November 1, 2007
Last Chance to
Vote in CWA's Election E-Poll!
If you haven't voted yet, there are just a few days
left to let CWA know your choice for president, and
whether CWA should make an early endorsement in the 2008
presidential race. Go to
www.cwavotes.org and make your voice heard. The
voting deadline is November 9. Approximately 25 locals
have reached our goal of getting 10% or more of thier
members to vote.
And check out the message from CWA President Larry
Cohen urging all members and retirees to vote at
www.cwa-union.org.
CWA
Local 1298 and AT&T Fight for U-Verse and 1,300 Jobs
"Unity at AT&T" took on a whole new meaning in
District 1, as members of CWA Local 1298 in Hartford,
Conn., took action in support AT&T's "U-Verse" – the
company's high-speed broadband and television service.
Those efforts paid off on Oct. 31 when a Superior
Court Judge overturned a decision by the state utility
board that would have blocked AT&T from competing with
cable companies.
"In a rare move, AT&T and Local 1298 have partnered
to save 1,300 jobs," said District 1 Vice President
Chris Shelton. "With this victory, Local 1298 has shown
what a mobilized membership can achieve."
Local 1298 President Bill Henderson said, "We at CWA
Local 1298 are thrilled and want to thank our members
for all their efforts on this issue. Because of the
court's decision, the layoff threat for 1,300 members
has been circumvented."
Some 200 Local 1298 members rallied on Oct. 18
against the utility board decision, and Henderson, along
with top officers and business agents from the local,
attended an Oct. 26 Superior Court hearing seeking to
overturn the DPUC decision.
The local delivered more than 13,000 letters from
employees, friends and customers telling leaders of the
State Legislature that "DPUC got it wrong" and asking
them to call a special session to overturn the decision.
Henderson and an AT&T executive also appeared
together on a YouTube video encouraging CWA members to
contact the governor and state legislators to urge them
to overturn a Department of Public Utility Control
decision that would have made it impossible for AT&T's
U-Verse high-speed broadband and TV service to compete
with cable TV companies. Watch the video and get more
information at
www.cwa1298.org.
State regulators originally determined in 2006 that
U-Verse, because it is a new technology using Internet
protocol, was not a cable service, would not be
regulated as such and therefore did not require a
franchise license. AT&T quickly swung into action to
roll out U-Verse to neighborhoods and customers.
Cable companies challenged that decision and a
federal court reversed that ruling, finding that U-Verse
does meet the federal definition of a cable company
under the Cable TV Act. But the court's decision gave
individual states great leeway in regulating cable
providers.
Last month, state regulators declared that AT&T must
cease deployment of U-Verse and abandon customers who
had already signed up, unless it was willing to apply
for a cable license and build a network to serve the
entire state.
AT&T and CWA maintained that the regulations and
requirements previously imposed on cable companies were
as a result of the virtual monopoly that cable enjoyed.
To impose those same requirements on companies that
compete with a completely new and different technology –
in this case Internet protocol -- would be cost
prohibitive and deprive consumers of a choice of
providers.
Activists Collect 5,000 Postcards Urging NH Governor to
"Stop the Sale"
A delegation of CWA & IBEW members, teachers, first
responders, civic leaders and others delivered a
wheelbarrow full of 5,000 "Stop the Sale" post cards to
New Hampshire's governor as public hearings continued
over the proposed tax-free sale of Verizon's access
lines in New England to FairPoint Communications.
The signed post cards were gathered through a
door-to-door canvas of households across the state and
urged Governor John Lynch to "take a strong stand
against allowing Verizon to sell its assets to
FairPoint."
CWA and IBEW have been mobilizing workers, community
and consumer groups to demonstrate the growing
opposition to the sale. CWA research economist Kenneth
Peres testified at the Oct. 30 hearing, stressing that
FairPoint lacks the financial resources to provide
reliable service to customers, especially high-speed
Internet services. A media campaign, including radio
messages and Internet ads, also are spreading the word
among residents that the proposed sale is a bad deal for
consumers.
The ads and more information can be found at
www.stopthesalenow.org. A decision by the state's
public utility commission is expected within the next
several weeks.
At a news conference at the state house, members of
the delegation delivering the postcards described how
the sale would harm telephone service, hurt jobs and the
region's economy.
"Cutting edge technology is essential to keeping good
paying jobs in the state," said Mark MacKenzie,
President of the New Hampshire AFL-CIO. "If the sale is
approved it could send New Hampshire and its economy
backwards."
First responders charged that the proposal "poses
risks that firefighters do not want to take. In order to
assess the risk of an emergency, we need reliable
information." Small business owners expressed concerns
about a move by state regulators that could put future
economic development at risk.
House Committee Unanimously Backs Broadband Census
Bill
CWA commended the House Energy and Commerce Committee
for its unanimous approval of the Broadband Census of
America Act of 2007, H.R. 3919.
The House bill incorporates key provisions supported
by CWA's "Speed Matters" campaign, which calls on
Congress to establish a national Internet policy to
improve the quality, availability and affordability of
high speed broadband service to every community. It is
similar to the Broadband Data Improvement Act, S. 1492,
which also was unanimously approved by the Senate
Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee.
The votes raise the hope of quick action by Congress
to move toward a national policy that will bring about
high speed Internet access for every American.
