There's Still
Time to Support 'Sockville' and Pediatric AIDS Fight
CWA Joins White House Jobs Summit, Calls for
'Workplace Summit' Strategy
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CWA Pres Cohen at White House
Jobs Summit.
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At today's White House Jobs Summit, CWA President
Larry Cohen joined the nation's leading labor,
corporate, small business and other leaders to focus on
the critical connection between jobs and economic
growth. President Obama, Vice President Biden and top
government officials made remarks and listened as
participants presented ideas about job creation and the
economy.
Cohen was part of the discussion on "creating jobs
through rebuilding America's infrastructure," which
looked at both traditional infrastructure investment
like roads and schools, and the necessary buildout of
high speed broadband that will help the United States
regain its standing as a leader in the Internet age and
create quality jobs.
Cohen also joined an earlier tech panel led by the
Administration's technology and science team that looked
at job creation through innovation and new technology.
CWA is calling for a new policy initiative and new
perspective on jobs that will help bring about real
economic recovery. Right now, the nation is in a vicious
cycle of corporate job cuts and contracting out that has
frozen unemployment above 10 percent. Every employer
that cuts jobs to preserve profits or improve its share
value adds to the current recession.
Workers and employers must hold their own job
summits, and corporate leaders must change practices
that cut jobs at the expense of workers and economic
growth. CWA also is calling on the Obama administration
to evaluate all programs and Federal decisions on the
basis of their job creation or job destruction
implications. Similar to the environmental impact review
required of many projects, CWA believes that a jobs
impact analysis should be undertaken as a critical
component in decision-making and the approval process.
For more information, go to
www.jobsnotcuts.org
Proposed Comcast-NBC Universal Mega-Deal Raises
Anti-Trust Concerns
CWA said the proposed merger of Comcast and NBC
Universal "clearly spotlights the dangers of media
consolidation in the Internet Age" and called on
regulators to give the deal a thorough review.
If approved by regulators, this deal would create a
mega-media company, one with the market power to
determine what programs get aired and how much consumers
must pay to view programming in every media outlet:
cable, television and especially the Internet. This
mega-company would control one out of every five viewing
hours in the United States, CWA said.
The nation's largest cable company, with 24 million
customers, Comcast also has 15 million Internet users
and controls most must-have regional sports programming.
If it takes on NBC Universal, it adds a major television
network, 27 local televisions, cable channels including
CNBC, MSNBC, Telemundo, Bravo, USA Network and more,
plus Hulu, a growing stop especially for households
under age 35.
CWA also pointed out that Comcast also has been cited
for anti-democratic corporate governance processes by
investor and public interest groups, and has a long
history of violating workers' rights. If Comcast is
permitted to take over NBC Universal, the corporation's
undemocratic structure could be transferred to the new
mega-media company, giving one person control over the
dominant source of cable, television, Internet and media
programming, CWA warned.
CWA represents about 2,000 Comcast workers and about
2,500 NBC-Universal broadcast technicians and other
workers.
IUE-CWA Pact at Behr Dayton Thermal Saves 900 Jobs
In tough bargaining with Behr Dayton Thermal Products
in Dayton, Ohio, members of IUE-CWA ratified a four-year
contract that saves 900 jobs at the formerly
Chrysler-owned auto parts supplier. The agreement was
ratified 538 to 261.
The agreement prevented the plant from shutting down.
"This was a very difficult set of negotiations," said
IUE-CWA President Jim Clark. "I am proud of Local 84775
President Roy Turner and his entire team for stepping up
and getting the best deal possible for their membership
while preserving their jobs for the future," he said.
Behr was determined to close the plant and move work
elsewhere if it couldn't change its cost structure and
stop continuing financial losses, according to IUE-CWA.
Members stood strong during negotiations and
overwhelmingly rejected the company's proposed "last,
best and final" offer.
When bargaining resumed, the union brought in an
independent auditor who confirmed that the company's
financial losses were real. To stem its losses, Behr
sought to slash workers' health benefits by $12 million,
but the union succeeded in reducing the size of the
health cuts. IUE-CWA hired a health insurance expert to
assist in developing a new health plan that would
deliver the needed savings needed but give workers
choices for their individual needs.
