June 26, 2008
- CWA President Cohen
to Convention: 'This is Our Time;'
Delegates Galvanized for Obama Victory in November,
Employee Free Choice
- CWA Election Results
CWA President
Cohen to Convention: 'This is Our Time;'
Delegates Galvanized for Obama Victory in November,
Employee Free Choice
 |
|
Delegates
meet in Las Vegas at the 70th CWA convention. |
Declaring that "this is our time," CWA President
Larry Cohen called on delegates to the 70th annual
convention to imagine life a year from now – a nation
led by President Barack Obama, the Employee Free Choice
signed into law and affordable, universal health care
within reach.
"This is our time and it rests on three
things – our unity, our strategies and our focus," Cohen
said, calling on the nearly 2,500 delegates, alternates
and guests attending the Las Vegas convention to return
to their locals and inspire CWA members, retirees and
families to work harder, and dream bigger, than ever.
The promise of the Employee Free Choice Act was the
convention's recurring theme, evoked by everyone at the
podium from workers fighting to organize to global labor
leaders.
"We need to pass the Employee Free Choice Act so that
workers like me can join a union without running through
a meat grinder of employer intimidation," said Roger
Reece, a worker leading the fight for CWA recognition at
Verizon Business in New York and New England. "I know
that soon I will be holding a CWA card in my wallet."
The spirited convention, which included a live
teleconference with Obama, also served as a farewell
celebration for retiring Secretary-Treasurer Barbara
Easterling, who joined CWA 57 years ago as a telephone
operator at Ohio Bell. Delegates elected CWA Executive
Vice President Jeff Rechenbach as secretary-treasurer
and elected District 7 Vice President Annie Hill as
executive vice president. (See full election results in
story below.)
In her final convention speech as a national officer,
Easterling urged delegates not to underestimate their
power to change the world. "Brothers and sisters, our
voice has never been more important than it is today,"
she said. "During the past seven years, the Bush
administration took dead aim at all of us in this room.
Well guess what? We're still standing, stronger than
ever. And together we can once again make history by
electing Barack Obama president and changing America."
Obama Thanks CWA for Support
In a satellite hookup from the campaign trail in
Albuquerque, N.M., on Monday, Obama thanked delegates
for passing a resolution endorsing him. He pledged his
full support not only for Employee Free Choice, but for
a federal government that once again values workers and
workers' rights. "It's not just that this administration
hasn't been fighting for you – they've actually tried to
stop you from fighting for yourselves," he said. "This
is the most anti-labor administration in our memory.
They don't believe in unions. They don't believe in
organizing. They've packed the labor relations board
with their corporate buddies." (Obama's full speech is
available at
www.cwavotes.org.)
Earlier Monday, in an emotional speech that left
delegates and national officers brushing away tears,
retiring District 2 Vice President Pete Catucci paid an
especially personal tribute to Cohen and the union at
large. Catucci, who was diagnosed in 2006 with ALS, also
known as Lou Gehrig's disease, stood and spoke despite
his difficulties with speech and movement. He described
his condition as a "gift" that has taught him to focus
on what he called the "sweet and healing" power of love.
Catucci, too, championed the Employee Free Choice
Act, saying it "will change the entire labor movement
and help make the United States stronger, more humane
and more competitive than ever."
Million Member Mobilization
Cohen talked about the CWA's leading role in the
labor movement's Million Member Mobilization, which is
collecting signed postcards from 1 million union members
demanding passage of Employee Free Choice. The
postcards, along with many of the members' photographs,
will be displayed in the U.S. Capitol after the November
elections. The goal is to pass the bill soon after the
new Congress takes office in January.
CWA has pledged to get 15 percent of its members to
sign cards, and Cohen asked delegates from locals that
have committed to participating to stand up. A vast
majority of the delegates stood, and those who didn't
were urged to add their local numbers to poster boards
on the side of the ballroom. On Wednesday, speaking in
favor of a resolution of support for the campaign, Local
1126 President Mike Garry said, "15 percent of your
local? I say we sign them all up, brothers and sisters!"
In a fiery speech just after the resolution passed,
United Autoworkers President Ron Gettelfinger noted the
1 million members collectively that CWA, UAW, the
Steelworkers and the International Federation of
Professional and Technical Engineers have in three
states that are vital to victory in November – and
ultimately vital to passing Employee Free Choice: Ohio,
Pennsylvania and Michigan.
