September 17, 2009
Cohen to AFL-CIO: Organizing is Key to Playing
Offense for America's Workers
More workers with bargaining rights means a bigger,
stronger voice for all workers, which is why organizing
even in the toughest of times is labor's number-one
job, CWA President Larry Cohen told delegates to the
AFL-CIO convention in Pittsburgh.
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CWA Pres. Larry Cohen, chair of
the AFL-CIO Organizing Committee, gets delegates
fired up. |
"Every leader in this room, every delegate, every
shop steward, this is our message: We don't flinch. We
can't just play defense. We can't just defend the
contracts that we inherited," Cohen said.
Cohen recognized CWA members at Comcast in Pittsburgh
who struggled for years to join the union and flight
attendants at Delta who are fighting to be AFA-CWA
members.
"These are the real heroes of our movement," Cohen
said, asking the CWA members to stand and recognizing
members of other unions who were invited to tell their
organizing stories at the convention.
Cohen applauded President Obama's Labor Day speech in
Cincinnati, saying it lays the groundwork for a vote in
Congress soon on the Employee Free Choice Act.
"It's been decades since we heard something like
this, the president of the United States saying, 'Every
American owes something to America's labor movement,
even if you're not a union member,'" Cohen said.
"In our darkest moments, we need to take that to
heart. We need to tell our members that if the president
of the United States can say that, we can't forget it.
That becomes the enthusiasm and the groundswell that
will now drive our movement forward."
Obama Vows Support for Labor's Goals, Delegates
Endorse Labor Unity
President Barack Obama promised AFL-CIO convention
delegates that he was dedicated to rebuilding America's
middle class by giving workers and unions the tools to
rebuild a strong labor movement. "When labor succeeds
that's when the United States of America succeeds," he
said.
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At the AFL-CIO Convention,
President Obama vowed to build the middle class
by fighting for labor's goals. |
The president said he will fight for labor's goals
restoring the economy, protecting and creating good
jobs, fighting for quality and affordable health care,
and passing the Employee Free Choice Act. "These are the
reforms the American people need, and these are the
reforms I intend to sign into law," he said.
President Obama said he refused to go back to a
business and political culture that hurt the nation and
economy. "We're not going to go back to those days," he
declared. "It would be bad for unions, bad for the
middle class...We're not turning back. We're moving
forward," he said.
Delegates pass Unity resolution.
Submitted by CWA, AFL-CIO delegates adopted a resolution
on labor unity that supports continuing the work of the
National Labor Coordinating Committee to reunify labor.
The NLCC is made up of Change to Win, the AFL-CIO, the
10 largest unions plus the National Education
Association which has never been affiliated with the
AFL-CIO.
AFL-CIO leaders elected. Delegates
elected Richard Trumka, former AFL-CIO
Secretary-Treasurer, to head the AFL-CIO. Liz Shuler,
former executive assistant to the IBEW president, was
elected secretary-treasurer and Arlene Holt Baker was
re-elected executive vice president.
Delegates Pledge to take Comcast Workers' Fight Back
to their Communities
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Convention delegates pledged to
take up Comcast workers' fight for fairness. The
cable workers hold up a banner featuring Comcast
worker and activist John Pezzana. |
Comcast workers' fight for fair contracts and a union
voice was taken on by 2,500 AFL-CIO convention delegates
who signed a CWA petition to educate elected officials,
community leaders and activists in their hometowns about
Comcast's attack on workers' rights.
Not so long ago, some 5,000 workers at Comcast had
bargaining rights. Far fewer do today, the result of
Comcast's refusal to bargain fairly and its continuing
harassment and assault on workers who try to organize.
Convention delegates honored a strong group of CWA
members at Comcast in Pittsburgh who fought to keep
their union through four elections over five years and
are pressing Comcast for a fair contract.
Puerto Rico Fight: Stimulus
Dollars Paying for Paper's Scab Workers
Puerto Rico newspaper workers
who were pushed out of their jobs at El Vocero in July
and replaced by non-union employees continue to picket
their building and offices of local politicians who are
channeling U.S. stimulus fund to the union-busting
publisher.
"Local mayors and Puerto Rico's
secretary of labor have been giving stimulus money
taxpayer dollars to publisher Miguel Roca through sham
companies that he set up to hire scabs to do our work,"
TNG-CWA President Bernie Lunzer said.
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Members of
TNG-CWA 33225 (UPAGRA) in Puerto Rico march in
front of the El Vocero newspaper building in San
Juan to protest their replacement with scab
workers. |
Nestor Soto, a CWA executive
board at-large member and president of TNG-CWA Local
33225 (UPAGRA), has uncovered a paper trail proving that
Roca has received at least $4.4 million in Workforce
Investment Fund money to pay his new non-union
employees.
Those
workers were hired after 107 employees
in El Vocero's front office, distribution and printing
operations were locked out of their jobs
on July 5. Roca claims they were laid off.
CWA is supporting the UPAGRA
members with funds set aside for victims of collective
bargaining strategies. Every week, the union gets a
permit to shut down the street in front of the El
Vocero's San Juan offices for a mass picket.
