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February 25, 2010
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UPTE-CWA Gains Tentative
Contract at UC After 2-Year
Fight
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CWA: Comcast/NBC Merger is a Bad
Bet
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UT Activists Rally to Save Jobs,
Higher Education
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CWA: Bargaining Rights Now for
Nation's Airport Security
Officers
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CWA and Free Press: Saving
Journalism is Key to Saving
Democracy
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Flight Attendants at Mesa,
Atlantic Southeast Ratify
Agreements
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Don't Miss Spring Deadlines for
Beirne, Bahr College
Scholarships
UPTE-CWA Gains Tentative Contract at
UC After 2-Year Fight
It took two years of tough
bargaining, but University
Professional and Technical
Employees/CWA Local 9119 won a
tentative agreement last week
covering 9,000 researchers and
technicians at the University of
California.
The five-year agreement provides for
pay increases of 14.5 percent over
the contract term, plus a $1,000
lump sum payment to be paid this
July.
The tentative settlement will be
sent to members for a ratification
vote.
"Local 9119 achieved this settlement
during the worst economy in the
history of California. I'm proud of
the bargaining committee, the local
leadership and everything they have
done to protect members," said CWA
District 9 Vice President Jim
Weitkamp.
Progress in bargaining was delayed
by university officials who refused
to fairly address workers' concerns
about their pay and retirement
security.
Union members kept up a constant
mobilization campaign, lobbied the
state legislature, and gained public
and community support through a
media campaign.
In other improvements, the contract
sets up a $1.7 million equity pool
to help address pay inequities for
workers in some job titles. The
university will contribute 4 percent
into the workers' pension plan this
year, and has agreed to match or
exceed additional one percent
contributions by employees in 2011
and 2012.
The contract also limits increases
in workers' health benefits and
parking fees.
"This is a great agreement,
especially considering the terrible
state of California's economy," said
UPTE-CWA Local 9119 President Jelger
Kalmijn. "We won good raises and
placed real limits on how much the
university can charge for health
care and other benefits. We will
continue to fight for workers at UC,
especially in the area of job
security," he added.
CWA: Comcast/NBC Merger is a Bad Bet
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CWA President Larry Cohen
tells the House Judiciary
Committee that the
Comcast/NBCU merger
threatens quality jobs,
investment and the future of
the Internet.
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CWA President Larry Cohen told the
House Judiciary Committee that the
proposed Comcast/NBC merger should
be assessed in terms of jobs, the
impact on competition, and the
likely negative effect on the
emerging Internet video marketplace.
Cohen testified on a panel with
Comcast CEO Brian Roberts, NBC CEO
Jeff Zucker and other witnesses
representing independent film
makers, consumers and public policy
groups. Read the testimony here.
Cohen told the committee that the
proposed merger would saddle the
company with $8 billion in new debt
and that "NBCU will be under
pressure to cut jobs, raise prices
or renege on that debt." CWA can
cite firsthand many examples of
media and communications mergers
that did just that. "There are no
warranties, no guarantees for
consumers, workers and communities.
Companies make lots of commitments
but don't have to carry them out,"
he said.
With the nation's unemployment near
10 percent, it's critical that our
government evaluate and assess
corporate restructurings with
regulatory review in terms of the
impact on jobs, he said.
Cohen also stressed Comcast's
low-road labor policy, one based on
a strategy to stop workers from
gaining bargaining rights and using
aggressive action to stop workers
from organizing or getting contracts
at companies that it has acquired.
The merger also would create a
company with the market power to
increase cable rates, block
competition in the video marketplace
and control content, Cohen said. "No
other nation allows this degree of
connection between content and pipe,
and with good reason," he said.
"In the end, consumers lose
innovation and an open Internet.
The Internet, once a source of
expanding consumer choice and
diversity of programming content,
would now become mainly a vehicle to
protect the current cable
incumbents," Cohen said.
UT Activists Rally to Save Jobs,
Higher Education
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Hundreds of University of
Tennessee employees, members
of United Campus Workers-CWA
Local 3865, rallied against
the proposed budget that
would cut jobs and harm
quality education. |
Hundreds of university employees,
members of United Campus Workers-CWA
Local 3865, rallied at the
University of Tennessee in Knoxville
to fight against the proposed budget
that would cut jobs and wages for
hundreds of support staff and
nontenured faculty members and harm
quality education.
The group then marched to the
president's office and delivered a
letter that called on university
administration to look at other
strategies before laying off
workers. Over the past 10 years, top
administrative salaries have nearly
doubled to $76.1 million, while
salaries of operational support
workers, including programmers,
secretaries, library staff, police
force and others, have actually
decreased. "Cuts must start at the
top, whether those cuts are layoffs,
salary or benefit reductions,
furloughs or other cost-saving
measures," said UCW President Tom
Anderson. The average salary of
workers slated to be laid off is
$23,500 a year.
CWA District 3 Vice President Judy
Dennis and CWA Organizing Director
Ed Sabol joined Anderson, union
members and students in the march to
the president's office.
The governor wants to cut $61
million from higher education, and
university administrators have
targeted lower-paid workers for
layoff. UCW says that's unfair and
shortsighted, citing the
university's own research that shows
that for every one job at the
university, at least two additional
jobs are created in nearby
communities.
