Showing posts with label strikes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label strikes. Show all posts

Monday, August 20, 2012

Sent to me by friend of blog Tom: The Caterpillar Strike as Metaphor


If Labor Unions Can’t Put the Brakes on This Thing, Who Can?

The Caterpillar Strike as Metaphor

by DAVID MACARAY

Not that anyone—least of all American factory workers over the last three decades—needs to be reminded that corporations have very little respect for working people, the International Association of Machinists (IAM) strike against the Caterpillar plant in Joliet, Illinois, removed any lingering doubts.

Judging by their actions, Caterpillar saw this negotiation as a unique opportunity to stick it to their workers. Indeed, its truculent, take-it-or-leave-it posture is emblematic of every offensive aspect of post-Reagan corporate arrogance. Labor relations have gone from hard-nosed collective bargaining to gladiatorial blood sport, with labor now shedding most of the blood. What used to be viewed as an undignified and unnecessary show of muscle by management, is now regarded as standard procedure.

What Caterpillar has said to the IAM is this: No matter how healthy we are as a company, no matter how profitable we become, and no matter how much cold, hard cash we manage to rake in, we will never, ever, under any conditions, share one more nickel with the hourly workforce than is absolutely, positively necessary. Which raises the question: Why is this company taking such a hard line with their long-time, loyal workers? Simple answer: Because they can.

While it was announced Wednesday that IAM district leadership (as opposed to local leadership, directly answerable to the rank-and-file) had reached a tentative agreement with Caterpillar management to end the 15-week strike (approximately 780 workers went out on May 1), there’s a good chance the local will reject the offer when they vote on Friday. No one can predict how these votes will go, especially after a lengthy strike, but given how disillusioned and resentful the membership it, a rejection is definitely a possibility.

According to reports, the company’s LBF (last, best and final offer) was very close to the concession-laden LBF that precipitated the strike in the first place and resulted in the membership spending 15 long, agonizing weeks on the bricks, drawing a paltry $150 a week in strike benefits. It’s going to be interesting to see how successful IAM’s apparatchiks are in persuading the membership to accept what is, by all accounts, a profoundly inferior contract.

Among other things, it calls for a staggering 6-year freeze on wages and benefits. A company making billions of dollars in profits off the backs of its workers insists on a 6-year wage freeze? How cold is that? And not only is this freeze being offered with a straight face, it’s being presented as one of those “If you don’t like it, pal, you can rot in Hell” propositions. It’s true. The company has indicated that if the union remains coy, they’re prepared to fire everybody and take their chances with a brand new workforce.

Last winter, Caterpillar showed how aggressive they were willing to be. Appealing to that wildly misleading wage statistic known as “fair market,” Caterpillar insisted that the 450 workers at its London, Ontario, plant take a whopping 55-percent wage cut. When the workers balked (and who wouldn’t?), the company locked them out. And when it became clear that the union viewed these tactics as a form of economic extortion and were unwilling to roll over, Caterpillar shut down the entire factory and moved away. Period. No more jobs.

As far as pure commerce goes, Caterpillar is doing spectacularly well. Profits are at a record high and forecasts for the future are even rosier. Moreover, management is so confident and comfortable being in the driver’s seat, they’re not even trying to cosmetically cook the books for negotiating purposes. Caterpillar executives are more than willing to admit that business is booming. In fact, they’re bragging about it.
Last year the company earned a record $4.9 billion in profits, and expects to come in even higher this year. But, alas, they’ve also vowed that none of that increase—none of that marvelous windfall—is going to end up in the pockets of the people who actually do the work. Why would they give these people raises when, technically, they’re not obliged to? Only a fool would pay more than necessary.

To make matters worse, Caterpillar executives are playing dumb. Management is clinging to the fiction that it has no choice but to freeze wages because their pay scale is already higher than the “fair market.” Of course, the insanely bitter irony here is that today’s “fair market” wage is a grossly misleading statistic, the tragic result of a concerted, two-decades long assault on American earnings.

Which is why the middle-class is shrinking so alarmingly. It’s not unemployment that is killing the middle-class; it’s the depletion of decent-wage jobs. While bottom-line fundamentalists like Caterpillar proudly see themselves as benefactors to their stockholders, what they are, in fact, is destroyers of the middle-class and subverters of the American Dream. And if labor unions can’t put the brakes on this thing, who can?

DAVID MACARAY, an LA playwright and author (“It’s Never Been Easy: Essays on Modern Labor”), was a former union rep. He is a contributor to Hopeless: Barack Obama and the Politics of Illusion, published by AK Press. Hopeless is also available in a Kindle edition. He can be reached at dmacaray@earthlink.net

Original Post here:  http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/08/17/the-caterpillar-strike-as-metaphor/

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Chicago teacher union call for a strike with 90% of the vote


View more videos at: http://nbcchicago.com.
Chicago teachers have shown their solidarity in massive numbers. More than 90 percent of teachers have given the OK for a work stoppage, multiple sources told NBC Chicago. That number is well above the 75 percent needed, by law, to authorize a strike. Chicago

Teachers Union spokesman Stephanie Gadlin declined to provide an official number but said that some schools have seen 100 percent of teachers approve a strike.

