September 13, 2007
- Labor
Board Cites Verizon Business for Unionbusting
- Unions
Rally for Bill to Aid Those Sickened at Ground Zero
- Locals
Urged to Honor Customer Service Professionals Oct.
1-5
- AFA-CWA Presses Fight for Bankruptcy
Reform
- IN BRIEF:
- Legislators Show Support for Striking
Interpreters
- Chavez-Thompson Retiring from AFL-CIO After
12 Years as EVP
- AFA-CWA Helps Scuttle Windfall for Northwest
Lawyers
- Are Postal Rate Hikes Threatening Your Local
Newsletter?
- UAW's 2008 Union-Built Vehicle Guide
Available Now
Labor
Board Cites Verizon Business for Unionbusting
Stating that Verizon Business "has been interfering
with, restraining and coercing employees in the exercise
of the rights" guaranteed by federal labor law, the NLRB
has backed CWA charges against the company on behalf of
VZB workers seeking to organize in Pittsburgh and
Monsey, N.Y.
"When this labor board, the most anti-union,
pro-business board ever, cracks down on a major
corporation like Verizon, it's damning evidence that the
pattern of behavior is truly egregious," said CWA
President Larry Cohen.
Complaints issued by NLRB regional directors in
Pittsburgh and New York found that Verizon Business
management:
- "threatened employees with layoff for supporting
the union."
- "informed employees that Verizon Wireless, a
related employer, had laid off employees because of
their union activity."
- "engaged in surveillance of employees to
discover their union activities," and made sure to
give the impression that they were under
surveillance.
- issued disciplinary warnings against union
supporters for distributing union materials and
authorization cards "while permitting nonunion
solicitations and distribution" in the workplace.
CWA Vice Presidents Jim Short District 13 and Chris
Shelton of District 1 both condemned Verizon's actions,
and Cohen has written to presidential candidates citing
the complaints as evidence that "underscores all the
more boldly why the Employee Free Choice Act is
essential to restoring workers' organizing and
bargaining rights."
A majority of Verizon Business technicians in New
York and New England have signed unionization cards, as
verified by U.S. senators and representatives and other
leaders, and they would already have union
representation if the Employee Free Choice Act were the
law of the land.
The NLRB found that Verizon admitted that it had
fired Verizon Wireless workers for union activity and
used this boast as a threat to frighten the VZB
workers. For years Verizon Wireless workers have faced
a relentless employer campaign of coercion,
surveillance, firings and even closing of entire offices
to stamp out their efforts to win collective bargaining
rights.
Separate NLRB hearings on these cases are set for
Oct. 31 in Pittsburgh and Nov. 5 in New York City.
Unions
Rally for Bill to Aid Those Sickened at Ground Zero
Days before the sixth anniversary of the September 11
attacks, CWA members and leaders rallied with hundreds
of other union activists near Ground Zero in New York to
demand government help for workers, including CWA
members, rescuers and others affected by the toxic air
and other health risks in the aftermath of the 2001
tragedy.
Activists at the Sept. 8 rally, who also included
religious, political and community leaders, called for
passage of the bipartisan "9/11 Health and Compensation
Act" introduced this week by U.S. House Democrats
Carolyn Maloney and Jerrold Nadler and Republican Vita
Fossella, all of New York.
"The heroes of 9/11 responded immediately when our
country was attacked, but when these same heroes needed
help, our government dragged its heels. Thousands are
sick, and that is a fact," Maloney said.
Remembering 13 members of the CWA family who died on
September 11, District 1 Vice President Chris Shelton
told activists that the government betrayed the heroes
who worked on and near the toxic rubble for months.
"George Bush stood on the pile alongside a New York
City firefighter and said that the recovery workers
would never be forgotten and would always be taken care
of. He climbed down from the pile and promptly forgot
them," Shelton said. "Christine Todd Whitman, head of
the EPA at the time, told the recovery workers that the
air was clean, the air was fine and that they could work
at the site safely."
The 9/11 Health and Compensation Act would provide
funding to ensure that everyone exposed to toxic dust
and debris at Ground Zero can be medically monitored and
that everyone who is sick can be treated. The list
includes rescuers who came from across the country,
lower Manhattan residents, students and workers,
including CWA members at Verizon who restored the
battered area's communications network, CWA-represented
city traffic enforcement officers, and nurses who
traveled to the scene to help out.
"Previously all funding for monitoring and treatment
has been emergency funding," said Micki Siegel de
Hernandez, health and safety director for CWA District
1. "It's come piecemeal; there's no long term plan. This
bill would establish a long-term program."
