February 21, 2008
- CWA Prepares Challenge of Piedmont Election
Results
- AT&T Video Service Members Ratify New Contract
- IBM Tech Workers Use Technology to Fight Back
- Flight Attendants Push Bill for FMLA Leave at
Minnesota Caucuses
- Easterling Honored with United Way Joseph Beirne
Award
- IN BRIEF:
- Bush Budget Would Shut Down Many Social
Security Offices
- Mexican Miners Ask U.S. Not to Fund
Strike-Breaking Police
- 'Shame On Elaine' Site Details Chao's
Disgraceful Record
CWA Prepares Challenge of Piedmont Election Results
After falling just short 60 votes of winning
union representation this week, gate and ramp agents at
Piedmont Airlines and CWA are preparing to challenge the
results of the election.
Votes tallied by the National Mediation Board (NMB)
on Feb. 19 showed that 1,228, or 47.6 percent, of the
2,574 agents voted for union representation. Under
Railway Labor Act rules that govern airline union
elections, 1,288 agents, or 50 percent plus one of all
eligible agents, needed to participate in the election
in order for the union to be certified. Agents who do
not cast a vote are counted as votes against a union
under these arcane rules.
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Piedmont
Airlines ramp and gate agents from Charlotte
(above) and elsewhere are seeking union
representation. |
Union supporters are reporting that many people whom
the airline had listed as "union eligible" should not
have been on the voting list as many as 40 in one
location alone. Further, there are reports of many
other agents who should have received voting
instructions but did not, and who failed to receive the
ballot materials even after requesting them from the NMB.
CWA is also looking into complaints of heavy-handed
anti-union activity by some supervisors. The union has
seven days from the ballot count to file a challenge.
More than 62 percent of the agents signed union
authorization cards when they petitioned for a union
election on Nov. 21. Since the increased security
brought about by 9/11, union organizers have had
absolutely no access to airline workers who work beyond
security gates. This has made union representation
elections far tougher. Also, the union activists were
handicapped as is the case in all NMB elections in
not being provided an address list of the union eligible
workers; they had to build a contact list from scratch
through one-on-one organizing at the worksite.
CWA-represented flight attendants and passenger
agents at US Airways and Piedmont, who have access to
the gate and ramp areas, provided major support in the
campaign.
AT&T Video Service Members Ratify New Contract
CWA members in District 6 unanimously ratified a new
three-year agreement with AT&T Video Services that
provides job upgrades, wage increases, improvements to
the company's health care proposal and other gains.
About 80 customer service representatives and
technicians are covered by the agreement.
More than 40 percent of unit members received job
upgrades and the agreement also provides for an 8
percent wage increase over the contract term along with
lump sum payments and several increased pay
differentials.
On health care, improvements have the potential
to save workers hundreds of dollars a year, and pension
bands were increased. The agreement also sets new limits
on mandatory forced overtime, a critical issue for
members.
CWA District 6 Vice President Andy Milburn said the
unity and solidarity of 65,000 CWA members in District 6
locals was the key to achieving a fair agreement.
Constant mobilization by District 6 locals,
including a rally in San Antonio, showed AT&T we had
solidarity with our 80 union brothers and sister at
Video Services, he said. Milburn also thanked J.D.
Williams, president of Local 6215, and local members for
their strong support, including the seed money for buses
to San Antonio.
IBM Tech Workers Use Technology to Fight Back
IBM tech workers are using information technology to
organize and fight back against a 15 percent pay cut
imposed by management recently in what amounts to
retaliation against having to pay them overtime.
Over 1,300 of the affected workers so far have signed
on to an online protest sponsored by Alliance@IBM CWA
Local 1701, demanding that IBM roll back the pay cut for
some 7,600 technical support workers who it reclassified
on Jan. 21 as being eligible for overtime. The cut
affects about six percent of the company's workforce.
Many workers are finding that, even with overtime,
the pay cut will cost them thousands of dollars a year.
"After 10 years of employment with IBM this reduction
places me back at my 2003 salary," said one worker on
the petition. Fewer than one third of the workers are
working enough on a weekly basis, estimated at 45 hours
a week, to break even, according to Alliance@IBM
coordinator Lee Conrad.
Ironically, the company's action stems from a $65
million settlement that IBM reached in 2006 to settle a
lawsuit with the workers, who charged that they were
unfairly being denied overtime and back pay.
Alliance members rely on mass e-mails and website
communications to rapidly communicate and mobilize all
the more important since nearly half of the IBM
employees work from home or are constantly mobile, said
Conrad.
Last year, Alliance members and other IBM unions
around the world staged an innovative "virtual strike"
at IBM's "island" in the Internet virtual 3-D world,
Second Life. A YouTube video of the Second Life
"strike" and the current online petition drive are found
at the Alliance website,
www.allianceibm.org.
Flight Attendants Push Bill for FMLA Leave at
Minnesota Caucuses
Deeply involved in the process that will determine
both major parties' nominees for president, four
Northwest Airlines flight attendants went a step
further, lobbying their Minnesota state caucuses on Feb.
5 to make FMLA leave more accessible to flight crews.
Northwest AFA-CWA members Camilla Wokerstorfer,
Julienne Wycoff and Sandee Russell participated in
separate Democratic precinct caucuses in the
Minneapolis-St. Paul area. Their colleague Robin Wimmer
attended a Republican caucus in Minneapolis. Each
convinced her precinct caucus to adopt a resolution of
support for H.R. 2744/S. 2059, the Airline Crew Family
and Medical Leave Act.
The bill clarifies the formula under which flight
attendants and pilots qualify for time off under the
Family and Medical Leave Act to take into consideration
the unique way their hours are tracked in the airline
industry.
