April 9, 2009
- Labor Leaders Form National Labor Coordinating
Committee
- Members Mobilize Nationwide as AT&T Bargaining
Continues
-
Union-Community Coalition in Lynn, Mass., Protests
Bank Abuses
- Local 3570 President Runs for Mayor in Jackson,
Misss.
- New Ad Exposes Greed of Companies Fighting
Employee Free Choice
- Retired
Dist. 2 VP Peter Catucci, 60, Succumbs After Valiant
Fight
- 400 Health Care Workers Join CWA in California
and New York
- May Deadlines Set for Annual Newsletter, Website
Contests
Labor Leaders Form National Labor
Coordinating Committee
Organizations representing 16 million working people
-- affiliates of the AFL-CIO and Change to Win and the
National Education Association -- have come together to
create a new National Labor Coordinating Committee to
act nationally on critical issues facing working
families.
"Recognizing the historic moment we face, the
American labor movement must unify to restore the
American dream for working families," said David Bonior,
the facilitator of the unification effort. Bonior
serves as chair of American Rights at Work.
The Committee will work on some of the biggest
challenges confronting our nation, including the reform
of our labor laws, the renewal of our economy and the
passage of national health reform.
"The Committee pledged to complete its consultations
among affiliates and other work on unification plans
over the coming months. A unified labor movement is the
way to ensure that the vast majority of Americans who
want a union are able to join one," Bonior said.
CWA President Larry Cohen has been the leading
advocate of the reunification effort and has worked for
several years to bring about a united labor movement.
The members of the National Labor Coordinating
Committee are the Presidents of AFL-CIO, Change To Win,
and these unions:
National Education Association
American Federation of State County and Municipal
Employees
American Federation of Teachers
Communications Workers of America
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers
International Brotherhood of Teamsters
Laborers International Union of North America
Service Employees International Union
Unite Here
United Auto Workers
United Food and Commercial Workers
United Steelworkers of America
Members Mobilize Nationwide as AT&T Bargaining
Continues
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CWA Local 6316 member spreads
the CWA message. |
In the days since their contracts expired last
weekend, CWA members at AT&T have stepped up a busy
schedule of rallies and actions. From leafleting outside
the NCAA basketball finals and opening day of Major
League Baseball games to demonstrations outside AT&T
offices and even more standups and taps inside AT&T
operations, CWA members sent management a clear message:
we want a fair contract.
Five of the six contracts between CWA and AT&T
expired April 4. The contract covering workers at AT&T
Southeast expires Aug. 8 and bargaining will resume in
July.
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Informational picketing is
a a family affair for members of CWA Local 1298.
|
For now, employees are continuing to report to work,
but that could change at any time. Members are working
under the terms of the expired contracts, with the
exception of arbitration for new grievances.
Negotiations covering nearly 100,000 AT&T workers
covered by five contracts are continuing, but CWA has
called on the company to step up the pace of
negotiations. AT&T has been dragging its feet and has
not moved forward on critical issues for workers,
including employment security and health care.
In just four days, an Internet campaign and e-support
from CWA activists have resulted in more than 20,000
signers to a statement of support protesting corporate
greed and calling on AT&T not to cut middle class jobs
and benefits. CWAers are signing up friends, family and
co-workers to make sure AT&T gets the message, said CWA
Executive Vice President Annie Hill. Go to
www.standupforworkers.com or click on the ads when
you see them on news, political and entertainment sites.
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Hundreds of District 4
members leafleted outside the AT&T-sponsored
NCAA basketball finals in Detroit. |
In Detroit, hundreds of CWA members from Michigan,
Ohio and Indiana turned out for rallies and leafleting
over the past week outside Ford Field, where the
AT&T-sponsored NCAA basketball finals were played. Signs
called out AT&T for corporate greed and pointed out that
the company's comparisons to the auto industry just
don't hold up.
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District 9 members turned out
for the opening day of Giants baseball in San
Francisco with a message for AT&T. |
In San Francisco, District 9 members turned out in
force for the Giants opening ballgame April 7. Rain
washed out plans by the CWA "Steward's Navy" on the
waterfront, "but the landlubbers had a great time," said
Libby Sayre, the district's area director for northern
California. "More than 60 soggy activists from 9410,
9415, 9412, 9423, 9421, and 9404 and NABET kept spirits
high with signs and chants. We distributed several
hundred fliers to Giants fans with "Go Giants" or the
opening day roster on one side and a CWA flier on the
other."