The bill would provide further compensation for
Ground Zero workers with long-term respiratory diseases
and other illnesses and disabilities by reopening the
9/11 Victim Compensation Fund. Siegel de Hernandez said
she has spoken to several CWA members with severe Ground
Zero-related breathing problems who are no longer able
to work.
The bill would also require the federal government to
collect and analyze data about Ground Zero-related
illnesses and those affected. Doctors and clinics set up
to assess and help those at risk have kept data and
commissioned studies, but there is no central database
or permanently funded resource.
In addition to federal help, New York state has
changed its workers compensation law with regard to
World Trade Center-related illnesses. Workers now have
until Aug. 14, 2008, to file a registration form that
protects their right to file a claim.
Whether or not workers currently show signs of
illness, anyone who worked at or near Ground Zero is
urged to file a WTC-12 form in order to be able to file
a claim later, if necessary.
More information is available on websites for the New
York Workers' Compensation Board and the New York
Committee for Occupational Safety and Health. The
addresses are
www.web.state.ny.us and
www.nycosh.org.
Locals
Urged to Honor Customer Service Professionals Oct. 1-5
Think it's easy answering phones all day, often
talking to demanding, confused and even angry callers,
fingers racing across a keyboard for hours on end to
find answers in multiple data bases – all while a
supervisor listens in or stands over your shoulder
pushing you to work faster or sell more?
CWA is urging local leaders to let the union's
150,000 customer service professionals know just how
proud CWA is of their hard work and dedication. And
Customer Service Professional Week, a worldwide event
Oct. 1-5, is just the time to do it.
"From our telecom companies to our airlines to
newspapers, universities and many other office settings,
we have members working on the front lines of customer
service every day," CWA President Larry Cohen said. "How
successful could any of our employers be without these
skilled professionals who resolve countless problems and
build a strong base of loyal customers?"
CWA members in customer service say call center jobs
have become more stressful than ever as supervisors
monitor phone calls, keep count of sales made and force
call-takers to follow a script that most customers
abhor. And many call center workers are coping with a
range of health problems from pain in their hands, arms,
necks and backs to debilitating ergonomic injuries.
But there is some good news: Despite the corporate
frenzy for outsourcing call centers to low-paid workers
overseas, some employers are beginning to understand how
valuable an experienced U.S. workforce is. This year,
CWA negotiated for the return of 2,000 AT&T jobs and 500
U.S. Airways jobs that had been sent to other countries.
CWA will have flyers available that locals can
download and pass out to members as well as the public
to help customers understand the value of skilled,
U.S.-based call center professionals.
AFA-CWA Presses Fight for Bankruptcy Reform
AFA-CWA testified before a congressional committee on
Sept. 6 as part of a continuing campaign calling for
reform of the nation's bankruptcy laws.
"Many AFA-CWA flight attendants, as well as other
airline workers, have had their lives destroyed by
corporate bankruptcies and by management's use of the
law to force devastating cuts on employees," said Master
Executive Council President Greg Davidowitch,
representing AFA-CWA at a hearing of the House Judiciary
Subcommittee on Commercial and Administrative Law.
"Something must be done to level the playing field so
that bankruptcy is no longer a 'business strategy' that
simply transfers money to executives' pockets and leaves
the employees with nothing more than slashed pay,
diminished health care, destroyed retirement security,
bitterness, mounting debs and the prospect of personal
bankruptcy."
The union is working closely with Rep. John Conyers
(D-Mich.), chair of the House Judiciary Committee, and
Sen. Richard Durbin (D-Ill.), Senate majority whip, to
develop bankruptcy reform legislation that is more
favorable to workers and their families.
Filing for bankruptcy protection allows corporations
to tear up and force renegotiation of union contracts,
slashing pay, benefit and pension costs to become more
attractive to potential investors. Executives are
routinely rewarded with massive bonuses and compensation
packages for taking such actions, which lead to new
infusions of capital, allowing companies to exit
bankruptcy at the expense of the workers.
The pattern has become a trend since 2001, with over
20 airlines filing. The most recent rounds of
bankruptcies have been accompanied by a dramatic
slashing of jobs as well. ATA Airlines cut over 1,000
flight attendant positions and Mesaba Airlines reduced
their ranks by almost half. Aloaha Airlines had a 12
percent reduction in the flight attendant workforce. US
Airways saw over 3,000 slashed. United suffered the
largest blow when over 12,000 flight attendants' careers
were put on hold.
