|
April
29,
2010
Getting
Ready
for
the
Future
--
CWA
Needs
to
Hear
from
You!
A
new
online
discussion
board
is
now
available
to
voice
your
comments
and
ideas
about
the
most
recent
Ready
for
the
Future
proposals.
More
information
about
the
plan
is
here.
This
effort
is
carrying
out
the
2005
CWA
convention
mandate
to
look
at
the
"right
sizing"
of
the
CWA
Executive
Board
by
2011
and
to
review
the
use
of
union
resources
to
make
sure
our
approach
is
effective
and
efficient.
Any
recommendations
must
be
acted
on
by
delegates
at
the
2010
convention
to
be
implemented
in
2011.
The
online
forum
is
open
to
CWA
members
and
local
union
officers
to
provide
ideas
and
feedback
on
the
next
step
of
Ready
for
the
Future.
Get
started
by
logging
on
at
http://rff.cwaforum.com
and
entering
this
access
code:
CWARFF2010.
Note
that
anonymous
comments
can't
be
accepted.
The
Ready
for
the
Future
plan
has
been
a
big
success,
following
its
adoption
by
the
2005
CWA
convention.
Working
together,
we’ve
accomplished
a
lot,
including
a
hugely
successful
strategic
industry
fund
(SIF)
program
that
has
financed
bold
campaigns,
like
Speed
Matters,
telecom
fights
and
health
care
and
bargaining
rights.
We
have
included
local
leader
perspective
through
the
at-large
members
on
the
Executive
Board
and
built
an
active
Stewards
Army
that
has
made
a
real
difference.
CWA
District
9
Reaches
Tentative
Contract
at
Verizon
West
CWA's
District
9
bargaining
team
reached
a
tentative
three-year
contract
with
Verizon
West
that
boosts
wages
by
8.25
percent,
holds
the
line
against
health
care
cost
shifting
and
ensures
that
a
new
sales
incentive
compensation
plan
for
customer
service
representatives
remains
voluntary.

CWAers at Verizon West take fair contract fight to Santa Monica.
The
agreement
also
requires
Verizon
to
discuss
ways
to
reduce
subcontracting
and
the
offshoring
of
jobs.
The
tentative
contract
covers
more
than
5,500
workers
in
California.
CWA
District
9
Vice
President
Jim
Weitkamp
credited
members'
strong
and
steady
bargaining
mobilization
efforts
as a
major
factor
in
reaching
the
agreement.
"Members
and
their
families
stood
behind
their
negotiating
team
and
kept
up
the
fight
for
the
quality
contract
they
deserved,"
he
said.
"With
that
support,
we
maintained
quality
healthcare,
accomplished
pay
increases
that
reflect
members'
efficiency,
and
moved
work
from
Verizon
Business
and
the
Video
Hub
into
this
collective
bargaining
agreement.
This
should
bring
additional
good
paying
jobs
to
California,"
said
Weitkamp.
CWA
locals
built
public
support
and
helped
keep
pressure
on
the
company.
This
included
a
resolution
adopted
by
the
Long
Beach
City
Council
that
supported
CWA's
call
to
keep
quality
jobs
in
the
community
by
corporations
that
have
city
contracts.
The
tentative
agreement
will
be
submitted
to
members
for
a
ratification
vote.
More
details
are
available
at
district9.cwa-union.org.
Solidarity,
German
Style:
ver.di
Members
to
Leaflet
DT
Annual
Meeting

Ver.di members will hand out this leaflet at the May 3 DT annual meeting.
At
the
Deutsche
Telekom
annual
meeting
in Cologne,
Germany next
week,
members
of
ver.di,
the
union
representing
T-Mobile
and
DT
workers
in
Germany,
will
be
leafleting
participants
as
they
enter
the
meeting.
Some
50
ver.di
members
will
be
covering
every
entrance
at
the
meeting
site,
handing
out
a
leaflet
that
calls
out
T-Mobile
USA
for
its
"Wild
West"
behavior
and
its
poor
treatment
of
workers
who
want
a
union
voice
in
the
United
States.
As
one
T-Mobile
USA
worker
said,
"This
is
very
impressive!
50
people
devoted
to
handing
out
flyers
so
that
we
can
have
rights
in
America?
Ver.di
really
is
with
us."
Ver.di
has
been
working
with
CWA
to
focus
public
attention
on
the
double
standard
of
T-Mobile
and
parent
company
DT,
which
support
workers'
rights
in
European
operations
but
refuse
to
do
so
in
the
United
States.