UCW represents 1,000 university
workers at seven University of
Tennessee campuses. Union members
will hold a lobby day with state
legislators in March.
CWA: Bargaining Rights Now for
Nation's Airport Security Officers
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CWAers join hundreds of
union members in Washington,
D.C. at a rally to support
bargaining rights for the
nation's 40,000 airport
security officers at the
Transportation Security
Administration. Kim Kraynak,
one of the first TSA union
activists, thanks labor for
its support. Left, are CWA
President Larry Cohen and
AFA-CWA President Patricia
Friend. |
CWAers rallied with hundreds of
union activists this week to support
full collective bargaining rights
for the nation's 40,000 airport
security officers.
At a rally at the AFL-CIO, activists
called on the Obama administration
to carry out its pledge to grant the
workers, employees of the
Transportation Security
Administration, bargaining rights
like other federal workers have.
The American Federation of
Government Employees, which is
working with the transportation
security officers, or TSOs, to gain
bargaining rights, filed a petition
with the National Labor Relations
Authority calling for a union
election. AFGE already represents
13,000 TSOs.
At the rally, AFGE President John
Gage called on the Obama
administration and Homeland Security
Secretary Janet Napolitano to move
forward now.
CWA President Larry Cohen said the
workers' struggle for collective
bargaining rights should be
supported by everyone who wants a
union, or belongs to a union.
"Every one of us carries the message
proudly that this is the time for
all workers in this country to have
full collective bargaining rights,"
said Cohen. "This is also a message
to every employer that this labor
movement is back," he said. "We're
fighting back, and we're going to
win." Because of low pay, poor
morale, and often unsafe working
conditions, airport screeners have
among the highest turnover rates of
any job in the federal government.
AFA-CWA President Patricia Friend
dismissed claims that TSA workers
should not have bargaining rights
because it would threaten national
security.
"In the airport cabin, flight
attendants are the last line of
defense to keep airline passengers
safe," said Friend. "As airport
screeners, you are the first line of
defense and deserve to have the same
rights to improve your working
conditions."
CWA and Free Press: Saving
Journalism is Key to Saving
Democracy
CWA and allies like Free Press are
working together to save quality
journalism and the democracy it
protects.
"We're losing 1,000 newsroom
employees every month, and we've
lost 30,000 over the last two
years," John Nichols of The Nation
said during a discussion with CWA
and TNG-CWA staff and officers. "And
that's come after the culling out of
radio and television. Roughly 20,000
people are no longer on the air."
Founded by Nichols and University of
Illinois Professor Robert McChesney,
Free Press successfully built a
grassroots movement in the early
2000s that helped millions of
Americans understand how and why
concentrated media power reduces
their access to information. Free
Press continues to work to promote
diverse and independent media
ownership and quality journalism.
Their latest book, "The Death and
Life of American Journalism," looks
at media consolidation, the Internet
and other factors that are reducing
the number of journalists and news
stories produced in the United
States.
As part of their book tour, Nichols
and McChesney met with regulators
and elected officials in
Washington.
TNG-CWA President Bernie Lunzer has
pledged "an army of foot soldiers"
from locals to engage their
communities in the battle to save
their newspapers.
Flight Attendants at Mesa, Atlantic
Southeast Ratify Agreements
Mesa/Freedom/Go! flight attendants
have ratified a two-year contract
that raises salaries, improves work
rules and lays a foundation for the
next round of negotiations in 2012.
Negotiated with help from the
National Mediation Board, the
contract recognizes the flight
attendants' "dedication and
professionalism during this
challenging time (and) provides a
framework for working alongside
management in rebuilding our
airline," said AFA-CWA Mesa
President Brian Manning.
In another AFA-CWA victory, Atlantic
Southeast Airlines flight
attendants ratified a Memorandum of
Understanding that the union and
management reached in January.
"This agreement gives ASA flight
attendants much deserved
improvements while providing for
management's requests as well,"
AFA-CWA Atlantic Southeast President
Jeannie Babb said. "It is a good
example of the power of negotiations
and what can be accomplished through
productive discussions."
Don't Miss Spring Deadlines for
Beirne, Bahr College Scholarships
CWA members and their families are
encouraged to apply now for
scholarships that can help them
attend college or pursue a
distance-learning degree in the
2010-11 academic year.
An annual scholarship from CWA's Joe
Beirne Foundation provides 15
students up to $3,000 toward their
college tuition, an award that can
be renewed for a second year if
winners have a satisfactory academic
record.
The deadline for the Beirne
scholarship, named for CWA's
founding president, is March 31. CWA
members, spouses, children,
grandchildren and dependents
of active, retired, laid-off or
deceased members are eligible.
Winners will be chosen from a
lottery of eligible applicants.
Applications are available online
only at:
www.cwa-union.org/members/beirne.
The second scholarship, named for
CWA's President Emeritus Morton
Bahr, covers full tuition and fees
for college courses offered by
Empire State College's Center for
Distance Learning.
CWA members, their families and
domestic partners are eligible to
apply. Scholarship winners can
continue to receive funding as long
as they make satisfactory academic
progress and enroll in four to eight
credits at least two terms per year.
The Bahr deadline is May 15. Forms
are available online at
www.esc.edu/bahr. To request an
application by mail, e-mail
special.programs@esc.edu or call
(800) 847-3000, ext. 2492. |