April 19, 2007
FCC
Filing: Don't Let Cable Block Out Telco Competition
CWA joined with leading consumer groups this week in
a joint filing urging the Federal Communications
Commission to maintain rules that prohibit the big cable
TV companies from denying "must-have" programming to
competitors such as satellite broadcasters and AT&T and
Verizon.
The cable giants still control 70 percent of the
multi-channel video market, and they are in a position
to choke off competition by keeping other companies from
offering programming from channels like CNN, Discovery,
HBO and popular regional sports networks, the joint
filing stated. The cable companies own, at least in
part, four-fifths of the 90 most-watched channels.
FCC program access rules, due to "sunset" this year,
should be extended for another five years, stated CWA
along with the Consumer Federation of America, Consumers
Union, Free Press and the Media Access Project.
The lack of true competition is evidenced by a 70
percent increase in cable prices – two and half times
the inflation rate – since Congress deregulated cable
pricing in 1996, the filing noted.
Cable mergers and license deals in recent years have
further concentrated Big Cable's dominance in regional
clusters, with emphasis on the big urban markets, while
the growth of satellite services has mainly come in
smaller rural markets. And so far, competition from
AT&T and Verizon has been limited, the groups stated.
Verizon right now can only market its FiOS service to 3
million homes and AT&T's U-Verse only claims 10,000
subscribers to date.
The filing urged the FCC to reject the cable
industry's contention that anti-trust laws are
sufficient to protect competitors, noting: "Anti-trust
actions are time consuming, taking years to resolve,
during which competition will have been stifled."
Tell GE: We Shouldn't Have to Choose
Between Jobs and the Environment
General Electric is exploiting environmental concerns
to sell its energy-saving compact fluorescent light
bulbs (CFLs), but what it isn't telling consumers is
that the bulbs are all coming from China while the
company slashes investment – and jobs – in the United
States.
IUE-CWA has launched a public information and
petition campaign to urge GE to invest in U.S. plants
and allow American workers to make the next generation
of lighting products. Go to
www.ScrewThatBulb.org to sign the petition.
GE has been asking both consumers and its own workers
to sign a pledge to "go green" and buy the CFLs, but in
so doing, "GE is actually asking workers in its lighting
plants to pledge to put themselves out of a job,"
IUE-CWA points out on the website. It notes that GE has
cut jobs in its lighting division by nearly 70 percent
since 1980.
"Workers and consumers shouldn't have to choose
between saving jobs and saving the environment," said
IUE-CWA President Jim Clark. "GE should do the right
thing and invest in advanced technology that will
stimulate our economy here at home."
An ironic twist to GE's "go green" marketing effort
aimed at socially conscious citizens is the fact that
China is one of the world's worst industrial polluters
and also is known for suppression of workers' rights.
Pulitzer Winners To Shareholders:
Maintain Quality Journalism at Dow Jones
Two of this year's Pulitzer Prize winners at the Wall
Street Journal joined other leading reporters in telling
Dow Jones shareholders on Wednesday that quality
journalism at the paper could be threatened by current
bargaining demands to slash salaries and health benefits
for the editorial staff.
James Bandler and Charles Forelle, both members of
IAPE Local 1096, a TNG-CWA affiliate, urged directors
and shareholders to continue the commitment to editorial
quality that allowed them to write their prize-winning
series of articles on stock option abuses.
Washington correspondent Michael Phillips "spoke
powerfully on behalf of war correspondents about the
anger they feel when they risk their lives in the Middle
East and then return to discover that senior managers
are trying to cut their pay and benefits," said Local
1096 President Steve Yount, who also addressed the
annual meeting in New York.
Local bargaining chair Jim Browning also told
shareholders of "the growing anger in the newsroom at
the threat the cutbacks pose to our journalistic
quality," Yount said. Three dozen reporters stood in
solidarity the whole time that the union spokespeople
addressed the meeting.
Dow Jones' harsh concession demands recently prompted
220 Dow Jones Newswires employees in New Jersey to join
Local 1096. The largest remaining non-union unit at Dow
Jones, the workers organized under card-check procedures
in the contract and they received recognition last week
after the majority was certified by the American
Arbitration Assn.
The local represents 1,800 Dow Jones editorial
workers in the United States and Canada.
Taking on Executive Pay at Shareholder Meetings
CWA members and other union activists are ready for
this year's round of corporate annual meetings, with
news conferences, demonstrations and other actions
planned for major CWA employers.
At the IBM meeting in Knoxville, Tenn., on April 24,
members of Alliance@IBM, CWA Local 1701 will speak to
three proposals and urge shareholders to adopt the
measures on executive compensation, offshoring and
pension and retirement medical benefits.
That same day in Greenville, S.C., IUE-CWA and CBC –
Coordinated Bargaining Committee of GE Unions --
activists also will urge shareholders to support
proposals tied to executive pay and other good
governance issues.
The CBC is pressing for shareholders to approve
proposals to separate the position of chairman and chief
executive officer to provide for more independent
oversight of management; to require a report on the pay
differential between GE's senior executives and the
lowest paid 10 percent of current employees, both in and
outside the U.S., and to provide for representation of
GE's retired workers with a non-executive retiree as a
candidate to sit on the board of directors.