The four unions have formed an alliance that
Gettelfinger said has set as its goal "100 percent
participation by every local union" in campaign and
get-out-the-vote efforts. "With your help, we're going
to get the job done and we're going to elect a pro-union
president," he said.
Despite the many difficulties union organizers face
today, CWA locals are proving up to the task. 43 locals
received awards for organizing more than 100 members
each over the past year. The union's highest honor, the
President's Award for organizing, was given to District
3 for winning collective bargaining rights for more than
3,000 new CWA members in southeastern states. The
victories included 2,400 retail workers at AT&T
Mobility, formerly Cingular, and 350 workers at the New
Era cap plant in Alabama.
"It shows you what can happen and what's going to
happen when we pass the Employee Free Choice Act,"
District 3 Vice President Noah Savant said, as Cohen
presented the award.
Global Focus on Workers' Rights
In an era of rapid globalization, speakers said
Employee Free Choice will help bring America's badly
eroded organizing and bargaining rights closer to what
workers enjoy in most of the rest of the developed
world. In addition to Europe and Japan, even such
countries as South Africa and Brazil beat the United
States – by far -- in the percentage of workers with
collective bargaining rights.
"I find it tragic that the world's most powerful
economy has the worst collective bargaining coverage of
any advanced nation," Philip Jennings, president of
Union Network International (UNI) told delegates on
Tuesday. He was followed by Francisco Hernandez Juarez,
head of the Mexican Telephone Workers Union, who looked
toward November and said, "We know and we hope you will
bring to power a progressive government in your
country." By electing Obama and enacting Employee Free
Choice, he said America will inspire Mexico and other
countries that have even fewer workers' rights now than
the United States.
Demanding fair trade agreements that protect workers'
rights in both the United States and its trading
partners was one of nine resolutions delegates passed
during the convention. In addition to the Employee Free
Choice resolution and Obama endorsement, delegates
heartily passed a resolution honoring Easterling's
decades of service.
The other resolutions supported CWA's leading role in
the campaign for affordable, universal health care,
resolved to organize the cable and satellite industries,
promoted the new CWA Print Sector label, pledged to
address climate change issues and a "green" jobs
strategy, and called for "peace and labor rights" in
Iraq with policies that truly support the health and
welfare of America's troops.
CWA Election Results
CWA President Larry Cohen was re-elected for a second
three-year term by acclamation of delegates at the 70th
convention. Delegates also elected Jeff Rechenbach as
secretary-treasurer and Annie Hill as executive vice
president, both by acclamation.
Rechenbach, CWA's past executive vice president,
succeeds Barbara J. Easterling as secretary-treasurer;
she had served in that post for 13 years until her
retirement this year. Hill, vice president for the
14-state District 7, succeeds Rechenbach as executive
vice president.
Also unopposed and elected by acclamation were Ralph
Maly, communications and technologies; Jimmy Gurganus,
telecommunications; Brooks Sunkett, public, healthcare
and education workers, and Bill Boarman, printing,
publishing and media workers.
Convention delegates also elected four at-large board
members to the CWA Executive Board. Elected were Carolyn
Wade, president, CWA Local 1040, Northeast
region; Nestor Soto, president, CWA Local 33225,
Southeast region; Claude Cummings, president, CWA Local
6222, Central region and Madelyn Elder, president, CWA
Local 7901, Western region.
In contested elections for district vice president,
Chris Shelton was re-elected vice president of District
1, defeating Carla Katz; Noah Savant was re-elected vice
president of District 3, defeating Stephen Sarnoff;
Louise Cadell was elected District 7 vice president,
defeating Brenda Roberts in a run off election; and Tony
Bixler was re-elected vice president of District 9,
defeating T Santora.
In uncontested elections, delegates for District 2
members elected Ron Collins as vice president,
succeeding Pete Catucci, who retired, Seth Rosen was
re-elected vice president of District 4, Andy Milburn
was re-elected vice president for District 6, and Edward
Mooney, president of CWA Local 13000, was elected vice
president of District 13, succeeding James Short, who
retired.
In other sector results: Jim Clark was re-elected
president of IUE-CWA, John Clark was re-elected
president of NABET-CWA, Bernie Lunzer was elected
president of TNG-CWA by a sector referendum tallied in
May and Pat Friend earlier had been re-elected president
of AFA-CWA under that sector's bylaws. |