The contract provides a $1,250 signing bonus,
contains small wage hikes for the lowest tier workers
making up most of the workforce, and includes some pay
reductions for senior-level employees who were eligible
to receive their pensions or company buyouts.
CWAers in Puerto Rico Rally for Justice after Murder
of Gay Student
CWA members joined thousands of demonstrators last
week in San Juan calling on the government to treat the
horrific murder of a 19-year college student killed
because he was gay as a hate crime.
Puerto Rico has had a hate crime law since 2002 but
it had never been applied to cases involving sexual
orientation or gender identity. The Puerto Rico
Department of Justice now has agreed to investigate this
brutal murder as a hate crime; a suspect has been
arrested.
CWA At-Large Executive Board Members Madelyn Elder
and Nestor Soto condemned those whose harsh opposition
to hate crimes laws based on sexual orientation has
helped fuel hatred and intolerance.
"Many political and fundamentalist religious leaders
have campaigned against members of the Lesbian, Gay,
Bisexual, and Transgender community, promoting, in their
expressions and actions, a climate of intolerance and
violence that end in acts such as the heinous murder of
this young man," said Soto, president of Local 33225 in
Puerto Rico.
"These same political and religious leaders have
maintained, in the words of human rights activist Pedro
Julio Serrano, 'a deafening silence' by not expressing
solidarity with the family of this young man, nor
condemning this terrible murder," he added.
Madelyn Elder, president of CWA Local 7901, pointed
out that 11 years after Matthew Shepard was brutally
murdered in Wyoming, and only one month after the U.S.
Congress passed an expanded Hate Crimes law to include
crimes based on sexual preference and gender
orientation, another murder of a gay man occurred,
because he is a gay man.
"Passing laws is not enough to deter such
violence. Rigorous enforcement and, as a nation,
meaningful support for the gay, lesbian, bisexual and
transgendered communities is vital to turn around the
hatred which leads to such crimes," she said. "To treat
this crime as 'normal' is unjust, she added.
"We hope that events like this do not occur in our
country, or any other country. We express our solidarity
and sorrow with the victim's family, the LGBT community
and with all who struggle daily for the equality of all
human beings regardless of race, sex, nationality or
sexual preference," Soto said.
For more information about issues affecting LGBT
persons, go to
http://prideatwork.org.
Flight Attendant Win FMLA Coverage, Law Goes to
President's Desk
Legislation to extend the protections of the Family
and Medical Leave Act to flight attendants and other
flight crew members is headed to the White House for
President Obama's signature following House action this
week.
"We are very pleased with the passage of the
legislation, sponsored by Rep. Tim Bishop (D-N.Y.),
which finally closes loopholes in the current law that
have denied coverage to many flight attendants," said
Patricia Friend, International President, Association of
Flight Attendants-CWA.
Friend noted that the legislation passed the House
with a strong, bipartisan vote and expressed the
appreciation of every flight attendant for Rep. Bishop.
The Senate passed a companion measure last month.
FMLA was enacted in 1993, but flight attendants and
other flight crew members were denied the law's
protections because of the way airlines computed their
work hours.
There's Still Time to Support 'Sockville" and
Pediatric AIDS Fight
Treat a youngster you love to the silliness of
Sockville, an award-winning DVD. At the same time you
can support CWA's charity of choice, the Elizabeth
Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation.
From now through Dec. 15, the Sockville DVD is
selling for $9.99 on a special website,
www.sockshelpingkids.com. For every purchase there,
the company will send $3 to the Pediatric AIDS
Foundation, which CWA has supported for nearly 20 years.
CWA locals that raise the most money for Pediatric AIDS
each year are recognized at CWA's annual convention.
Locals will get credit for every $3 donation from
Sockville DVD sales, as long as buyers include their
local number when they make their purchase. Locals are
encouraged to publicize the DVD and website with flyers
that can be downloaded from the site. Simply click the
"Resource" link on the upper left side of the page.
The DVD was designed and produced by CWA Local 6300
member Patrick Voss, who has also help create a
children's TV show about Sockville - - the place where
socks lost in the laundry go to live. The imaginative
show and DVD use humor to inspire children to embrace
good values and manners, follow their dreams and respect
others.
