August 27, 2009
- U.S.
Still Lags Behind Many Countries in Internet Speed
- CWA Members a Peaceful Presence at Rowdy
Town Hall Meeting in Virginia
-
CWA Mourns Death of Senator Edward Kennedy, Hero to
America's Working Families
- RMC President Bobby Brown Dies; Active CWA
Member for Six Decades
- Whole
Foods CEO Slams Workers' Rights, Health Care Reform
- CWA Calls for Labor Unity, Governance Reform at
AFL-CIO Convention
- 'Turn Off NBC' Bus Ads NABET's Latest Tool in
Fight for Fairness
- Register Now for CWA Safety and Health
Conference in San Diego
U.S. Still Lags Behind Many Countries in Internet
Speed
When it comes to Internet speed, the United States is
improving -- at a snail's pace.
CWA's third annual Speed Matters report on Internet
speed is getting a lot of buzz, with industry officials,
regulators and lots of others talking about it. It's
been covered by national and local newspapers and radio
and television stations across the country.
The United States ranks 28th in the world in terms of
Internet speed, with countries like Japan, South Korea,
Sweden and others far ahead. "At our current rate of
progress, it will take the United States 15 years to
catch up with current Internet speeds in South Korea
which are currently four times faster than the U.S.,"
CWA President Larry Cohen said.
Check out how your state and county compare at
www.speedmatters.org. The report found that only 20
percent of users had Internet speeds anywhere those of
South Korea and other top-ranked countries and nearly 20
percent of those taking the speed test didn't even
measure up to the FCC's definition of high speed, a slow
768 kilobits per second.
Speed matters, Cohen said, because new jobs and
America's ability to compete in a high-tech age are
directly linked to Internet speed and access. "Continued
job growth, innovation and rural development require
high-speed, universal networks," he said, as do advances
in tele-medicine, distance learning and new applications
being developed every day.
CWA Members a Peaceful Presence at Rowdy Town Hall
Meeting in Virginia
 |
|
CWA Local 2222 members Tim
Firebaugh, Joe Cooper, Don Lewis and Dolores
Trevino-Gerber served as marshals for a town
hall meeting in Virginia with Rep. James Moran.
Below, CWAers from D6 and other union activists
stand up for health care reform at a town hall
meeting in Beeville, Tex., with Rep. Ruben
Hinojosa. |
 |
CWAers helped staff a town hall meeting in northern
Virginia that drew an overflow crowd of people in favor
of health care reform, as well as the antis carrying
Nazi signs and bullhorns.
"It was 80 percent to 20 percent, in favor of people
who support reform," said Tim Firebaugh, congressional
district coordinator for CWA Local 2222. "The problem
was the 20 percent. They were there to disrupt. When
Governor Howard Dean was introduced they got so loud
that you couldn't even hear the man speak."
Dean, former head of the Democratic National
Committee and a physician, joined Rep. Jim Moran (D-Va.)
at a local high school. Long lines formed outside hours
before the 7 p.m. event, with the vast majority of
people chatting quietly and holding pro-reform signs.
Firebaugh and other union members, coordinated by the
Northern Virginia Area Labor Federation, acted as
marshals to keep the lines in order and direct people to
the auditorium and restrooms. Their peaceful demeanor
didn't stop opponents from calling them "union thugs."
One woman in line accosted CWA's health care campaign
coordinator Dolores Gerber when she saw a CWA insignia
on Gerber's shirt. Gerber said: "She asked why 'union
thugs' were at the event. I told her I was a union
member and proud of it and I was a constituent of
congressional district 8, was she? She fumbled around
and said it was a public meeting."
CWA
Mourns Death of Senator Edward Kennedy,
Hero to
America's Working Families
In a media statement, CWA President Larry Cohen
expressed the sorrow that CWAers felt on the death of
Senator Edward Kennedy.
Throughout a lifetime of public service, Senator
Kennedy made improving the lives of working men and
women his cause. Health care for all, an end to
discrimination, fairness and respect for workers, these
were Senator Kennedy's passions, CWA President Larry
Cohen said. "He has a special place in the hearts of CWA
members," Cohen said.
Cohen met with Kennedy the day before President
Obama's inauguration, and said Kennedy was determined to
complete two goals -- passage of the Employee Free
Choice Act and real health care reform. "That dream
will go on, and we will do so in his name," Cohen
pledged.
Every major advance, every step forward for working
families came about because of Kennedy's efforts:
Medicare and Medicaid, family and medical leave,
workers' rights, retirement security, equal rights and
fair treatment for women, civil rights for people of
color, the list goes on and on.
"We will extend that legacy when we achieve one of
Senator Kennedy's greatest passions, health care for
all," Cohen said.
