January 31, 2008
Vermont Forum Spotlights Political Movement for
Change
Building a political movement for change was the
focus of a day-long session at the University of Vermont
in Montpelier, where CWA President Larry Cohen
spotlighted the "Stop the Sale" campaign to keep quality
telecommunications services and jobs in northern New
England and joined a panel with U.S. Senator Bernie
Sanders (I-Vt.) and others on how to move forward on
workers' rights and social justice.
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Pres. Cohen
addresses conferees on building a movement for
workers' rights and social justice. |
More than 300 workers, students, health care
providers, educators and other activists participated in
discussions, workshops and actions around workers'
rights, livable wages, economic justice, quality health
care for all and global solidarity.
In an opening workshop, CWA President Larry Cohen
discussed the campaign by labor, community and other
activists to block the sale of Verizon landlines to
FairPoint Communications, a small, financially risky
company that will be unlikely to provide quality
service, let alone build out high speed Internet
networks for residents.
"CWA's three principal concerns are: how do we set
good public policy that will enable customers to have
access to real high speed Internet; how does the coming
global credit crunch affect this deal; and what happens
to workers who have invested their lives in this work
and find they now work for a company with an
overwhelming debt structure and financial problems,"
Cohen told reporters at a media briefing before the
conference.
"And FairPoint is not the only alternative," Cohen
added, pointing out that Verizon could spin off its
northern New England operations as an independent
company without the huge debt load that burdens
FairPoint.
Separately, CWA and the IBEW continued to press the
case against the FairPoint sale this week, testifying
before the Vermont Public Service Board and a Senate
Economic Development Committee hearing.
Senator Vincent Illuzzi, who chairs the committee,
and other Vermont lawmakers have expressed concern that
a proposed settlement by the companies will not provide
affordable broadband by 2010 to all residences and
businesses in the state now served by Verizon.
Expert witness Randy Barber, testifying for the
unions, said it was clear that FairPoint simply will not
have the financial resources to meet all the additional
commitments it has made. "The proposed Vermont
stipulation requires FairPoint to spend tens of millions
of dollars without a penny of additional funding from
Verizon. Verizon should not be permitted to abandon
Vermont without making adequate provision for the future
prospects of its customers, communities and employers,"
he said.
CWA Arizona Corrections Workers Win 'Meet and
Confer'
Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano has signed an executive
order establishing a "meet and confer" process for
discussing with CWA the hours, working conditions,
safety and other issues affecting 9,600 employees of the
state's Department of Corrections, including 3,600
members of CWA's Arizona Coalition of Police and
Sheriffs (AZCOPS), Local 7077.
"There has never been a labor group recognized in
this way in the state of Arizona. We're making history
here," said Tixoc Muņoz, president of the Arizona
Correctional Peace Officers Association, an AZCOPS
affiliate.
The executive order caps a year of work by Muņoz and
CWA, beginning with Napolitano's 2006 election campaign.
Muņoz took a full month leave of absence to work on
Napolitano's campaign full-time, calling and speaking to
members of 85 other police officer associations that
make up AZCOPS' total membership of about 8,600.
"It probably helps that we're the largest union in
the state," said John Burpo, director of CWA's National
Coalition of Public Safety Officers, who also worked to
obtain the executive order. CWA's total membership in
Arizona is around 15,000.
The order requires that the director of the Arizona
Department of Corrections meet at least quarterly with
the "duly elected representative of any employee
organization whose members constitute at least 50
percent of all Department of Corrections employees who
participate in payroll deductions for employee
organizations." CWA is the only state employee
organization that meets that criterion.
Subjects for discussion include hours, employee
safety conditions, disciplinary policies, morale issues
and budgetary strategy and requests.
Local 7077 represents corrections officers, teachers,
maintenance, clerical and other workers at several state
facilities.
Muņoz expects a meeting with the state to be
scheduled within the next six weeks. "We're going to
bring people from all over the state and let them speak.
We'll identify the top issues and go from there."
Utica Workers Take on Cable Giant Time Warner
Backed by community leaders in upstate New York, a
small but determined unit of CWA members are taking on
media giant Time Warner, challenging one town after
another to consider whether the union-busting monopoly
cable company deserves their business.
Last week, the Utica-based workers represented by CWA
Local 1126 showed up at a city council finance committee
in Syracuse and two days later held a protest in
Binghamton, where they were joined by members from other
CWA locals, labor council leaders and the mayor and
other city officials in decrying the company's treatment
of workers.
"A company with $6.5 billion in revenue and $6
million from the recent rate hike in Utica alone isn't a
company that should be complaining that it can't afford
to give its workers a 401(k) and a pension plan,
something every other Time Warner employee has," said
Local 1126 President Michael Garry. "But because we
chose to be union members, they've refused to give us
any retirement benefits." Their previous 401(k) and
pension plans were frozen when the former owner,
Adelphia, went bankrupt.
