at the
online website, truthout.org, which operates in five
states and Washington, D.C. |