October 8, 2009
- CWA
ComTech Members Ratify New AT&T Contract
- CWAers Blanket Capitol Hill for Health Care
Reform
- CWA: Health Care Reform Must 'Make Employers Who
Don't Pay, Pay'
- Retired Dist. 7 VP Louise Caddell Passes Away
- USA 3000 Flight Attendants Vote AFA-CWA, Union
Files for Election at Frontier
- October is Customer Service Professionals Month
- A New Era for Workplace Safety and Health
CWA ComTech
Members Ratify New AT&T Contract
CWA members at AT&T Legacy locations
nationwide ratified a new three year agreement by a
strong two-to-one margin. The agreement covers about
7,000 CWA-represented workers.
"This contract achieves our members' key goal of
improving employment security and safeguarding jobs. It
maintains workers' standard of living and quality health
care. In these extremely difficult economic times, these
are tremendous achievements," said CWA Communications
and Technologies Vice President Ralph Maly.
The settlement sets a "watermark" for job retention
and provides new layoff protections for workers. It
increases pay by about 9 percent over the contract term,
including cost of living adjustments, and provides
pension band increases of 2 percent in each year of the
agreement.
The health care plan provides for fully funded
preventive care and new company-funded health
reimbursement accounts that can be used toward any
eligible health care expense; both serve to offset some
cost changes in the plan, along with wage increases and
other improvements.
More details are available at
www.cwa-comtech.org.
Bargaining continues for about 65,000 CWA-represented
members at AT&T. These negotiations cover AT&T East (CWA
Local 1298), Southeast (District 3) and Southwest
(District 6). CWA members at AT&T Midwest, CWA District
4, and AT&T West, CWA District 9, earlier ratified new
three-year agreements.
CWAers Blanket Capitol Hill for Health Care Reform
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District 13 Vice President Ed
Mooney briefs CWA members before they head out
to congressional offices. Center is CWA Research
Director and health care expert Louise Novotny. |
More than 200 CWA members met with their senators and
representatives this week, part of a wave of CWAers and
union activists who are writing, calling and lobbying
their members of Congress on health care reform.
"Here's what Congress needs to hear from us: 'You
don't make those who pay, pay more. You make those who
don't pay, pay,'" CWA President Larry Cohen told CWAers
before they set off for legislative visits. Just this
week, about 150 District 13 members spent seven hours on
the bus from Harrisburg, Pa., and another seven hours in
congressional visits.
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CWA President Larry Cohen has
CWAers fired up and ready to go on health care
remform. |
CWAers from Arkansas, Colorado, New York, Ohio,
Oregon, Virginia and Washington state came to D.C. as
part of the AFL-CIO's "fly-in" from more than two dozen
states, and about 20 District 2 CWAers from Maryland set
up meetings with their senators and representatives.
Meeting with Senator Blanche Lincoln were Local 6508
President George West; Tom Pevey, Local 6508, and Kelly
and David Arellanes, retired local members who are
facing devastating financial hardship following Kelly's
traumatic injury and their insurer's refusal to pay.
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Jeannine Maury, a member of
CWA Local 7800 who works at Qwest, was part of
the Washington State delegation that took
labor's message to Capitol Hill. |
The Arkansas CWAers stressed to Lincoln that
companies like AT&T and even Walmart agree that all
employers should pay toward employees' health care.
The Senate Finance Committee's health care proposal
would hit employers that already provide quality health
care (above $8,000 for individual coverage and $21,000
for a family) with a 40 percent tax while, employers
that don't cover employees would continue to be health
care freeloaders.
CWA: Health Care Reform Must 'Make Employers Who
Don't Pay, Pay'
There's a lot of momentum in CWA's campaign to block
any tax on health care and instead to make sure that
those employers who don't provide any health care to
employees pay.
Meetings and calls from CWAers and others have so far
resulted in 168 members of the House of Representatives
signing a letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi opposing
any plans to tax health care.
The letter, drafted by Representative Joe Courtney
(D-Conn.), calls on Pelosi "to reject an excise tax on
high-cost insurance plans that could be potentially
passed on to middle class families."
CWA President Larry Cohen said "our front line
message is this: don't tax our benefits and make those
employers who don't pay, pay."
"It's absurd to make employers who already are paying
pay even more by hitting them with a 40 percent excise
tax, while not requiring anything from employers who
don't provide health care to employees. This tax will
cause even more cost shifting to workers," he said.
All week long, CWA members have come to Washington,
D.C. for meetings with their senators and
representatives, made thousands of phone calls to
congressional offices and sent personal letters that
make the case for real health care reform.
CWA members also are working with Senators Sherrod
Brown (D-Ohio), Jay Rockefeller, (D-WVa), Russ Feingold
(D-Wis.) and others to build support among senators for
a public health care option. So far, 26 senators have
signed onto a letter to Senate Majority Leader Harry
Reid. "The number one goal of health reform must be to
look out for the best interests of the American people –
patients and taxpayers alike – not the profit margins of
insurance companies," the letter says.