Add to that, he said, the fact that the 35 Utica
workers haven't had any raises in four years -- the last
year and a half under Time Warner ownership. Though the
cable company has changed hands a number of times, the
workers have had a union contract for 35 years and were
in talks with Adelphia when Time Warner took over.
The workers, the only unionized Time Warner workers
in upstate New York, overwhelmingly voted to keep their
union after a decertification attempt last fall. A
federal mediator is now involved after the company's
18-month's long refusal to budge at the bargaining
table.
The local is using a creative approach to get its
message across to the media. It tried to place a paid
TV ad on Time Warner's network, and when the ad was
turned down, workers used the censorship issue to
attract coverage by local broadcast stations in
Binghamton, which aired the spot for free as part of
their news reports. In one broadcast report, Mayor Matt
Ryan said of Time Warner, "They're dead wrong in trying
to bust this union."
CWA Student Video Contest Focuses on Workers' Rights
CWA and Jobs with Justice (JwJ) have announced a
contest for progressive student activists with a flair
for video production. Individuals and campus groups are
invited to submit a 1 to 3 minute "YouTube style" video
highlighting the failure of U.S. labor laws to protect
workers' rights and why America needs the Employee Free
Choice Act.
Up to 10 contest finalists will be selected, with
each receiving a $500 cash prize. Later, top winners
will be determined through online voting with those
winners receiving additional prizes of $1,000, $750 and
$500 for 1st, 2nd and 3rd place.
The winning videos will be widely circulated through
an electronic outreach campaign and posted on a special
CWA website promoting the Employee Free Choice Act.
CWA and JwJ will judge the initial 10 finalists based
on creativity and effectiveness in telling the story of
what's happening to workers who try to exercise their
rights to organize and bargain collectively in the face
of anti-union employers and a broken labor law system.
The video submissions can be serious or funny, they
can be in documentary style, or use actors, street
theater, or even animation in making the point about how
the bosses try to control and intimidate their workers.
The contest is open now and runs through the end of
March, 2008. Students of all ages -- high school through
college grad school -- are invited to participate.
Go to
www.efcavideo.com for more information and
instructions on entering and posting video submissions
online. Links to online sources for background
information on workers rights' and the Free Choice Act
are provided.
IN BRIEF:
- Responding to objections by IUE-CWA and
the Auto Workers to Delphi's proposed management
compensation plan, bankruptcy Judge Robert Drain
drastically slashed Delphi's proposed $87 million in
cash bonuses for executives to $16.5 million.
"After so much sacrifice by Delphi's
frontline workers, it is gratifying that the judge
recognized the overwhelming greed in throwing huge
cash payments to Delphi's executives," said IUE-CWA
President Jim Clark. "It is a very symbolic victory
for our members. Fairness prevails with this
decision."
Recognizing that Delphi's workers have suffered
greatly in the company's restructuring, Judge Drain
established the amount for the award to executives
to require some "equivalence of sacrifice." It was
the largest reduction in proposed executive
compensation ever imposed by a bankruptcy court,
said IUE-CWA's attorney Tom Kennedy.
- President
Bush has nominated anti-worker NLRB
Chairman Robert Battista to another term on the
board, just a month after Battista told a joint
Senate-House hearing that he doesn't believe the
primary purpose of the National Labor Relations Act
is to promote collective bargaining.
Battista's five-year term expired in December on the
heels of a string of rulings by the board's
Republican majority favoring employers and rolling
back worker and union rights. Bush has also
nominated a management attorney who has never
represented workers, Gerald Morales, for a vacant
seat on the board. Both nominations will require
Senate approval and face strong opposition.
Among those blasting Bush for once again turning his
back on workers was Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.),
chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and
Pensions Committee, who said: "It's unbelievable
that President Bush would renominate Mr. Battista to
the board, after he led the most anti-worker,
anti-labor, anti-union board in its history,"
Kennedy said.
- A staffing crisis among air traffic
controllers is dangerous and getting worse, the
union representing them warned this week as it added
Oakland, Calif., to a list of five other areas with
major airports and staffing emergencies.
"An already dangerous situation is about to
get worse," NATCA President Patrick Forrey said. "An
additional 2,200 experienced controllers will be
able to retire by the end of this year, thinning the
already-depleted ranks of the workforce at a time
when the skies have never been more congested. The
GAO has already stated that the risk of a
catastrophic accident on our runways around the
nation is high. Without an adequate amount of
rested, well-trained controllers in towers and radar
facilities, the risk of an aviation accident now
includes the airspace as well as the ground."
The FAA has refused to bargain in good faith with
the controllers since unilaterally imposing new work
rules in 2006. The agency repeatedly has cut control
tower staffing in recent years and shortened the
amount of time between work shifts, forcing fatigued
air traffic controllers to keep working.
In addition to Oakland, the union says Atlanta,
Chicago, Dallas, New York and Southern California
all pose serious safety concerns, and Miami may soon
be added to the list.
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