CWA Local 4900 turned Local 6222's solidarity song
into hip-hop music and used it for a mobilization video.
Watch it on YouTube at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VurUJAusLeo&feature=email.
Updates on bargaining, more photos and other
information are available at
www.cwa-union.org/att.
Union-Community
Coalition in Lynn, Mass, Protests Bank Abuses
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IUE-CWA members
joined hundreds of fellow activists in Lynn,
Mass., to protest Bank of America's home
foreclosures and anti-Employee Free Choice
campaign. |
Sixty IUE-CWA members were among several hundred
union activists and supporters in Lynn, Mass., who
protested Bank of America's numerous home foreclosures
and its anti-union campaign, all while taking taxpayers'
bailout money.
Bank of America got $45 billion in bailout funds but
that hasn't stopped it from lobbying against the
Employee Free Choice Act, said IUE-CWA Local 81201
President Jeff Crosby.
At the rally, Crosby rejected the claims of Bank of
America and other corporate opponents of Employee Free
Choice that now is a "bad time" to pass the bill.
"They say it's a bad time to encourage unions because
of the economy," Crosby said. "Well when we passed the
National Labor Relations Act in 1935 it was the middle
of the Great Depression. Unemployment was over 20
percent, three times what it is today. And unions
helped us build good jobs that sustained the economy for
the next 40 years. Unions are the solution, not the
problem."
Roger Moreau, chief steward at the Lynn Waste Water
Treatment plant, described the trouble he and his
coworkers had organizing a union with their employer
fighting them every step of the way.
"They fired two people," Moreau said. "It took us
three years to fight through the lies and intimidation.
Since we finally won a union through Local 81201, we
have started a pension, we made decent wages, we have
job security. We are part of the community here and we
can contribute. We need a fair and safe way to form
unions."
Local 3570 President Runs for Mayor in Jackson,
Misss.
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Brenda Scott, president of
CWA Local 3570 and candidate for mayor of
Jackson, Miss. |
Brenda Scott, president of CWA Local 3570, is running
for mayor of Jackson, Miss., a city and state where she
has successfully organized more than 3,000 members
against some of the toughest odds in the country.
"Brenda has done this in a state where there are no
collective bargaining laws for public workers and no
legal right for dues check-off for public workers," said
Beverly Hicks, CWA District 3 Vice President. "She has
been successful over the years against all odds, and CWA
is proud that the Mississippi labor movement has joined
us in supporting her."
Scott has been endorsed by Mississippi's AFL-CIO and
many religious and community organizations and is one of
16 people running in the May 5 primary election. The
general election is June. 2. Locals and individuals who
want to help support her campaign can go to
www.brendascott4mayor.com. Contributions may be
mailed to Scott's campaign at P.O. Box 1765, Jackson MS
39215.
New Ad Exposes Greed of Companies Fighting Employee
Free Choice
As thousands of union activists are using the
Congressional recess to talk to lawmakers about the
Employee Free Choice Act, a new TV ad hit national
airwaves Thursday exposing the true motive – greed -- of
those spending millions to try to defeat the bill.
The hard-hitting ad calls out corporations, many of
which have received billions of dollars in
taxpayer-funded bailouts at the same time they are
fighting organizing and bargaining rights for workers.
"The public and lawmakers alike need to know that the
special interests opposing the Employee Free Choice Act
are the same ones that caused this economic meltdown,"
said Mary Beth Maxwell, executive director for American
Rights at Work. "This new ad sends a resolute message
that now is the time to help workers bargain for a
better life."
"Greed" and another ad, "Fabric of America," can be
viewed at
www.freechoiceact.org.
While Congress is in spring recess until April 17,
activities underway nationwide include rallies,
leafleting, lobbying, town hall meetings, moving
billboards featuring huge photos of workers, community
forums, vigils, call-in days, and more. CWAers, workers
struggling to organize, students, elected officials,
civil rights leaders and others are participating.
