August 2, 2007
Governors Urge
Senate to Pass Employee Free Choice Act
In a letter to U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid
and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, 18 Democratic
governors called on the U.S. Senate to support the
Employee Free Choice Act and urged the lawmakers to
restore workers' rights.
The governors are Bill Ritter, Colorado; Rod
Blagojevich, Illinois; Chet Culver, Iowa; Kathleen
Sebelius, Kansas; John Baldacci, Maine; Martin O'Malley,
Maryland; Deval Patrick, Massachusetts; Jennifer
Granholm, Michigan; Brian Schweitzer, Montana; Jon
Corzine, New Jersey; Bill Richardson, New Mexico; Eliot
Spitzer, New York; Ted Strickland, Ohio; Ted Kulongoski,
Oregon; Edward G. Rendell, Pennsylvania; Chris Gregoire,
Washington; Joe Manchin, III, West Virginia; and Jim
Doyle, Wisconsin.
Read their letter here,
under What's Hot.
CWA
Members Want Real Answers from Candidates
Democratic and Republican presidential candidates
heard from CWA this week. The candidates are being asked
for specific responses on three very important issues
for CWA members and working families – the Employee Free
Choice Act, health care and trade and jobs. The
candidates' answers will be posted on a special CWA
election website and will be a factor in CWA's
endorsement process.
Candidates have been asked to respond to these
questions:
- We would like to hear if you support the
Employee Free Choice Act and what you would do as
president to lead the fight to get that legislation
past the hurdle of a Senate filibuster and onto your
desk for signature.
- Please tell us how you would fund universal
health care to ensure that all Americans have
coverage and to make U.S. jobs more competitive and
not disadvantage those employers who currently
provide quality health benefits to their employees.
- Please detail specific steps you would offer to
cut the trade deficit – now more than $700 billion a
year – and help spur the retention and growth of
jobs in this country.
Democratic presidential candidates invited to provide
their specific responses are Senators Joseph Biden,
Hillary Clinton, Christopher Dodd, John Edwards, and
Barack Obama; Rep. Dennis Kucinich; Governor Bill
Richardson; and former Senator Mike Gravel.
Republicans are Senator John McCain; Representatives
Ron Paul and Tom Tancredo; former Governors Mike
Huckabee, Mitt Romney and Tommy Thompson; and former
mayor Rudy Giuliani.
District 13
Launches Drive in Pennsylvania for Broadband, Cable TV
Franchising
District 13 has launched a grassroots campaign to
create a statewide franchise for cable TV and to bring
high-speed Internet access to residents across
Pennsylvania.
Jim Short, CWA vice president for District 13, urged
members to visit the district's website and participate
in an e-mail campaign to pass the Consumer Choice Cable
Franchising and High Speed Broadband Promotion Act,
introduced in the State Legislature by Majority Policy
Chair Todd Eachus.
"Far too many of our fellow citizens have been left
behind in the information age, and this bill would be a
huge step toward closing the digital divide," Short
said. "First and foremost, this bill would require
companies to provide service to residents of rural
Pennsylvania and low-income households, as well as
schools, hospitals and government agencies."
CWAers in District 13 are also working to build a
strong coalition of organizations with interest in the
bill including municipal governments and consumer
groups.
The legislation:
- Allows statewide cable
franchising, replacing the current system in which
cable providers negotiate with each of the state's
2,500 municipalities.
- Sets buildout requirements.
- Redefines franchise fees to
more accurately reflect the value of cable services
to local governments.
- Sets standards for cable
companies to provide access to public institutions
such as schools and hospitals, and
- Provides real oversight of
the cable industry by the public utility commission.
To send an email to state legislators, visit the
District 13 website
here and click on the button labeled "It's about
having a choice."
Verizon Workers Put Company on Notice
Thousands of CWA and IBEW members at Verizon rallied
at "One Year 'til Expiration" actions from Boston,
Mass., to Virginia on August 2, sending a message to
Verizon that CWA will safeguard good jobs, quality
health care, and other benefits in contract negotiations
that begin next June.
Union members and activists also criticized the
company's assault on the rights of Verizon Business and
Verizon Wireless workers who want union representation,
as well as Verizon's plan to sell telephone lines in New
England to FairPoint Communications.
Contracts covering some 70,000 CWA and IBEWers at
Verizon East – Verizon territory from Maine to Virginia
– expire August 2, 2008. "All of us want to win a good
contract, to stop the sale, and tear down the wall at
Verizon Business," said CWA District 1 Vice President
Chris Shelton. "This can only be accomplished through
mobilizing and building community support, and that's
our plan for 2008."