Hundreds of CWA, IBEW and other union activists are
making plans for the Verizon annual meeting May 3 in
Pittsburgh. They will rally at the United Steelworkers
headquarters and march to the convention center, the
meeting site. Inside, a sea of union supporters wearing
red shirts and union shirts will be visible in support
for shareholder resolutions on executive compensation,
compensation consultants who may not be making
independent recommendations on executive pay and
shareholder approval of executive severance payments.
The AFL-CIO is leading a campaign aimed at investors
at Verizon and other companies that spotlights how the
pay of many executives has little connection to how well
a company performs. Verizon CEO Ivan Seidenberg earned
more than $109 million over the past five years, while
shareholders experienced a negative 5 percent return in
the same period. "Working people are fed up with a
system that showers CEOs with lavish rewards with little
or no accountability," said AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer
Richard Trumka.
Trumka, IBEW President Edwin Hill and CWA District 13
Vice President Jim Short will be among those attending
the Verizon annual meeting.
CWA's Police Union Builds International Solidarity
Nearly 100 activists from locals that comprise CWA's
National Coalition of Public Safety Officers celebrated
organizing gains and shared ideas for addressing health
care, pension and staffing issues when they gathered in
Reno, Nev., April 12 and 13 for their annual training
and leadership conference. Welcomed by District 7 Vice
President Annie Hill, they also used their two-day
meeting to build solidarity with other police
organizations within the United States and abroad.
A highpoint of the conference was a presentation by
Pretty Singozo, 2nd deputy president of POPCRU, the
police and corrections officers union of South Africa.
"Pretty's participation further cemented the ties
between CWA and POPCRU," said NCPSO President Chris
McGill. "We are continuing to build a mutually
beneficial relationship."
"We have pledged solidarity with American police
officers because they have helped us achieve dignity for
our members," Singozo said.
POPCRU, a public sector member of Union Network
International, was established in 1999, five years after
the end of apartheid and the establishment of a new
South African democracy. Also affiliated with the
Congress of South African Trade Unions, POPCRU
represents about 120,000 police officers and corrections
officers.
"We are part of a strategic partnership,
participating in the formation of the government and
influencing legislation on behalf of workers and the
poor," Singozo said. While they have collective
bargaining, they have gained health and safety
protections and better training through legislation.
CWA ties with POPCRU began four years ago when NCPSO
Executive Director John Burpo addressed an international
symposium on organizing sponsored by POPCRU and attended
by police from other African countries including Zambia,
Malawi, Botswana and Kenya. Then Burpo returned to
South Africa in 2005 to help POPCRU fight against prison
privatization.
"We say the campaign against privatization has been a
success because now the government is building more
prisons and improving the prisons and there is more
employment for our members," Singozo said.
Singozo pointed out that, like in the United States,
"Our responsibility is to police the rights of other
people. Now – with a union – our police are also able to
fight for their rights."
IN BRIEF:
- While Verizon president and chief
operating officer Dennis Strigl addressed telecom
industry execs at Bank of America's Media,
Telecommunications and Entertainment Conference in
New York City on March 29, some 200 CWA members at
Verizon core picketed on the outside, chanting "Tear
Down the Wall." CWAers are planning to keep the
pressure on Strigl and other company officials until
they respect Verizon Business employees' right to
organize.
"We need to keep reminding Verizon that our
union – and workers who want a union at Verizon
Business – are not going away," William Gallagher,
vice president Local 1109.
- Our opponents are pulling out all the
stops and sparing no expense to bully lawmakers,
misinform the public, and oppose free choice for
workers. We all should expect more of the same as
the debate on the Employee Free Choice Act continues
in the Senate (bill S. 1041).
To help supporters stay on message and not get
distracted when ads surface and attacks escalate,
American Rights at Work has created a new fact sheet
and series of talking points to help spread the
message about who some of the most prominent
opponents of the Employee Free Choice Act are and
why not to trust their facts.
Go to
www.americanrightsatwork.org to get the fact
sheet and other information.
- The AFL-CIO has urged Congress to block
a free trade pact with Colombia until that country
shows progress in prosecuting paramilitary death
squads responsible for the murders of some 4,000
trade union officers since the 1980s. The
paramilitaries, founded by landowners to "control
crime" in rural parts of the country, are funded
primarily by drug-traffickers. Only one person has
been convicted in the 2004-2006 murders of 236 trade
unionists. Since the killings began in the 1980s –
involving over 20,000 union members, political
leaders, educators, and others – there have been
just 31 convictions.
Recent news tying U.S. corporations and allies of
Colombian President Alvaro Uribe to the death squads
has raised concern in Congress. In March, the
U.S-owned Chiquita Brands plead guilty to making
payoffs to the paramilitaries, and Coca Cola is
being sued for being complicit in the 1996 murder of
a union leader. More recently, 8 Colombian
congressmen with close ties to Uribe were arrested
and charged with working with the squads and
smuggling cocaine.
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