RMC President Bobby Brown Dies; Active CWA Member
for Six Decades
 |
|
RMC President
Bobby Brown at CWA convention. |
Bobby Ray Brown, president of CWA's Retired Members'
Council and a Local 6201 member for nearly 60 years,
died Aug. 24 in Texas.
"Bobby was a leader, not only for the RMC and
District 6, but across CWA," CWA President Larry Cohen
said. "He was also a force throughout AT&T and provided
constant representation to retired workers on the issues
most important to them."
"But mostly I will remember Bobby as the best of
CWA. He always put our union first, inspiring so many
of us to be the best we can be," Cohen said.
Brown, who was 79, had been recently diagnosed with a
brain tumor, but gave a dynamic address to CWA
convention delegates this past June.
Brown got his start as a communications technician
during the Korean War, serving in the U.S. Army attached
to an Air Force unit. When he returned, he began a
40-year career at SBC (now AT&T), and joined CWA. Always
an active member, he served as one of his local's vice
presidents.
After retiring, he was elected president of his
Retired Members' Council chapter, then president of RMC
District 6. He continued in his District 6 role after
being elected RMC president in January 2009. He also
continued to serve on Local 6201's legislative-political
committee.
A lifelong Democratic activist, Brown gave his time
to community projects and local politics, serving as a
city council member and mayor pro tem in Haslet, near
Fort Worth.
Survivors include his wife, Priscilla, four children,
13 grand-children and 14 great-grandchildren.
Whole Foods CEO Slams Workers' Rights, Health Care
Reform
Whole Foods shoppers have long paid a premium for
wholesome food they thought they were buying from a
socially conscious retailer. Turns out it's been
bait-and-switch all along.
Whole Foods CEO John Mackey has publicly attacked the
Employee Free Choice Act and real health care reform.
Now consumers and unions are fighting back.
In the time since Mackey wrote an anti-reform op-ed
for the Wall Street Journal, outraged shoppers have
launched boycotts that are rapidly spreading through
online social networks and blogs.
"While all of us empathize with those who are sick,
how can we say that all people have more of an intrinsic
right to health care than they have to food or shelter?"
Mackey wrote. "This 'right' has never existed in
America." A public option is "the last thing our country
needs," he declared.
Mackey has been working behind the scenes to strip
out majority sign-up and other key provisions from the
Employee Free Choice Act, and likes to boast that his
stores are "100 percent union-free."
But union members, consumers and activists are
showing up in force outside Mackey's stores nationwide.
This week UFCW members in St. Paul, Minn., demonstrated
in front of a local Whole Foods as the start of a
campaign to educate shoppers about Mackey's efforts to
undermine health care reform and workers' rights.
CWA Calls for Labor Unity, Governance Reform at
AFL-CIO Convention
CWA will press for constitutional amendments that
call for better use of financial resources by the
AFL-CIO and changes to improve governance. The
constitutional amendments plus a resolution on Labor
Unity have been submitted for consideration by AFL-CIO
delegates next month.
Rich Trumka, AFL-CIO secretary-treasurer, and certain
to be the next AFL-CIO president, spoke and answered
questions at the August CWA Executive Board meeting.
The resolution on Labor Unity calls on the AFL-CIO to
continue to support the National Labor Coordinating
Committee and the NLCC goal of uniting the labor
movement.
The leaders of 11 major unions, including the
National Education Association, plus the AFL-CIO and
Change to Win, have been working for a united labor
movement that will best serve the interests of working
people at this critical time in our history. The NLCC
also coordinates work on the Employee Free Choice Act,
health care, and other issues.
'Turn Off NBC' Bus Ads NABET's Latest Tool in Fight
for Fairness
 |
|
NABET-CWA
message makes its way around Washington, D.C.
|
NABET-CWA members in Washington, D.C., are asking
local residents to "Turn Off NBC 4" to support their
fight for a fair contract as the network continues its
union-busting campaign.
Bus ads, mobile billboards and an Internet campaign
are the latest efforts by NABET-CWA activists in
Washington and in New York, Los Angeles and Chicago to
build support for a fair contract. The stations employ
2,500 NABET-CWA members.
The network wants to change workers' job titles, but
not their jobs, to move work out of the bargaining
unit. NBC is also demanding changes in the seniority
system that could hurt longterm employees.
The workers' contract expired March 31.
Register Now for CWA Safety and Health Conference in
San Diego
Join CWA's health and safety team in San Diego in
October for the Occupational Safety and Health
Conference, where experts will help you tackle the flu,
ergonomics, toxic materials and other hazards workers
face on the job.
The conference is Oct. 3-5 at the Holiday Inn
On-the-Bay in San Diego. Seminars also will cover
recordkeeping, leadership skills and what the Obama
administration is doing to protect workers and overturn
anti-worker rules from the Bush administration.
Participants should register for the conference and
at the hotel by Sept. 11.
More information and registration details are at
http://cwa-union.org/issues/osh/2009conference.html.
|