Rallies were held in Boston, Mass.; Baltimore, Md.;
Richmond, Fredericksburg and Petersburg, Virginia;
Morgantown, Charleston, and Poca, West Virginia; and
other locations.
CWAers at Verizon West held a support rally in
Upland, Calif., to show their solidarity with next
year's Verizon bargaining. The Verizon West contract,
covering 6,000 workers, does not expire until March
2010, but workers spotlighted management's interference
earlier this year in an organizing effort by DSL
technicians in California.
In New York City, more than 3,000 CWA and IBEW
members held their "One Year 'til Expiration" rally on
June 27; Verizon West workers also rallied that day in
Long Beach, Calif., to protest the company's
union-busting.
Dow Jones Workers Fight for Quality Publications,
Quality Contract
Dow Jones workers are determined to win a fair
contract despite the news that Rupert Murdoch's $5
billion bid for the company was accepted by the Bancroft
family, which currently owns the company.
"The employees of Dow Jones are the most important
asset of this company and that's true regardless of who
owns Dow Jones & Company," said Steve Yount, president
of the Independent Association of Publishers' Employees.
"IAPE will continue to do everything it can to ensure
that the employees of Dow Jones are recognized and
rewarded for their contributions — the very
contributions which make Dow Jones & Company worth $5
billion."
"Going forward, IAPE members will continue to band
together to fight for their interests. That includes
negotiating a quality collective bargaining agreement,"
he said. Negotiations for a new contract got underway
last October.
Murdoch has been criticized by media watchdogs for
letting his politics and business interests influence
news coverage. Murdoch owns News Corp., the tabloid New
York Post and other news operations.
"Our members at Dow Jones demonstrated throughout
this process that the reporters and others who work at
The Wall Street Journal and other Dow
Jones publications are committed to doing everything
possible to maintain the editorial integrity and
independence of newsroom operations," said TNG-CWA
President Linda Foley.
TNG-CWA represents more than 2,000 Dow Jones
professionals at The Wall Street Journal,
WSJ.com, Dow Jones newswires, Barron's MarketWatch and
SmartMoney.
IN BRIEF:
- CWA is prepared to do whatever it takes
to make certain that Embarq Corp., formerly Sprint
Corp.'s local telephone operations, lives up to its
commitments to active and retired workers. CWA
represents about 4,000 active workers at Embarq.
The company announced that it would eliminate
health care coverage for Medicare eligible retirees
beginning January 1. In meetings with Embarq
officials, CWA has stressed that this breaks a clear
promise that Sprint and Embarq made to workers about
their health care coverage in retirement. Retirees
and their families will face higher costs and a
likely reduction in services covered, depending on
their medical needs.
"Sprint and Embarq actively pressed workers to
retire within certain timeframes and said that
retiring workers would maintain their health care
coverage. Those workers not choosing to retire on
the company's timetable were shifted into another
health care plan. Clearly, Embarq is reneging on its
commitment to workers and CWA isn't going to let
that happen," said Jimmy Gurganus, vice president
for telecommunications at CWA.
- If you can't be at Chicago's Soldier
Field for the AFL-CIO presidential candidates' forum
Tuesday night Aug. 7, consider hosting or attending
a house party to watch it with other union members.
The AFL-CIO has prepared a "Planning a Watch
Party" toolkit, which can be downloaded
here (Acrobat, 267 Kb). It includes
party tips, a sample invitation and a working
families' issue guide on topics that include good
jobs, trade, health care, education, retirement and
the Employee Free Choice Act.
Hosts are asked to let the AFL-CIO know about
their parties by sending an e-mail to
aomens@aflcio.org that describes the event,
where it's taking place and how many people are
expected.
The forum, which will feature questions from
union members, runs from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. EDT and
will be carried on MSNBC and XM radio. Keith
Olbermann, who hosts "Countdown" on MSNBC, will
moderate.
- Calling it "More than just a dream come
true, because I never could have dreamt this," Rick
Hummel, a veteran sports columnist for the St. Louis
Post-Dispatch and a member of TNG-CWA Local 36047,
was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame last
weekend along with baseball greats Cal Ripken and
Tony Gwynn.
Hummel, known to Post-Dispatch readers as "The
Commish," has covered the St. Louis Cardinals for 36
years. A story on the Hall of Fame website said he
was honored for "his strength, persistence and
sharpness of his wit, not on the pitcher's mound but
in the press box."
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