June 12, 2008
- CWA Ad
Campaign Urges N.J. Lawmakers to Keep Promises
- Delta
Interfered with Fair Election, AFA-CWA Charges
- Health Care Workers Rally for Fair Contract at
Mercy Hospital
- Retirees Gear Up for Employee Free Choice,
Health Care Campaigns
- T.O. Moses Dies, Former Telecommunications VP
- Jake Earley Dies, Retired District 3 Staff Rep
- IN BRIEF:
- District 3 Safety and Health Activists
Discuss Concerns, Solutions
- House
GOP Kills Extended Jobless Benefits after Veto
Threat
CWA Ad
Campaign Urges N.J. Lawmakers to Keep Promises
CWA has launched an advertising blitz in New Jersey to
counter proposals from a handful of state legislators
who are trying to renege on their commitment to ensure a
secure retirement and health care for state workers.
Union leaders say legislators are breaking a promise
made to state workers in contract talks last year, when
CWA agreed to concessions to help the state combat its
budget problems.
Television, radio and print ads, along with mailings,
began
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CWA's message to citizens of New
Jersey, as voiced in print, radio and TV
campaign. |
this week. A TV ad airing on broadcast and cable
stations features a health care professional who cares
for veterans, an educator and a social worker, each of
them urging state residents to "call Trenton and tell
them to keep their word – protect our future."
"Last year, tens of thousands of New Jersey state
workers negotiated a contract with Trenton that saved
taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars while
protecting health care and retirement security for our
families," said CWA District 1 Vice President Chris
Shelton. "The governor, the legislature and the
hard-working women and men of the Communications Workers
of America agreed to this contract. Now, Trenton is
trying to go back on its promises."
The rollbacks proposed by legislators would change
how pensions are calculated, eliminate benefits for
part-time workers and allow the state to offer
"incentives" to get workers to opt out of health care
benefits, among other changes.
CWA represents 55,000 state and local government
workers in New Jersey. The union's support helped elect
Democratic Gov. John Corzine in 2005. Corzine hasn't
endorsed the pension reforms but, according to media
reports, is considering them.
"Social workers look after our elderly and abused
children. Parks workers protect our outdoors.
Inspectors keep our roads and bridges safe. Their work
makes us proud to live in New Jersey," Shelton said.
"There is a better way to fix our budget problems.
Trenton should start by eliminating real waste and
fraud, closing corporate tax loopholes and raising taxes
on the wealthiest."
The union's TV ad can be viewed on YouTube at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t4bFJqjb5Qk.
Delta
Interfered with Fair Election, AFA-CWA Charges
Delta Air Lines management engaged in tactics that
interfered with the flight attendants' ability to have a
fair and free union election, AFA-CWA stated in formal
interference charges it filed this week with the
National Mediation Board, which governs labor relations
in the airline industry. The union's allegations include
substantial evidence that the airline employed
aggressive tactics designed to defeat the workers'
campaign for representation.
"Delta flight attendants were denied the opportunity
to freely participate in this election," stated AFA-CWA
President Patricia Friend. A majority of the airline's
13,000 flight attendants signed cards supporting union
representation when AFA-CWA filed for an election last
February. When the election began, the airline launched
a campaign to suppress the vote, urging workers to tear
up their official balloting information from the NMB as
soon as they received it.
In its filing with the agency, AFA-CWA is asking for
a new election with a "Laker" balloting procedure that
would limit the effects of any further illegal conduct
by Delta management. By re-running the election under
this procedure, flight attendants would be permitted to
vote either "Yes" or "No" for a union, with a majority
of those voting determining union representation. Under
the previous, and traditional, airline election
procedure, workers either vote "Yes" or write in the
name of another union. Those not choosing to
participate are counted as "No" votes.
Health Care Workers Rally for Fair
Contract at Mercy Hospital
CWA-represented nurses and other health care workers
held a huge rally and informational picket line outside
Mercy Hospital in South Buffalo, N.Y., following an
overwhelming vote by members to authorize a strike if a
fair contract isn't reached.
Members of CWA Local 1133 voted by a 97 percent
margin to authorize a strike, a message to Catholic
Health System that "enough is enough," said Local
President Peggy Chadwick-Ledwon. CWA represents 2,000
employees at the hospital.
Chadwick-Ledwon said one critical issue is hospital
staffing and the high number of vacancies which force
nurses to do the work of two people and skip breaks and
lunches to provide proper patient care. Under the
hospital's current staffing levels, "nurses are tired
and there is nobody to relieve them. It's hard getting a
call on your day off to come in because the hospital is
again short-staffed, and you know your co-workers are
killing themselves," she said. We need to have a
competitive wage and benefit package so we can fill
vacancies, especially for night shift nurses, she added.
Other key issues are benefit differentials for
part-time workers, who more often than not are required
to work full-time hours, wages and health care, said
Chadwick-Ledwon. "We don't want to go out on strike. We
just want a fair contract. Unfortunately, this is the
third contact where we've had to take a strike vote" to
show management that workers are serious about fairness,
she said.
Hundreds of CWA nurses and health care workers
rallied outside the hospital, joined by CWA District 1
Vice President Chris Shelton and other supporters.