"Robin, Julienne, Sandee and Camilla should be
applauded for their dedicated commitment and courage to
make their voice heard in our fight to improve our
profession," said AFA-CWA President Pat Friend.
Sen. Barack Obama and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt
Romney won their parties' respective caucuses in
Minnesota; now the flight attendants want to make sure
they come out winners too.
"We're going to have to chase this a little,"
Wokerstorfer said. "We also became delegates for our
precincts and want to follow this through to make sure
it's put in the parties' platforms."
So far, AFA-CWA has generated more than 7,000 e-mails
and 20,000 hand-signed letters to members of Congress in
support of the legislation, securing the bipartisan
support of 171 representatives and eight senators. To
send an e-mail, visit
www.afanet.org.
Easterling Honored with United Way Joseph Beirne
Award
CWA Secretary-Treasurer Barbara Easterling has been
selected by United Way of America as this year's
recipient of its prestigious Joseph A. Beirne Community
Services Award for her career-long service to United
Way, including more than 10 years on its board of
governors.
Said Brian Gallagher, president and CEO of United
Way, "Barbara is a gracious and inspiring leader. She
has been a champion of United Way, the labor movement
and our longstanding partnership always ensuring the
interests of our nation's communities were considered
first and foremost. She is a true advocate and both our
movements will miss her leadership."
Easterling will step down from the United Way board
concurrent with receiving the award on May 15 and will
retire from CWA at the convention in June.
Easterling first became involved with United Way and
its predecessor organizations as a steward in Local 4302
in Akron, Ohio. To this day she remembers the words of
CWA founding President Joe Beirne, urging local leaders
to get involved as "a way we can represent our members
beyond the company gate."
As chief of the state's Labor Division under Ohio
Gov. John Gilligan, in 1970 she became the first woman
in the country to chair a United Way drive, in Summit
County, Ohio.
Easterling was elected to the United Way's board in
1997. For much of her tenure on the board, Easterling
served on United Way's executive committee. Tackling
issues such as poverty, HIV-AIDS and teen pregnancy, she
championed a restructure of the agency to have greater
impact in individual communities and contributed to the
development of its Center for Community Leadership.
Easterling often became the public face of United
Way, speaking at community events around the country,
serving on awards committees and presenting awards at
the agency's national conferences. In addition, she
corresponded with numerous select labor leaders,
reinforcing her conviction that positive changes taking
place in United Way's program would benefit both the
agency and communities.
Easterling is the 38th recipient of the Beirne
Community Services Award, created by the charity in
Beirne's memory and presented to leaders throughout the
labor movement who have contributed their time and
talents to United Way.
IN BRIEF:
- Failing to deal a lethal blow to Social
Security, the Bush administration apparently has
decided that it's easier for now to make life harder
for the elderly and the tens of millions of baby
boomers beginning to join the ranks of America's
retired citizens.
Bush's proposed 2009 budget would close
scores of Social Security offices across the
country, forcing some seniors and disabled citizens
to travel hours to the nearest field office.
Witold Skwierczynski, president of AFGE Council 220
in Washington, D.C., told reporters last week that
the system is already under enormous pressure. "Over
the past 10 years the Social Security administrative
budget has been constricted by upwards of $1.3
billion. Further cuts, as 76 million baby boomers
enter the system, could prove to be disastrous," he
said.
A bill is already pending in Congress to keep Social
Security offices open, introduced by Rep. Brian
Higgins (D-N.Y.). Known as the Social Security
Customer Service Improvement Act, H.R. 5110, it
would give Congress additional oversight of SSA
staff levels, office closures and budget estimates.
- Embattled miners in Mexico who are being
attacked by strike-breaking police officers and
soldiers are asking Congress to withhold $1.4
billion in funds that the Bush administration wants
to give their country's security forces.
A delegation of miners came to Washington
to make the request on behalf of workers who have
been on strike for nearly seven months over unsafe
conditions at the Cananea copper mine in Sonora, 70
miles from the U.S. border.
The mine is owned by Grupo Mexico, which has ties to
ASARCO Inc., a metals company that employs U.S.
Steelworkers in Arizona and Texas. "Mexico cannot be
allowed to violate workers' human rights with
impunity under the pretense of securing borders and
combating narco-trafficking," USW President Leo
Gerard said. "The attack on the Cananea miners is
just the most recent in a series of repressive
actions by the Mexican government."
In spite of a court ruling that the strike is legal,
nearly 1,000 federal police are occupying the copper
mine and surrounding area and have used tear gas and
pellet guns against workers.
- Check out what's surely one of the
Internet's most perfectly named websites
www.ShameOnElaine.org
and you'll get a good picture of the dismal 7-year
record of Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao.
Created by American Rights at Work, the
website tracks Chao's many anti-worker actions and
the death and injury toll of workers who have
suffered because of her department's lax enforcement
of safety rules.
This week the site reported on the tragedy of the
eighth worker to die after the recent sugar refinery
explosion in Georgia. Authorities say the likely
cause was combustible dust. Experts urged Chao in
2006 to issue safety rules on combustible dust but
she failed to do so just one of the safety issues
she's ignored.
Among an exhaustive list of other worker insults,
Chao put a pal from the ultra conservative Heritage
Foundation on the DOL payroll a man who wrote a
report titled "How to close down the Department of
Labor."
In announcing the site, ARAW Executive Director Mary
Beth Maxwell said Chao has so far escaped the
public's scrutiny. "Please join us in shaming Elaine
and restoring the Department of Labor as an agency
run on behalf of America's workers," she said.
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