Read
more
at
www.tuworkers.org.
CWA
Reaches
Agreement
on
Verizon
'Surplus'
CWA
has
reached
an
agreement
with
Verizon
that
provides
additional
payments
and
benefits
for
workers
who
agree
to
retire
early
or
leave
the
company
under
a
one-time
enhanced
payroll
offer.
Verizon
had
announced
that
some
12,000
workers
in
Verizon
East
would
be
declared
"surplus,"
and
subject
to
possible
layoff.
Talks
had
stalled
over
Verizon's
refusal
to
abide
by
contract
provisions
governing
contracting
out;
the
company
backed
off
that
position
and
CWA
Vice
Presidents
Chris
Shelton,
District
1;
Ron
Collins,
District
2;
and
Ed
Mooney,
District
13,
were
able
to
finalize
an
agreement.
Read
more
here.
AFA-CWA
Elects
Veda
Shook
President;
Honors
Retiring
Pat
Friend
for
Lifetime
Achievement
The
AFA-CWA
Board
of
Directors
has
elected
Veda
Shook
as
international
president;
she
will
take
office
when
current
President
Patricia
Friend
retires
Dec.
31
after
15
years
of
leadership.
Sara
Nelson
was
elected
international
vice
president
and
Kevin
Creighan
was
elected
to a
second
term
as
international
secretary-treasurer.
Shook,
an
18-year
Alaska
Airlines
flight
attendant,
has
served
as
vice
president
since
2007
and
is
in
charge
of
AFA-CWA's
organizing
program.
Recent
organizing
victories
include
campaigns
at
Lynx
Aviation,
Ryan
International
and
USA3000,
and
AFA-CWA
now
is
working
with
flight
attendants
who
want
a
union
voice
at
Delta/NWA.
Nelson
currently
is
the
communications
chairperson
for
AFA-CWA's
United
Airlines
Master
Executive
Council;
she
has
been
a
flight
attendant
for
14
years.
Creighan,
who
has
served
as
secretary-treasurer
since
2005,
has
extensive
experience
in
accounting
and
membership,
in
addition
to
his
work
as a
flight
attendant
and
local
union
officer.
The
AFA-CWA
Board
awarded
Friend
the
Ada
Brown
Greenfield
Lifetime
Achievement
Award.
Named
for
one
of
the
union's
founders,
it
has
only
been
awarded
twice
before.
"President
Friend
has
been
a
role
model
and
an
inspiration
to
countless
colleagues
through
her
years
of
work
for
AFA-CWA.
She
serves
as a
living
testament
to
the
power
of
what
we
can
achieve
through
the
labor
movement,"
the
board
said
in a
joint
statement.
Friend
began
her
career
as a
United
flight
attendant
in
1966.
Under
her
leadership,
AFA-CWA's
victories
include
whistleblower
protections
for
aviation
workers,
new
penalties
for
passengers
who
interfere
with
crewmember
duties,
a
smoking
ban
on
international
flights,
an
extension
of
the
Family
and
Medical
Leave
Act
to
cover
flight
crews
and
seniority
protections
for
flight
attendants
in
the
event
of a
merger.
CWA
COPE
Contest
Kicks
Off
May
1
What's
more
exciting
than
a
trip
to
Las
Vegas?
How
about
a
chance
to
win
a
free
trip
to
Las
Vegas
by
signing
up
for
COPE
or
increasing
your
contribution
by
as
little
as
$1 a
week?
May
1
kicks
off
CWA's
biggest
COPE
contest
ever.
Locals
will
have
a
little
over
six
months
to
sign
up
new
COPE
members
and
urge
those
already
participating
to
increase
their
contributions.
COPE
contributions
are
the
way
CWA
members
show
their
support
for
elected
officials
and
candidates
that
stand
up
for
us.
These
voluntary
contributions
help
keep
our
union
and
our
union
movement
strong.
Winners
of
the
Las
Vegas
trip,
which
includes
airfare
for
two
and
two
nights
in a
hotel,
will
be
determined
by
drawing
and
will
be
announced
on
Election
Day,
Nov.
9.
Everyone
eligible
for
the
contest
gets
a
CWA
T-shirt.
COPE
cards
are
available
through
CWA
staff.
