May 10, 2007
Message
to Senators: Employee Free Choice Act
Would Mean Health Care, Pensions for
Millions
U.S. senators will get an earful from
CWA members next week about the critical
need for Employee Free Choice Act,
including the fact that the organizing
and bargaining rights bill would likely
bring health benefits to more than 3.5
million uninsured Americans.
That estimate is based on
figures showing that union workers –
because of their ability to bargain
collectively -- are 28 percent more
likely to be covered by employer-paid
health plans. The study, by the
Institute for America's Future, also
predicts that nearly 2.8 million workers
would receive employer-paid pensions if
the Employee Free Choice Act becomes
law.
"It's no coincidence that as
employers have trampled on the right of
workers to bargain contracts, more
Americans are without health care and
retirement security," CWA President
Larry Cohen said. "That's a vital point
we need to make in our phone calls with
senators and their staffs next week."
CWA and IBEW members are making the
week of May 14 a "week of action" for
passing the Employee Free Choice Act.
The bill passed overwhelmingly in the
House in March and is pending in the
Senate.
Cohen and other CWA leaders are
hoping that thousands of calls will pour
into Capitol Hill from members and their
families across the country. Locals have
been given a list of 11 senators who are
considered swing votes and another 47
senators who have signed on as the
bill's co-sponsors.
"We need to persuade the 11 senators
who are not yet committed and we want to
thank those who have, and make sure that
the shameless efforts of the Chamber of
Commerce and other business lobbies
haven't changed their minds," Cohen
said.
The 11 are Democrats Blanche Lincoln
and Mark Pryor of Arkansas, Ken Salazar
of Colorado and Ben Nelson of Nebraska
and Republicans Susan Collins and
Olympia Snowe of Maine, Norm Coleman of
Minnesota, John Sununu of New Hampshire,
John Voinovich of Ohio, Gordon Smith of
Oregon and Arlen Specter of
Pennsylvania.
With Verizon's union-busting behavior
a focal point of the Employee Free
Choice Act fight, CWA is also asking
locals to urge state and community
leaders to write letters to Verizon
chief Ivan Seidenberg in support of
workers' bargaining rights.
Members Now Posting Comments
on Diversity Proposal
Members are now able to post comments
on the CWA Diversity proposal at the
Ready for the Future website (www.cwa-union.org/future
-- click on Diversity Committee).
In addition to the members' bulletin
board, the text of the Diversity
proposal – to be submitted to the 2007
Convention -- is posted, along with
notes from meetings of the Committee on
Executive Board Diversity and a Q&A on
the proposal.
The committee, created last year as
part of the CWA Ready for the Future
program, held sessions with local
leaders around the country to gather
input and also e-mailed a survey to all
locals to solicit ideas for making the
Board better reflect the ethnic and
gender composition of the membership.
The proposal calls for adding four
at-large members to the Executive Board,
with a goal of at least three being
persons of color and at least two
women. The four seats would represent
four geographic regions of CWA with
similar membership size.
The at-large diversity Board members
would not be Vice Presidents but would
attend all Board meetings, serve on
Board committees and have a voice and
vote on all matters before the Board.
They would be paid for lost wages and
expenses for attending meetings and for
Board-related responsibilities.
The Diversity Committee estimates the
cost for all four seats at $25,000 per
year. By contrast, a Vice President's
position costs at least $400,000
considering that it includes at minimum
an office, an assistant and a secretary.
In addition to addressing the Board's
demographic balance, the proposal "adds
four rank-and-file voices to our
leadership deliberations," said
Secretary-Treasurer Barbara Easterling,
chair of the Diversity Committee. "The
more our leaders reflect our members,
the more responsive we will be to their
needs and the better perspective we will
have in making decisions on the critical
issues facing CWA," she said.
President Larry Cohen said, "This
committee worked very hard to find a
formula for bringing better balance to
our Board in keeping with our democratic
traditions and our organizational
needs." He noted that other unions are
also taking steps to increase leadership
diversity in line with the AFL-CIO's
resolution on diversity adopted in 2005.