"We are very grateful to the
executive board for recognizing what an injustice this
is and helping us support our members while they fight
back," Lunzer said.
The union is also trying to
recover money from Roca that is missing from workers'
401(k) funds and other accounts, and is pursing legal
strategies over his refusal since last year to make
required contributions to their TNG-CWA pension fund.
Conference Helps Empower CWA Women
"CWA Women Building for the Future" was the focus of
the national women's conference in St. Louis, and more
than 150 CWAers joined in activities and discussions
designed to empower women as leaders, unionists and
political activists.
CWA Executive Vice President Annie Hill outlined
CWA's campaign to help win real health care reform.
CWA's priorities call for an employer mandate, measures
to protect retirees, a public option and no taxes on
workers' health benefits and plans. "Health care reform
is something we must do," she said.
Sessions focused on ways to establish effective
women's committees, bring more young workers into the
labor movement, how CWA women are leading in our union,
and social networking and other new tools to reach the
next generation of women workers.
In a unique presentation, members of the National
Women's Committee dressed as famous and pioneering
American women, including Mother Jones and Harriet
Tubman, to bring to life their efforts in the fight for
women's equality.
Participants also heard from CWA President Larry
Cohen, District 6 Vice President Andy Milburn and
Madelyn Elder, an at-large executive board member.
Members of the National Womens Committee are
Kathleen Hernandez, chair, District 1, Local 1031;
Claudia Cole, District 2, Local 2336; Vonda Hardy,
District 3, Local 3640; Angie Miller, District 4, Local
4108; Virginia Anderson-Dunbar, District 6, Local 6300;
Shari Wojtowicz, District 7, Local 7250; Gayle Crawley,
District 9, Local 9410 and Mary Behling, District 13,
Local 13301.
CWA and UAW Form New Legislative Alliance
CWA and the UAW have set up a new legislative
alliance that will work to advance the issues important
to the unions' 2 million active and retired workers and
all working families: workers' bargaining rights through
the Employee Free Choice Act, real health care reform,
fair trade, retirement security and more.
CWA President Larry Cohen and UAW President Ron
Gettelfinger said the alliance will increase the
effectiveness of legislative efforts and also will
continue the unions' joint work on telecommunications
and automotive issues.
The unions will make staff and other resources
available to the new alliance; other operations,
including bargaining, international affairs, political
action, and others will remain separate.
AT&T Mobility Workers in Caribbean, Washington State
Join CWA
Workers at AT&T Mobility continue to demonstrate that
they want union representation and are using majority
sign-up to get their union voice.
More than 170 AT&T workers from the U.S. Virgin
Islands and Washington State are the latest mobility
workers to join CWA, including 141 network technicians
and engineers from Washington state and 30 retail store
workers in St. Thomas and St. Croix.
The workers in the Virgin Islands were assisted by
District 3 Organizing Coordinator Liz Roberson.
Washington state workers will be members of WashTech CWA
Local 37083; Local 37083 organizer Malachy Sreenan,
president Les French and vice presidents Anna Bloomquist
and James Burdick supported the campaign.
Labor's Allies
Travel to DC to Fight for Employee Free Choice
More than 300 activists from around the country,
representing small business, veterans, farmers, civil
rights and faith leaders and other allies went to
Capitol Hill to tell their members of Congress that the
Employee Free Choice Act is critical to rebuilding
America's economy.
CWAers escorted groups that visited with members of
the Arkansas Democratic delegation, including Senators
Blanche Lincon and Mark Pryor and Representatives Vic
Synder and Mike Ross.
The activists said that they support Employee Free
Choice for a number of reasons, including these:
- We can best grow a new, clean energy economy
with high-road jobs and a skilled, union workforce.
- Our faiths teach us that workers have a
fundamental right to make their own decisions about
bargaining with their employers, and to have jobs
with dignity, safe working conditions, and a living
wage.
- Unions improve the lives of working people
regardless of race, ethnicity, creed, gender, sexual
orientation, or gender identity, and union
membership lifts wages significantly for women and
people of color.
- Respecting rights in the workplace leads to
civic participation at home and thus better public
policies that serve the needs of the entire
community.
Obama College Rally for
Health Reform Draws CWAers, Thousands of Students
Members of CWA locals in Maryland and Washington,
D.C., were among thousands of people who turned out for
President Obama's health care rally at the University of
Maryland in College Park.
"Our members got there at 6:30 this morning but still
couldn't get in," said Local 2336 President Michael
Harris. Wearing CWA red were members of Locals 2106,
2107, 2108 and 2336. After waiting many hours, about
17,000 people finally got inside the university's
basketball arena to hear the President.
Obama stressed that far from a "government takeover,"
a public option for health care is simply a way to give
people a choice of insurers and spur competition. He
compared it to a public university, like the one his
audience attends. "Nobody says we are taking over
private colleges. What we're doing is giving students a
choice," Obama said. "You should have the choice the
same way in your health care." |