April 24, 2008
- Workers Organize
at Iowa AT&T Call Center
- AFA-CWA to Congress: Bargaining Rights Critical
for Workers at 'New Delta'
- ‘Save Our Parks Protest’ Spotlights Looming N.J.
Budget Debate
- CWA Battling
Corporate Greed at Shareholder Meetings
- AFL-CIO Documents Increase in Worker Deaths,
Injuries
Workers
Organize at Iowa AT&T Call Center
 |
Eager to enjoy the benefits
of a union, workers at AT&T
Mobility's new customer care center in
Davenport, Iowa, sign cards supporting CWA
representation. |
A unit of nearly 200 workers at the new AT&T Mobility
customer care center in Davenport, Iowa, organized with
CWA Local 7110 in just one day, according to District 7
Administrative Director Kevin Mulligan. A majority of
the workers – over 70 percent – signed up through card
check on April 14 and the election was certified by the
American Arbitration Association this week.
The call center, just opened in December, is expected
to have over 500 employees within two years. Mulligan
credited an exceptionally committed inside committee
with the victory. "Each of them had been talking with
the co-workers for weeks about the need to organize."
Affordable health care, decent pay with regular wage
increases, consistent and fair company policies were key
issues.
"This clearly demonstrates the need for enacting the
Employee Free Choice Act," said District Vice President
Annie Hill. "When given a choice to organize through
card check, and without management intimidation, workers
have shown time and time again that they want to be able
to have a real say in their jobs," she said.
Today's economic squeeze makes workers even more
eager to seek union representation, said Ananda Foster,
a CWA-represented AT&T Mobility employee from Local 7901
(Portland, Oregon) who assisted the workers in the lead
up to the card signing.
In a second card check recognition announced this
week, a unit of 70 pathway techs at
Custom Cable Communications in New York won bargaining
rights. Local 1101 Secretary/Organizer Jim Trainor
assisted the workers in their drive.
AFA-CWA to Congress: Bargaining Rights Critical for
Workers at 'New Delta'
AFA-CWA is calling on Congress to urge Delta Airlines
executives to remain neutral in the current union
representation election among Delta flight attendants,
and further to monitor management's behavior, noting
that bargaining rights are vital for flight attendants
to be able to negotiate over the impact of the proposed
Delta-Northwest Airlines merger.
Testifying today before a House panel reviewing the
pending merger, Veda Shook, the union's international
vice president, pointed to Delta management's history of
anti-union behavior and said the airline is using
consultants to oppose the employees' representation
drive now underway. "In the context of this merger, the
company's anti-union tactics take on added urgency; the
merger should not be permitted to become a vehicle for
union busting," she said.
AFA-CWA is concerned that "Delta executives will use
the merger to eliminate the rights of employees to have
a seat at the table when the airline is fully merged
with Northwest," Shook testified. Because of arcane
rules governing labor relations in the airline industry,
flight attendants already unionized at Northwest
Airlines could be in jeopardy of losing their union
after a merger unless the Delta employees win their
drive.
AFA-CWA represents about 9,000 flight attendants at
Northwest and is campaigning to represent an additional
13,500 at Delta in an election now underway that runs
through May 28. Under unique airline election rules, 50
percent plus one of the employees must actively vote in
the election; people who fail to vote are counted as
voting "no union," encouraging management to focus on
voter suppression, she told lawmakers.
After the merger, if the smaller Northwest unit was
the only one unionized, flight attendants would have to
win an election among the combined unit or potentially
lose bargaining rights that Northwest flight attendants
have had for 60 years.
"It is our hope and the hope of thousands of Delta
flight attendants that they will overcome these
difficult election procedures and decide next month to
join AFA-CWA," Shook told members of the Taskforce on
Competition Policy and Antitrust laws of the House
Judiciary Committee. "They will then have the right to
bargain for improved work rules through a legally
binding contract and the historic collective bargaining
rights of the Northwest flight attendants will have been
protected in the newly merged Delta Airlines."
Earlier this week, 26 U.S. senators sent a letter to
the CEOs of Delta and Northwest urging both parties to
"demonstrate a genuine commitment to cooperative labor
relations" and to remain neutral in representation
elections. Senator Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) who led the
effort, stated, "Delta and Northwest Airlines should
honor the loyalty and hard work of their employees by
immediately offering them a seat at the table in merger
talks."
‘Save Our Parks Protest’ Spotlights Looming N.J.
Budget Debate
CWA New Jersey state workers were among 500
demonstrators who rallied Wednesday outside the
Statehouse in Trenton to urge Gov. Jon Corzine and the
Department of Environmental Protection not to close nine
state parks as part of a budget-cutting move.
At stake are beloved campgrounds, historic Revolutionary
War battlefields, hiking trails, swimming pools and
other public facilities -- and potentially the jobs of
80 CWA members who maintain the parks. The closings and
partial closings of other parks is only the tip of the
iceberg, saving a modest $4.5 million out of a total
proposed budget cut of $2.7 billion from projected
spending.
The state’s budget crunch, CWA leaders say, is the
culmination of grossly irresponsible tax cuts in the
1990s by the administration of Republican Gov. Christine
Todd Whitman and subsequent decisions by the
GOP-dominated state legislature, compounded by the
current economic downturn that is pressuring many other
states.
CWA is preparing a major public-outreach campaign that
seeks to help all New Jersey residents understand what’s
at stake and fight for solutions that won’t devastate
state programs, services and jobs.