Serving with Easterling on the
Diversity Committee are Vice Presidents
Annie Hill, Noah Savant and Brooks
Sunkett, Women's Committee members Susan
McCallister, Local 7704
secretary-treasurer, and Mary Lou
Schaffer, Local 13550 president; and
Committee on Equity members Keith
Robinson, Local 6310 steward and Jetty
Wells, Local 4009 executive vice
president.
AFA-CWA Takes on Management at
United, US Airways
AFA-CWA flight attendants picketed
the UAL Corp. – United Airlines – annual
meeting in Chicago May 10 to protest the
excessive $40 million compensation
package paid to CEO Glenn Tilton.
Flight attendants and other airline
workers are picketing to alert
shareholders that the "shared sacrifice"
that management talked about throughout
the airline's bankruptcy remains a
sacrifice for workers who are not
sharing in post-bankruptcy "rewards."
"Executives must follow through on
their promise of shared rewards. No one
does better unless everyone – employees,
passengers and shareholders – does
better," said AFA-CWA United
spokesperson Sara Nelson.
Many United executives now are
receiving equity incentive payments
while airline workers have seen their
pay and retirement security slashed.
United emerged from bankruptcy
protection in February 2006.
Flight attendants, pilots and other
airline workers also picketed outside
the International Aviation Symposium in
Phoenix, Ariz., this week to focus
attention on their frustration with
Phoenix-based US Airways.
AFA-CWA members at US Airways and
America West are angry over the lack of
progress in contract negotiations for a
merged agreement. "The failure of US
Airways management to recognize the
value and worth of flight attendants on
the job and at the bargaining table is
an 'age-old strategy for disaster,'"
said Gary Richardson, president of
AFA-CWA's Master Executive Council for
America West.
Mike Flores, president of AFA-CWA's
Master Executive Council for US Airways,
reminded management that "there is no
such thing as a 'full-service, low-cost
airline."That only works if you find
employees willing to work for nothing
and customers willing to pay for
nothing," and isn't happening.
CWA, UNI
Aid Struggle by South African Workers
To Win Bargaining Rights at Vodafone
Subsidiary
CWA has joined with UNI Telecom and
other unions around the globe in
condemning Vodafone's South African
subsidiary, Vodacom, for refusing to
recognize its workers' union in
violation of the law. In South Africa,
employers are required to grant
automatic recognition when 30 percent of
the workforce supports unionization.
That threshold was surpassed this spring
when more than 1,300 of Vodacom's 4,000
workers had joined the Communications
Workers Union.
Instead, Vodacom chose to wage war
against its employees, mainly women
employed in call centers, by firing
union activists and threatening
supporters. In other tactics designed to
dilute union support, the company
promised promotions to workers if they
agree to leave the union and padded its
employee list with the names of
contractors and supervisors.
Vodafone owns 45 percent of Verizon
Wireless and its South African
subsidiary shows much of the same animus
towards unions and workers' rights as
its American cousin. In 1999, Vodacom,
the largest mobile carrier in South
Africa with over 20 million customers,
agreed to allow the CWU to recruit on
company facilities, but has since broken
every part of that agreement.
The workers were set to strike this
spring, but Vodacom was able to persuade
a court to issue a temporary injunction
against the action on March 12. A final
ruling on the case is expected by May
14.
Despite the company's actions, union
support among the workers continues to
grow. "These workers will prevail. Their
struggle serves as a reminder of what we
can achieve despite history and the
odds," said CWA President Larry Cohen.
"A little more than a dozen years ago,
these workers would have been jailed
under South Africa's brutal anti-worker
apartheid regime," he said. "Yet today,
apartheid is gone and South Africa's
labor laws are more progressive than our
own in the United States." Cohen
recently stepped down after five years
as president of UNI Telecom, the world's
largest voice for telecommunications
workers worldwide.
CWA, UNI, and the U.S-based
Solidarity Center have been assisting
the Vodacom workers' campaign for union
representation. Read more about the
worker's campaign at
www.cwuvodacom.blogspot.com.
Help
Urged for Locked-Out
Ohio
Newspaper Workers
In the wake of a nine-month lockout
at the Toledo Blade newspaper in Ohio,
CWA leaders are asking locals to adopt a
family to help 215 workers who have lost
their health insurance.