AFA-CWA President Pat Friend and Antoinette Muoneke,
an AFA-CWA member and United Flight attendant, testified
before Congress earlier this year.
Mouneke said because of job and benefit cuts, her
hours away from home increased by 40 percent, yet she
still could not afford to pay higher health care
premiums. And even with the new retirement system
AFA-CWA won when United froze her old one, Mouneke said
she lost over 30 percent of her pension benefit.
"To add insult to injury, management then shops for
potential investors, using employees' reduced standard
of living as a selling point," Friend said.
IN BRIEF:
- Support continues to grow for some 400
members of the California Federation of
Interpreters, TNG-CWA Local 39521, who have been on
strike since Sept. 5.
More than two dozen members of the State Assembly
and another two dozen members of the State Senate
have signed onto a support statement calling on the
court to bargain a fair contract with interpreters.
The interpreters work for the Superior Court of Los
Angeles, Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo Counties.
They are fighting for equitable treatment by the
court, including the salary structure that other
court employees have.
- Linda Chavez-Thompson, the AFL-CIO's
executive vice president for 12 years, has announced
she will retire this month from what she called "the
greatest job I have ever had."
AFL-CIO President John Sweeney said, "In everything
she has done, she has broken new pathways for the
labor movement," citing her work rejuvenating state
and local labor alliances, efforts on civil, human
and women's rights and leadership on immigration
issues.
Chavez-Thompson rose through the ranks of AFSCME,
ultimately serving as international vice president,
before being elected to her current position in
1995. As a second-generation Mexican-American, she
is the first person of color to serve in one of the
AFL-CIO's three highest offices.
Upon retiring Sept. 21, Chavez-Thompson will become
the executive vice president emerita of the
federation. With executive council approval, she
will continue to chair the council's immigration
committee, advise state federations and labor
councils, and serve as president of the
Inter-American Regional Organization of Workers,
among other assignments.
Sweeney said he is nominating Arlene Holt-Baker, a
top assistant to Sweeney and formerly to
Chavez-Thompson, to fill the remaining two years of
the executive vice president's term. Previously an
area director for AFSCME, Holt-Baker oversaw
organizing and political activity in California.
- AFA-CWA members at
Northwest Airlines were instrumental in blocking
payment of $4.2 million in "end-of-case bonuses" for
the airline's bankruptcy lawyers and they have a
suggestion for how the spare cash can be used:
"Since (the airline) will not have to pay these
ridiculous bonuses, we think it is far better spent
on returning some of the pay and workrules the
Northwest flight attendants have sacrificed," said
the union's Northwest Master Executive Council
President Kevin Griffen.
The bankruptcy judge in the case agreed
with AFA-CWA's contention that the law firms have
already been well compensated with tens of millions
of dollars in fees. The U.S. Trustee and a creditor
joined with the union in filing objections to the
bonuses.
- U.S. postal rate increases are hitting
small publications hard and CWA wants to know how
much more locals are paying to mail newsletters, and
whether it's affecting their ability to publish.
Editors of some publications have reported
hikes of 22 to 26 percent in their postage bills.
Because of a complicated formula for determining how
much and what type of publications are charged,
there is not a common across-the-board increase.
The International Labor Communications Association
will be testifying at a hearing on Capitol Hill
about the impact of the rate hikes. CWA will be
sharing information from locals with the ILCA so
that it can be included as part of the testimony.
The hearing is currently scheduled for Sept. 27
before the Subcommittee on the Federal Workforce,
Postal Service and District of Columbia, part of the
U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Government
Reform.
Send information on your postage increases to
cwanews@cwa-union.org.
- Want to buy vehicles made in the United
States or Canada by union members – including
IUE-CWA members? Check out the UAW's "2008
Union-Built Car and Truck Guide."
The guide lists the familiar American
brands such as Buick, Chevrolet, Ford, Mercury,
Dodge and Jeep, as well as union-made models from
Isuzu, Mazda, Mitsubishi, Saab, Suzuki and Toyota.
The vehicles or vehicle parts are made by members of
the UAW, the Canadian Auto Workers and IUE-CWA.
The UAW cautions car shoppers that not all vehicles
made in the United States or Canada are built by
union-represented workers. The Toyota Corolla, for
example, is made in the United States by UAW
members, but the Canadian model is made in a
nonunion plant and other models are imported from a
third country.
To get the scoop on other vehicles, download the
guide at
www.uaw.org.
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