"Governor Corzine's budget takes New Jersey in the
wrong direction. It cuts vital public services, like
state parks, subsidies for prescription drugs for
seniors, and state aid to hospitals and higher
education, threatening the quality of life for New
Jersey working families,” said CWA District 1 Vice
President Chris Shelton. “We will fight these budget
cuts, and push for better choices--closing corporate tax
loopholes and raising taxes on the wealthy in order to
preserve state services and protect our members' jobs."
CWA members from several locals were joined by
protesters from the Sierra Club, Audubon Society,
various historical societies and other environmental and
community groups at the “Save Our Parks” protest.
CWA Battling Corporate Greed at Shareholder Meetings
CWA members will be turning out in force for the
Verizon, Idearc and IBM shareholder meetings next week,
taking on issues that include out-of-control stock
options, corporate governance and executive pay as well
as anti-labor policies.
IBM's meeting is Tuesday, April 29, in Charlotte,
N.C. Verizon and Idearc both meet May 1; Verizon in
Lincoln, Neb., and Idearc in Dallas. Idearc, whose CWA
and IBEW-represented workers in New England and New York
have been without a contract since last summer, is a
directory-advertising company spun off from Verizon in
2006.
CWA and IBEW activists will deliver thousands of
proxy votes from worker shareholders to the Verizon
meeting. The unions are supporting two shareholder
proposals: the first would curb stock options awarded to
senior executives and bar current stock options from
being re-priced; the second would separate the role of
CEO and chairman of the board in the Verizon hierarchy.
Doing so is "fundamental to sound corporate
governance," the resolution states, asking, "How can the
CEO be his own boss? Directors are responsible for
protecting the shareholders' interests – and they must
do so primarily by monitoring and evaluating the CEO's
performance."
CWA and IBEW, which have spent years battling the
company's union-busting at Verizon Wireless and lately
at Verizon Business, are also backing a "no confidence"
vote against the election of the board of directors.
The unions will hold a press briefing immediately
before the shareholders meeting starts, explaining how
the company has built a wall between Verizon's unionized
landline operations and its rapidly growing non-union
areas.
The wall blocks union members "from the high-growth,
high-profit segments of the company in Verizon Wireless
and its large accounts acquisition from the former MCI,
Verizon Business," the unions say in a joint statement.
"Over the last five years, union membership has slipped
from producing 70 percent of revenues to only 33
percent; substantially weakening workers bargaining
power."
At the Idearc meeting, CWA members from Locals 1301
and 1302 will be joined by supportive CWA members from
Dallas Local 6171 to leaflet outside and raise questions
inside the meeting. About 700 CWA and IBEW members at
Idearc have been working without a contract since last
June when the company declared a bargaining impasse –
illegally, CWA has charged -- and rolled back benefits,
job security and sales commission plans. Both unions
have filed unfair labor practice charges with the
National Labor Relations Board.
A campaign website,
www.cwa-union.org/idearc, details the company's many
bad management decisions that have led the Idearc's
stock to plummet by 87 percent in less than a year.
On Tuesday, members of CWA's
Alliance@IBM will picket and rally outside the company's
meeting in Charlotte, raising worker and retiree
concerns about executive pay, off-shoring of jobs, pay
cuts and shrinking pensions.
"While IBM employees face a decline in
their standard of living and retirees see pension checks
evaporate due to lack of cost of living adjustments
coupled with increases in medical retirement co-pay, our
executives live the life of luxury. Executive greed and
bloated compensation needs to be challenged," said IBM
employee and Alliance Vice President Earl Mongeon.
Lee Conrad, national coordinator of the
Alliance, said members are calling on IBM to halt the
shifting of its U.S. jobs to low-cost countries. "At a
time when the U.S. economy is in recession and
unemployment is rising it is unconscionable to continue
to move work offshore," Conrad said. "The Alliance is
urging elected officials, community leaders and citizens
to call on IBM to halt this destruction of U.S. jobs."
AFL-CIO Documents Increase in Worker Deaths,
Injuries
The nation's workplaces remain unsafe, and current
safety laws and penalties are too weak to protect
workers. That's the conclusion of the AFL-CIO's annual
"Death on the Job" report, which provides grim
statistics on how many workers were killed and injured
on the job in the past year, as well as information on
penalties assessed for serious violations and other
data.
In 2006, the most recent year for which government
statistics are available, 5,840 workers were killed by
job hazards, an increase of 106 deaths from 2005. Some
4.1 million workers were injured and an estimated 60,000
died due to occupational disease. On an average day, 153
workers lose their lives as a result of workplace
injuries and disease, and another 11,233 are injured,
the AFL-CIO report found. The full report is available
at
http://www.aflcio.org/issues/safety/memorial/.
David LeGrande, CWA's occupational safety and health
director, said the increase in the fatality rate was a
major concern, because it demonstrated that our nation's
system of safety rules and enforcement simply wasn't
addressing workplace hazards and protecting workers. He
also pointed to the Labor Dept.'s underreporting of
workplace injuries and illnesses, as documented by the
report, as more evidence that workplace safety and
health has declined over the past eight years.
Certain health and safety issues, like job stress and
ergonomics, have received virtually no attention under
the Bush administration, he said. Those topics will be
discussed at the District 3 health and safety meeting
next month in Jacksonville, Fla., with a panel of local
leaders to discuss ergonomic and job stress issues for
customer service and outside plant workers.
On April 28, CWA locals across all districts will be
joining with other unions and AFL-CIO labor councils to
remember their co-workers killed on the job and focus
attention on the need to better address workplace
hazards.
To check on events on your area, go to
http://www.aflcio.org/issues/safety/memorial/. |