The locked-out workers include 13
members of the CWA Printing Sector and
more than 200 other full-time and
part-time mailers, drivers, engravers
and paper handlers who belong to other
unions.
The Toledo Council of Newspaper
Unions, which includes The Newspaper
Guild-CWA, has been negotiating with the
company for more than a year. CWA
President Larry Cohen said the lockout
that began last August was not only an
attempt to get the affected workers to
give up their union and First Amendment
rights, it "also was a cynical attempt
to coerce the two unions with
agreements, the Guild-CWA and the
pressmen, to strike so that workers in
those units could be permanently
replaced."
But the unions fought back, launching
a boycott against the paper that cut
circulation and slashed ad revenues. The
National Labor Relations Board has
issued sweeping complaints against The
Blade, finding that the lockouts are
illegal and the company engaged in
bad-faith bargaining.
In spite of the findings and broad
community support for the workers, the
newspaper hasn't backed down. The
lockout continues. Unemployment
compensation for the workers expired
March 1, leaving them to survive on
union benefits alone. And on April 1,
all 215 locked-out workers lost their
health insurance.
The cost for a month of coverage for
each family is $823.67, with each single
coverage policy running $317.72. "These
staggering amounts are well outside what
these locked-out workers can afford and,
as you well know, just one unplanned
medical emergency without insurance can
mean economic devastation for these
workers and their families," Cohen said.
He said CWA is asking for donations
from locals in increments of $500, which
will be sent to a central fund and used
to pay COBRA costs for as many
locked-out workers as
possible. Individual workers will be
paired with donating locals to keep
those locals updated on the situation.
Members can make individual donations
online via PayPal from the Toledo TNG
local's website -
www.toledoguild.org. Locals wishing
to adopt a worker can get information by
sending an e-mail to:
lockedoutrelief06@sbcglobal.net.
IN BRIEF:
-
Nurses stormed Capitol Hill this
week to push Congress to overturn
the decision by the National Labor
Relations Board to allow employers
to reclassify many nurses – and
potentially millions of other
workers – as supervisors, denying
them their union rights.
Thousands of "charge nurses" such as
Lori Gay of Salt Lake City could
lose their right to representation
even though their supervisory role
amounts to minutes a week. "As a
charge nurse, I'm in charge of the
pencil," Gay told the U.S. House
Education and Labor Subcommittee On
May 8. "Typically, I spend 10
minutes at the end of my shift
filling out an assignment sheet for
the oncoming shift, making sure
every patient has a bed and a
nurse. I record the traffic in and
out. It's as simple as that. I
don't have the authority to hire,
fire, evaluate or promote other
nurses."
Subcommittee chairman Rob Andrews
(D-N.J.) has introduced legislation,
drafted with input from the AFL-CIO,
saying that only someone who engages
in supervisory duties more than half
the time is a supervisor.
- With Gov. Martin
O'Malley's signature on the bill,
Maryland this week became the first
state to require government
contractors to pay their employees a
living wage -- $8.50 an hour in
rural counties and $11.30 an hour in
urban areas.
Unions and other advocates
have pushed for a living wage in
Maryland for the last decade.
O'Malley said the bill says to state
contract workers that "we are going
to treat you in a fair and just and
decent way."
The state legislature passed a
similar measure in 2004 but the
Republican governor, Robert Ehrlich
Jr. vetoed it. Supporters estimate
that the new law could help 50,000
workers.
- The long list of social
service and regulatory agency
victims of Bush budget cuts now
includes the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission, the federal
agency that investigates claims of
racial and gender bias on the job.
Although she said she's under a
White House gag order and isn't
supposed to ask for any more
funding, EEOC Chairwoman Naomi Earp
told a Senate subcommittee this
month that her agency has lost 543
employees – 500 of them in
enforcement -- since Bush took
office in 2001.
The EEOC has a backlog of 36,000
unfinished cases, a number that is
projected to grow to 55,000 next
year. Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.),
chair of the appropriations
subcommittee holding the hearing,
said the EEOC was in "disarray" and
said she will request an independent
audit by the Government
Accountability Office (GAO) on the
effects of recent restructuring
efforts.
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