Retired Dist. 2 VP Peter Catucci, 60, Succumbs After
Valiant Fight
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Peter G. Catucci |
Retired District 2 Vice President Peter G. Catucci,
who spent a lifetime fighting for working families, died
April 3 after battling ALS disease for more than two
years. Catucci, 60, was CWA's longest-serving district
vice president, having won election to the post at CWA's
48th Convention in 1986.
About a month ago, Catucci and CWA President Larry
Cohen were in attendance at the White House as President
Barack Obama signed an executive order that removed
restrictions on responsible scientific research and
federal funding for embryonic stem cell research. Since
stepping down as a CWA leader in 2008, Catucci had been
a tireless fighter to restore the funds.
"Pete's service to our union is legend," said CWA
President Larry Cohen. "He helped lead many of the
positive changes we made in recent years,
including CWA's groundbreaking 'Ready for the Future'
restructuring," Cohen said, adding "Pete's beloved
District 2 was his constant focus beyond his family."
District 2 Vice President Ron Collins, a long-time
friend and colleague, praised Catucci's "incomparable
fighting spirit during his years of service to his union
and in finding a cure for those suffering from ALS."
Catucci's commitment to working men and women began
in 1968 when he joined CWA Local 2336 after going to
work at C & P Telephone, now Verizon. Catucci served as
steward, strike captain and executive vice president
before being elected local president in 1976. As
president, Catucci lead the local through tough rounds
of bargaining.
Elected District 2 Vice President in 1986, Catucci's
leadership and dedication to organizing helped bring CWA
representation to thousands of workers in sectors
including airlines, health care, public service,
printing, news media, broadcast, cable TV, higher
education and law enforcement.
Despite his February 2007 diagnosis of ALS,
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also known as Lou
Gehrig's disease, Catucci continued to devote time and
energy over the next two years to pressing for an end to
restrictions on the federal funding of embryonic stem
cell research. Catucci retired at the CWA Convention in
June 2008. He told delegates that he would continue to
keep up the fight for stem cell research and for the
Employee Free Choice Act, which he called "stem cell
research for the labor movement."
Catucci is survived by his wife, Terry; Children,
Nick, Traci and Francesca. The family has asked that
donations be made to the 4 Pete's Sake ALS Foundation,
Attn: Kurt Weigert, 1020 Cromwell Bridge Road, Towson,
MD 21286.
400 Health Care Workers Join CWA in California and
New York
Nearly 400 health care workers gained CWA
representation through organizing campaigns in
California and New York.
A unit of 63 licensed practical nurses and medical
technicians at the Faxton campus of the Faxton-St.
Luke's Health Center, in Utica, N.Y., voted for CWA
Local 1126 by a big 40-16 margin, said District 1 Vice
President Chris Shelton. Workers wanted the same level
of benefits – guaranteed pay raises, medical benefits,
and job security – that nearly 800 CWA-represented LPNs,
RNs, and technicians at St. Luke's already have.
More than 300 medical interpreters and clinical
research coordinators at the University of California
medical centers have joined the Union of Professional
and Technical Employees-CWA Local 9119, District 9 Vice
President Jim Weitkamp said.
UTPE-Local 9119 already represents nearly 12,000
workers throughout the University of California system.
UTPE-Local 9119 also reached a first contract for 150
skilled trades employees at the Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory in Lawrence, Calif. Workers won
union certification last year through majority signup,
but their employer-contractor, the Bechtel Corp., had
tried to block workers' union choice by privatizing
their jobs; that move was unsuccessful.
May Deadlines Set for Annual Newsletter, Website
Contests
Entries are now being accepted for CWA's 2009 local
newsletter and website contests. The contests recognize
the hard work of all editors, webmasters and others who
devote their time and energy to membership
communications.
The deadline to enter the 26th-annual newsletter
contest is Friday, May 8. All locals were notified by
e-mail this week, and information, rules and entry forms
are posted online at
http://www.cwa-union.org/newslettercontest.
The web contest deadline is Friday, May 15. Awards
will be given for best local website, best electronic
newsletter and best local online advocacy campaign.
Entry forms are available at
http://www.cwa-union.org/ecom.
Panels of expert judges from outside CWA will judge
the contests. Awards will be presented at the 2009 CWA
convention in Washington, D.C. in June. |