November 5, 2009
- CWA Takes
on Verizon Over FMLA Abuses
- Big Breakthrough: NMB Proposes Majority Vote for
Airline Worker Elections
- Obama DOL Wins $1.2 Million for Puerto Rico
Workers
- Online Auction Aids Flight Attendants in Need
- Employee Free Choice is Major League
- NY Dish Network Techs, West VA ABC Officers Join
CWA
- CWA Member Wins Reelection to Detroit City
Council
- In
Maryland, Verizon Wants a Sweet Deal at Consumers'
Expense
CWA Takes on
Verizon Over FMLA Abuses
CWA has filed a lawsuit charging Verizon
Communications with denying workers the rights and
protections of the Family and Medical Leave Act. The
class action lawsuit covers Verizon workers in Districts
1, 2 and 13.
CWA and individual workers have laid out extensive
complaints against Verizon. “Verizon has created a
number of arbitrary administrative procedures that it
requires workers to follow if they want to be certified
for FMLA, but these procedures are not a part of the
FMLA law. They shouldn’t be used to deny workers their
rightful FMLA benefits, but that’s exactly what Verizon
is doing,” said CWA General Counsel Mary O’Melveny.
FMLA provides workers at companies with 50 or more
employees with up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave per year
for the birth or adoption of a child; care of a spouse,
parent or a child under 18 for a serious health
condition; care of a child over 18 with mental or
physical disabilities, and an employee’s own illness.
Verizon’s policies are a real Catch-22:
- If a worker followed verbal instructions from
the company’s absence reporting center, and those
instructions were wrong, though the worker didn’t
know it, the claim is denied.
- If a worker couldn’t file the full report on
time, because her doctor was on vacation or
unavailable, the claim is denied. If another
physician in the same office completed the report,
but didn’t spell out the relationship between the
two medical providers, the claim is denied.
- If information was missing from the claim, for
example, the doctor’s office didn’t complete an
item, the claim is denied.
- If a supervisor makes an error in reporting a
workers’ claim, it’s denied.
At Verizon, as far as FMLA is concerned, once a claim
is denied twice, a worker loses her FMLA rights.
Big Breakthrough: NMB Proposes Majority Vote for
Airline Worker Elections
The National Mediation Board this week proposed a
rule change to bring real democracy to union elections
in the airline and railroad industries.
Under the NMB proposal, workers would vote either
"Yes" or "No" in a union representation election. The
outcome would be determined by a majority of votes cast,
just as elections for public office now are conducted.
Under the current NMB rules, workers can only win
union representation if a majority of eligible workers
vote and a majority of those voters want a union voice.
Workers who don't participate are considered "No" votes.
The NMB's two-member majority called the current
system undemocratic. "Few if any democratic elections
are conducted in this manner," the NMB said. "In our
society, free choice is expressed on the basis of a
majority of valid votes cast in an election. The wishes
of those who take the time and trouble to cast ballots"
should not be superseded by those who chose not to
participate, it added.
The current system has encouraged airlines to engage
in intimidation and coercive tactics to suppress turnout
and keep workers from exercising their right to vote
during union elections.
The rule change was praised by AFA-CWA President
Patricia Friend. Employees seeking a union will now have
the opportunity to have a chance for truly fair
elections," Friend said. "They are excited for the
opportunity for their voices and votes to be counted."
AFA-CWA has been working with flight attendants at
the merged Northwest Delta Airlines to help bring union
representation to the airline's 21,000 flight
attendants. "Now that the NMB has announced that, for
the first time in recent years, airline employees
seeking union representation will have a chance for
truly fair elections, flight attendants at Northwest and
Delta are excited for that opportunity," Friend said.
"As the largest private sector union election this year,
we want this election at Delta Air Lines to occur under
the new democratic procedures and therefore are
withdrawing our single transportation application" that
would trigger a union election. The NMB will issue its
final rule after a 60-day public comment period.
Obama DOL Wins $1.2 Million for Puerto Rico Workers
When a Puerto Rico newspaper publisher raided the
union workers' retirement fund, the Bush administration
didn't do much. But under President Obama's Labor
Department, workers will get most of their money back.
DOL lawyers went to U.S. federal court on behalf of
the El Vocero workers and won a $1.28 million settlement
that restores most of the funds that were taken, as well
as promised employer contributions that were not made
between 2003 and 2006.
"What a difference a presidential election makes,"
said Bernie Lunzer, president of The Newspaper
Guild-CWA, which represents the workers through UPAGRA.