Retired Dist. 7 VP Louise Caddell Passes Away
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Louise Caddell was sworn in
as District 7 vice president in 2008.
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The CWA family is mourning retired District 7 Vice
President Louise Caddell who died Oct. 4.
"Louise moved across districts and sectors in CWA in
an almost unique way," said CWA President Larry Cohen.
"Her death leaves us grieving but also with an
opportunity to work even harder and carry out her wish
for CWA: 'don't give up and build our union.'"
An active leader of Local 6143 in San Antonio,
Caddell joined CWA staff in 1988, first in
Communications and Technologies in New Jersey and later
in District 7. Caddell was named assistant to the
District 7 Vice President in 1999 and in 2005 came to
Washington to head up CWA's legislative and political
work.
Battling acute leukemia, she returned to District 7
and her position as assistant to the vice president. In
2008 Caddell was elected District 7 vice president. She
worked to resolve the extremely difficult contract
negotiations with Qwest Communications and most recently
had been working with CWA's public safety workers.
When Caddell, age 60, retired on Sept. 22, 2009, Mary
Taylor, Caddell's assistant, was designated as district
vice president by the CWA Executive Board.
Political action was a critical part of Caddell's
life, and for more than 30 years, she helped coordinate
CWA's and labor's efforts to support Democratic
candidates for Texas statewide offices and the
presidency.
Caddell was named Democrat of the Year by the San
Antonio Democratic League and was honored by the San
Antonio AFL-CIO and Texas State Democratic Executive
Committee.
A memorial service will be held on Sat., Oct. 17, at
3 p.m., at the Newcomer Family Funeral Home, 190
Potomac, Aurora, Colorado, 80011.
In lieu of flowers, Caddell's family has asked that
memorial contributions be made to: The Denver Hospice,
501 South Cherry Street, Suite 700, Denver, Colorado
80246, marked for the "new inpatient care center." More
information is available at
www.theDenverhospice.org.
USA 3000 Flight Attendants Vote AFA-CWA, Union Files
for Election at Frontier
An overwhelming majority of the 114 flight attendants
at the charter airline USA 3000 voted for AFA-CWA
representation this week. They join their 240 colleagues
at Lynx Aviation and Ryan International who voted
earlier this year for an AFA-CWA voice.
Meanwhile, 900 flight attendants at frontier Airlines
are one step closer to gaining bargaining rights and a
union voice as AFA-CWA filed for an election with the
National Mediation Board.
October is Customer Service Professionals Month
October is Customer Service Professionals month and
CWA is working with unions around the world to recognize
these workers' professionalism and the need for strong
bargaining and organizing rights.
This year, CWA customer service professionals will
join in a postcard campaign to press the Spanish
telecommunications giant, Telefonica, to respect
employees' right to organize. In 2000, the company
signed a global agreement recognizing workers' basic
labor rights, but Telefonica operations in North and
South America and in Europe aren't abiding by that
agreement.
In coordination with UNI Global Union, CWA will
launch the card-signing effort during the last week of
October.
Click here to join the campaign. CWA also will
distribute more than 100,000 stickers supporting
Telefonica workers to CWA locals representing customer
service workers.
With CWA support, UNI has published a new report, "A
World on the Phone," which highlights the issues facing
call center workers around the world. Download the
report here.
Also as part of Customer Service Professionals'
month, CWA will establish a Call Center Committee to
examine issues facing workers in the industry and help
them communicate through a nationwide online-based
network. "This will be a great time for us to do
something special to honor the hard work that is
performed by all of our members in customer service,"
said Executive Vice President Annie Hill.
Hill is asking locals that represent customer service
professionals in telecommunications, newspapers,
airlines, public service and other sectors to complete a
survey that will provide more information about customer
service workers and their jobs.
Click here to download the survey.
A New Era for Workplace Safety and Health
For the first time in more than eight years, CWA
health and safety activists have a real reason to
celebrate: the Obama administration's strong commitment
to working families has meant a return to real
enforcement and other tools to make workplaces safer and
healthier.
Some 165 CWA safety and health activists at the Oct
3-5 conference heard from Jordan Barab, acting assistant
secretary of OSHA, CWA President Larry Cohen and IUE-CWA
President Jim Clark.
"Secretary of Labor Solis asked me to start moving
forward right away to refocus the agency on its original
mission, to assure safe and healthful conditions for
American workers," Barab said. That means "OSHA is
heading back to the original intent of the OSH Act.
We're back in the enforcement business and we're back in
the standards-writing business."
General sessions and workshops covered ergonomics,
occupational stress, the H1N1 flu virus, workplace
violence and the connection between safety and health
and the economy. Participants also discussed strategy
and what can be accomplished under the Obama
administration. |