Negotiations will resume on June 13; the contract
expired June 3.
Retirees Gear Up for Employee
Free Choice, Health Care Campaigns
Eager to go to bat for their union and working
families everywhere, CWA retirees have committed to do
whatever's needed to help pass the Employee Free Choice
Act and health care reform.
Last week, versions of the two campaigns designed
specifically for retirees were rolled out at the CWA
Retired Members' Council District 1 Leadership
Conference. The chapter leaders in attendance were the
first of the union's rapidly growing RMC to get the
official presentation, though many retirees across the
country are already lending a hand.
District 1 Vice President Chris Shelton and
Communications & Technologies Vice President Ralph Maly
explained CWA's game plan for passing the Employee Free
Choice Act in early 2009 – soon after a new Congress is
sworn in – and passing affordable, universal health care
by 2010.
"There is no question in my mind that retirees play
a critical role in getting the Employee Free Choice Act
and a national health care policy passed in Congress,"
Maly said. "Retirees make things happen and their
continued support is a must for the survival of the
labor movement."
The retiree leaders came from chapters in New Jersey,
New York, Connecticut, New Hampshire and Massachusetts.
Led by District 1 RMC President Audrey Buchanan-Swan and
Vice President Adele Rogers, they pledged to present the
campaigns to their membership.
Buchanan-Swan, of Local 1365 in Massachusetts, said
participants were enthusiastic about what they heard.
"It was very well received," she said. "Our retirees are
ready to embrace these campaigns and get to work."
Toward that end, they pledged to get at least 10
percent of their members to sign postcards and get their
pictures taken as part of the labor movement's Million
Member Mobilization to pass Employee Free Choice. The
RMC has about 24,000 members in its 169 chapters.
T.O. Moses Dies, Former Telecommunications VP
Former Telecommunications Vice President T.O. Moses,
who served CWA members for more than half a century
before his retirement in 2002, died June 7 in Lubbock,
Texas, at age 78.
Moses went to work as a switchman for Southern Bell
in 1949 and went on to hold every elective post with CWA
Local 3414, Monroe, La. He joined the CWA staff in 1967,
working with locals in St. Louis, Mo., and Lubbock and
Austin, Texas, and handling negotiations with General
Telephone of the Southwest. He was appointed
administrative assistant to the vice president of
District 12 in 1981 and was named assistant to the vice
president of District 6 after the districts merged in
1986.
Moses was elected telecommunications vice president
in 1989. During his leadership, the first bargaining
councils were established at Century Tel and Citizens
Communications. He helped negotiate the cooperative
resource council at GTE which brought a national focus
to important member issues. Friends and colleagues
fondly remember his wry and folksy humor that he often
deployed to resolve conflict and move contract talks
forward. When he retired, convention delegates elected
him vice president emeritus by acclamation.
Jake Earley Dies, Retired District 3 Staff Rep
John "Jake" Earley, 83, retired District 3 staff
representative, died June 10, in Tucker, Ga.
Earley came to CWA when he went to work for C & P
Telephone Co. of Maryland in 1948 as a PBX
installer-repair tech. He served Local 2108 for more
than 14 years as a shop steward and later as president,
the post he held when he was appointed to the CWA staff
1965.
As a CWA representative, and later administrative
assistant to the district vice president, Earley first
served in Shreveport, La., and later transferred to
posts in Nashville, Tenn., Columbia, S.C., and Atlanta,
Ga. He was considered a skilled negotiator who at
various times bargained contracts at United
Inter-Mountain Telephone, Western Electric, Alltel, GTE
and Southern Bell. He also was instrumental in
organizing major Western Electric locations in the
south. Earley retired in 1989.
IN BRIEF:
- Safety and health activists from 22
locals in District 3 met recently for a weekend
seminar in Jacksonville, Fla., to discuss workplace
safety concerns and solutions, including the
development of state-based occupational safety and
health committees and electrical hazards training.
Panel discussions included workplace
ergonomic issues affecting customer service
representatives and technicians, bathroom sanitation
on the job, public worker safety and health
legislation just passed in Florida and achievements
of a joint CWA/AT&T safety and health committee in
Louisiana.
The 46 participants also participated in workshops
on CWA's campaign for the Employee Free Choice Act.
Presenter Booker Lester, administrative director for
District 3 Vice President Noah Savent, detailed the
appalling and often illegal behavior of employers
who intimidate, threaten and fire union organizers
and activists, including workers who fight for
safety on the job.
- House Republicans on Wednesday, buckling
under the threat of a Bush veto, voted down a bill
that would have extended unemployment insurance to
the nearly 4 million jobless workers who will run
out of benefits over the next nine months.
"There is no better example after today's
vote why we need a change in November," Rep. Rahm
Emanuel (D-Ill.) told reporters. The bill would have
added 13 weeks of benefits for most jobless workers
and 26 for those in states with the highest
unemployment rates.
The vote was 279-144. If only five Republicans had
changed their vote, it would been enough to overturn
a Bush veto. Pledging to kill the bill, Bush claimed
that unemployment isn't high enough and the economy
isn't bad enough. May saw the biggest one-month
jump in the unemployment rate in more than 20 years,
at a time when gas prices have climbed above $4 a
gallon and food prices are rising.
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