"During the Bush years, the Department of Labor tried
to get our members to agree to a $600,000 settlement,
less than half of what they are owed, Lunzer said. "Now,
under the leadership of President Obama and Labor
Secretary Hilda Solis, we're a lot closer to the justice
that they deserve."
Publisher Miguel Roca has kept up his dirty tricks.
Since July, he has pushed more than 100 workers out of
their jobs, replacing them with non-union employees who
are being paid with U.S. stimulus dollars. Local mayors
and Puerto Rico's labor secretary are channeling the
taxpayer funds to Roca, according to a paper trail that
union leaders have unraveled.
CWA is aiding the UPAGRA members with funds set aside
to support collective bargaining strategies. The union
is continuing its mass pickets and gets a permit once a
week to shut down the streets in front of the
newspaper's San Juan offices.
Online Auction Aids Flight Attendants in Need
The Pegasus Project "Heroes of the Heart" Online
Holiday Charity Auction is open for bids from now
through Nov. 30.
This AFA-CWA project helps raise funds to provide a
financial lifeline for flight attendants facing a
critical, life-threatening illness or disabling injury
through an online auction of fabulous gifts, art, exotic
travel and many other items.
All funds raised go the Pegasus Project, which
provides short-term emergency grants to critically ill
or injured flight attendants represented by AFA-CWA.
Sheila Dail and Doreen Welsh, AFA-CWA's own "Heroes
on the Hudson" and members of the US Airways flight 1549
crew, are this year's Pegasus Project spokespersons.
"In a single moment one's life can change forever. A
routine doctor's visit results in a cancer diagnosis, a
short drive to the store ends in a horrific accident
that restricts you from working for many months, or,
like us, your plane makes an emergency landing on the
Hudson River after striking a flock of birds," they
said.
Please support our cause and be "a Hero of the Heart
to Flight Attendants in need," they said.
Click here to donate unique items or check out items
for bid.
Employee Free Choice is Major League
No matter who you liked in the World Series, one
thing is clear. Major League baseball players are on the
side of working women and men when it comes to Employee
Free Choice. This ad, which ran in national newspapers,
featured baseball players who believe all Americans
should have the same opportunity they've had—to be able
to join a union without being fired and to negotiate
with their employers without being penalized.
Playing by the rules matters, in baseball and on the
job.
NY Dish Network Techs, West VA ABC Officers Join CWA
Technicians at Dish Network in Queens, N.Y. and
enforcement officers from the West Virginia Alcohol
Beverage Control administration have won CWA
representation.
More than 60 Dish Network technicians beat back a
strong anti-union campaign to win representation with
CWA Local 1106 in an NLRB election. Dish management
illegally conducted captive-audience meetings less than
24 hours before the election and also promised workers a
big raise if they voted "no." The Dish techs were
assisted by Local 1106 President Tony Caudullo and Vice
President Jerry Bulzomi.
In West Virginia, 30 enforcement officers at the
state's Alcohol Beverage Control administration won
representation with CWA Local 2001. The ABC workers
wanted the same kind of professional representation that
CWA-represented West Virginia state troopers have, and
chose CWA. CWA represents more than 1,600 correctional
and juvenile services' support staff and officers in
West Virginia. The workers were assisted by Local 2001
and District 2 Staff Representative Elaine Harris.
CWA Member Wins Reelection to Detroit City Council
In Detroit, Brenda Jones, a member of CWA Local 4004,
was re-elected to the City Council. The former local
union president has been a strong advocate for working
families in the city since she was first elected to the
post in 2005.
Union leaders and members from CWA Locals 4100 and
4004 provided strong support for her re-election bid,
especially at rallies and in get-out-the-vote actions on
Election Day. Jones also had strong backing from CWA's
Minority Caucus, members of the United Auto Workers and
AFSCME, and the Detroit AFL-CIO.
In Maryland,
Verizon Wants a Sweet Deal at Consumers' Expense
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CWA's ad in the Baltimore Sun
reminded regulators that Verizon should be
required to meet service quality standards. |
CWAers, community activists, consumer groups and
others want the Maryland Public Service Commission to
say yes to quality service for Maryland telephone
customers and no to Verizon's attempt to avoid service
standards for residential customers.
This week in Baltimore, the Maryland PSC held a
two-day hearing on whether to accept a deal that would
let Verizon continue its record of missed service
appointments and delays for Maryland residents and even
raise telephone rates.
CWA District 2 Vice President Ron Collins said CWA
was working with state officials to require Verizon to
meet quality service standards and not agree to a deal
that is "good for Verizon but bad for Maryland."
Go to
Contactmdpsc.org and tell the Maryland regulators:
Reject this deal and tell Verizon to clean up its act.
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