Obama
First
President
to
Proclaim
April
28
as
Workers
Memorial
Day
As
CWA
locals
nationwide
joined
other
unions
and
activists
on
Apr.
28
to
remember
workers
killed
or
harmed
on
the
job,
President
Obama
did
something
no
other
U.S.
president
has
done:
he
issued
a
proclamation
officially
marking
the
date
as
Workers
Memorial
Day.
Obama
said
the
most
recent
mining
disaster
is a
tragic
reminder
that
"we
remain
too
far
from
fulfilling
the
promise"
of
safe
workplaces,
as
established
40
years
ago
by
the
original
Occupational
Safety
and
Health
Act.
"The
legal
right
to a
safe
workplace
was
won
only
after
countless
lives
had
been
lost
over
decades
in
workplaces
across
America,
and
after
a
long
and
bitter
fight
waged
by
workers,
unions
and
public
health
advocates,"
Obama
said.
"Much
remains
to
be
done,
and
my
administration
is
dedicated
to
renewing
our
nation's
commitment
to
achieve
safe
working
conditions
for
all
American
workers."
The
full
statement
can
be
read here.
The
AFL-CIO
this
week
released
its
annual
"Death
on
the
Job"
report.
In
2008,
the
most
recent
data
fully
available,
5,214,
workers
were
killed,
more
than
50,000
workers
died
from
occupational
diseases,
and
at
least
4.6
million
workers
were
reported
injured.
The
report
can
be
downloaded
at
www.aflcio.org.
Arkansas
Chamber
Ads
Say
it
All:
Big
Business
Wants
Sen.
Lincoln
Re-Elected
Nothing
scares
Big
Business
as
much
as a
pro-worker
elected
official.
Which
explains
why
the
Arkansas
Chamber
of
Commerce
is
desperately
trying
to
keep
Lt.
Governor
and
Democrat
Bill
Halter
out
of
the
U.S.
Senate.
The
Chamber
is
running
TV
ads
championing
Halter's
Democratic
opponent,
incumbent
Sen.
Blanche
Lincoln,
who
joined
Republicans
in
opposing
the
Employee
Free
Choice
Act
and
voting
against
health
care
reform.
The
primary
is
May
18.
The
Chamber
ads
praise
Lincoln
for
supporting
small
business
and
family
farms.
The
ads
don't
mention
that
Lincoln
and
her
family
collected
$715,000
in
federal
farm
subsidies
between
1995
and
2005,
while
Lincoln
used
her
political
power
to
fight
proposals
to
cut
the
payments
for
wealthy
farmers.
CWA
Proposes
'Middle
Ground'
to
Protect
an
Open
Internet,
Promote
Jobs
CWA
mapped
out
a
middle
course
for
the
Federal
Communications
Commission
to
follow
in
crafting
rules
to
protect
an
open
and
free
Internet.
In
comments
submitted
to
the
FCC's
Open
Internet
Proceeding,
CWA
noted
that
the
FCC's
National
Broadband
Plan
sets
ambitious
broadband
deployment
goals
to
bring
our
nation's
infrastructure
to
global
standards,
which
will
be
financed
mostly
with
private
capital.
The
FCC
should
chart
a
middle
course
by
adopting
rules
that
will
maintain
a
free
and
open
Internet
while
preserving
adequate
incentives
to
promote
job-creating
investment
in
innovative
broadband
networks.
Network
providers
like
telecommunications
and
cable
companies
made
capital
investments
of
more
than
11
times
that
of
application
providers
in
2008
and
2009,
and
employed
almost
ten
times
more
Americans
in
good-paying
family
supporting
jobs
than
the
application
providers.
CWA
stressed
that
network
providers
must
have
the
flexibility
they
need
to
manage
and
innovate
over
their
networks.
In
turn,
consumers
should
be
protected
from
"unjust
and
unreasonable"
discrimination
on
the
Internet.
Such
a
standard
would
protect
consumers'
ability
to
access
all
legal
content
on
the
Internet
without
foreclosing
their
ability
to
experience
the
specialized
quality
of
service
needed
for
telemedicine,
distance
learning,
public
safety,
entertainment
and
other
purposes.
CWA
continues
to
urge
the
industry
to
agree
voluntarily
to
the
FCC's
existing
four
Internet
Principles,
as
well
as a
fifth
regarding
transparency
that
would
require
providers
to
report
the
actual
speeds,
reliability,
contract
terms,
privacy
policies,
service
limits
and
traffic
management. |