"In order for our country to move forward to ensure
that a 21st century Internet is available for all, we
need better data to help us get there. This measure will
greatly improve the quality of that information," said
CWA President Larry Cohen.
In a letter to committee members, CWA Executive Vice
President Jeff Rechenbach said CWA especially endorses
the provision that calls for a "public, online map
showing what types of broadband access are provided
where, and by whom." The bill also would require the
Federal Communications Commission to report speed of
service, type of technology and other measures.
More information on CWA's campaign for high speed
Internet access for all is available at
www.speedmatters.org.
CWA Disaster Relief Aids Members Hit by Deadly Fires
By early reports, about a dozen CWA members lost
their homes in the wildfires that ravaged more than half
a million acres in southern California. Locals are
canvassing their members to assess the extent of damage,
overall they are reporting that "we have a lot of
members helping members" through volunteer efforts,
donations of food, blankets, water and dollars to the
Red Cross, the San Diego AFL-CIO and other groups.
"We're asking our members with serious losses to
contact their locals for help in applying for assistance
from the CWA Disaster Relief Fund," said CWA
Representative Cherie Brokaw, named by District 9 Vice
President Tony Bixler to coordinate CWA's efforts in the
district. Completed applications will be forwarded to
CWA Human Rights Director Gwend Johnson for processing.
In addition, about 40 flight attendants have reported
damage to their homes and about 100 were forced to
evacuate, said Heather Healy, AFA-CWA director of
Employee Assistance Programs. She said it appeared that
fewer than 10 flight attendans have lost their homes.
AFA-CWA members can contribute to the sector's Disaster
Relief Fund; details are available at
www.afanet.org.
Labor Reporter's Book Shows Why Unions are More
Important Than Ever
In a highly touted book packed with colorful
anecdotes and careful research, a veteran labor reporter
examines what's happened to organized labor in the
United States and what workers and unions can do to
rebuild their movement and America's middle class.
"It is no overstatement to say that labor has
contributed mightily to what has made America work – and
what has made it unique," writes Philip Dine in his
recently published book "State of the Unions: How Labor
Can Strengthen the Middle Class, Improve Our Economy and
Regain Political Influence."
Dine, a Pulitzer Prize-nominated labor reporter at
the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and member of The Newspaper
Guild-CWA Local 36047, looks at the corporate, political
and economic forces that have resulted in a nationwide
drop in union membership and what labor needs to do to
reverse that trend. Among the positive examples he cites
is CWA's Stewards' Army.
"In a time of increasing disenfranchisement of
average people, of growing gulfs between the haves and
have-nots, labor's most important role may be to serve
as a vehicle for the voices of people who are being
drowned out," Dine writes.
The book's many fans include Mike Wallace of CBS News
who said, "Phil Dine tells a compelling tale (and he
writes beautifully) of the decline, fall and potential
rebirth of a powerful labor movement in the U.S."
TNG-CWA President Linda Foley said Dine "has produced
a must-read for both union members and members of the
press. 'State of the Unions' – with its keen
observations and thoughtful conclusions – could be a
primer for labor leaders and labor reporters."
The book is avaliable at most book stores.
IN BRIEF:
- CWA members were among the crowd of 150
citizens outside the Federal Communications
Commission headquarters in Washington, D.C., on Oct.
31 protesting proposals that would enable a few
media companies to control even more outlets. Inside
at a public hearing, union, civil rights and
community leaders urged the FCC not to make rule
changes that will allow media companies to own a
newspaper and several radio and TV stations in the
same community and result in even more consolidation
of media ownership.
The hearing followed Commission Chairman
Kevin Martin's proposal to again ease media
concentration and ownership rules.
Veteran radio journalist Bob Edwards, a vice
president of the American Federation of Television
and Radio Artists, told the Commission, "Mark my
words. If you further deregulate media in this
country, networks, broadcast stations, and
newspapers will continue to consolidate, resulting
in fewer voices heard by citizens? Television
stations and newspapers will behave as commercial
radio owners behaved when they were largely
deregulated. They will adopt a business model that
shuts out local news and entertainment in favor of
national homogenized programming. If commercial
media are given the unfettered right to abandon
their obligation to serve the public interest, they
will do just that."
- CWAers from Locals 2222, 2252 and
TNG-CWA, plus other union activists, are walking
neighborhoods in northern Virginia to help get out
the vote to support worker friendly candidates in
next week's state elections. CWA Secretary-Treasurer
Barbara Easterling was on hand; check out her
remarks to Northern Virginia AFL-CIO volunteers at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dDgrjFTep7Y.
Leading CWA's political campaign efforts in Virginia
are Dolores Trevino-Gerber, Local 2222; District 2
legislative-political coordinator Charles "Boots"
Buttiglieri and CWA Political Director Alfonso
Pollard.
- In a move that will broaden choice for
consumers and restore competitiveness for other
video providers, the Federal Communications
Commission voted unanimously to end the deals that
have allowed cable companies to exclusively provide
video services to residents of apartment buildings
condominiums and planned subdivsions.
CWA and consumers groups have long
supported an end to the practice which gave an
unfair advantage to cable operators, restricted
choice for millions of consumers and resulted in
higher cable rates. The FCC's decision means that
cable companies cannot negotiate contracts that
prevent other providers of video service from being
able to provide service to customers in the same
building.
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