 "We're pleased," she said, but added: "We know there will be challenges by [Chicago Public Schools].

CTU is analyzing and double-checking the numbers before releasing any information on the vote. That may happen Monday.

 CPS officials declined to comment until official numbers are released.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel last year rescinded a four percent pay increase and pushed for a longer school day. CPS has since proposed a five-year contract which guarantees teachers a two percent raise in their first year and lengthens the school day by 10 percent. Source: http://www.nbcchicago.com/blogs/ward-room/chicago-teachers-union-ctu-strike-authorization-vote-158260415.html#ixzz1xJcr02R8

Friday, April 6, 2012

Chicago teachers ready to strike, union says

Chicago teachers ready to strike, union says

But in to order strike, new Illinois law says the union needs 75 percent of its eligible voting members on board. There are 675 schools in CPS.

Lewis said CPS wants to lock in a five-year contract and is offering teachers a 2 percent raise in the first year, with salaries based on performance in later years.

CPS officials would not comment on the on-going negotiations, but CPS CEO Jean-Claude Brizard said talk of a strike is premature and problematic.

“We shouldn’t be talking about the ‘S-word,’” Brizard said at a news conference Thursday. “Let’s talk about finding a way to work together to improve a system that will benefit nearly a half million children.”

Emanuel reacted strongly to the possibility of teachers walking out of their classrooms.

“Any time anybody’s not focused on their first priority, which is teaching our children, that’s where I get angst,” he said. “Don’t take away from your main mission, your job, what the people of the city of Chicago, the parents, the taxpayers expect of you, which is to teach our children.”

LP - We understand that the teachers' first priority should be on educating the children but apparently that isn't a priority for the governor. This is a problem when elected officials think that they have nothing to do with educating the kids in the cities they run. The buck really doesn't stop with the teachers if the kids aren't being educated it is the mayor's fault, no questions asked, and no amount of campaign funds should get you out of that.

Friday, March 2, 2012

Proposed Georgia Law Makes Picketing Illegal, Sit Downs a Felony

Proposed Georgia Law Makes Picketing Illegal, Sit Downs a Felony


Some Georgia lawmakers want to make legitimate union picketing and other common protest activities felonies that not only could result in one-year jail terms but up to $10,000 in fines.
The bill, SB 469, would clamp down on free speech and workers’ rights in several ways. First, it would outlaw picketing outside the home of a CEO or other top company officials, such as rallying outside the home of a sweatshop owner.
It also would allow businesses to ask a judge to halt the protests outside of a business. If the judge orders a halt and the picketing continues, the union members or protestors from other groups could each be slapped with a $1,000 fine.

LP - This would have been very convenient back in the Civil Rights days we'd still have segregated fountains and lunch counters.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

According to Huff Post: According to Celtic's player Delonte West he's about to join the work force by applying at Home Depot. Do I have a blog for you?

Delonte West To Home Depot: Celtics Player Applies For Job During NBA Lockout
The Huffington Post First Posted: 8/18/11 12:05 AM ET Updated: 8/18/11 12:05 AM ET
No savings. Less doing. This is more or less the opposite of the slogan of Home Depot, which is "More savings. More Doing," but it be may a recipe that brings the home construction and remodeling retailer a notable new employee. Troubled NBA combo guard Delonte West, who played last season with the Boston Celtics, wrote on Twitter that he recently applied for a position at Home Depot.
It's official.. Pride 2 the side.. just filled out a application at Home Depot.. Lockout aint a game..
It would seem that West hasn't been saving his NBA wages. Meanwhile, the NBA Lockout has assured that he won't be doing any playing to bring in more cash any time soon. Link to Huffington Post:http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/08/17/delonte-west-home-depot-nba-lockout_n_930016.html

Monday, August 15, 2011

AFL CIO Blog the newest attack on workers

Support Grows for Striking Verizon Workers’ Fight for Middle-Class Jobs

by Mike Hall, Aug 15, 2011

Photo credit: Scott Reynolds
The huge crowd outside the Verizon Center in downtown Washington, D.C., Saturday wasn’t there for a basketball game or concert. They cam to tell Verizon to stop its attack on middle-class jobs
The Verizon Center demonstration and dozens and dozens of other actions at Verizon worksites and Verizon Wireless stores are part of the growing support for the 45,000 Communications Worker of America (CWA) and Electrical Worker (IBEW) members forced on strike by Verizon Aug. 6.
The company, with $32.5 billion in revenue in the past three years, is demanding $1 billion in concessions from workers which amounts to $20,000 per Verizon worker per year. While talks resumed last week, those demands remain on the table. Says CWA Communications Director Candice Johnson:
If wealthy companies like Verizon can continue to cut working families’ pay and benefits, we will never have an economic recovery in this country. This is a fight for all middle-class working families.

Rest of story here: http://blog.aflcio.org/2011/08/15/support-grows-for-striking-verizon-workers-fight-for-middle-class-jobs/

Sunday, August 7, 2011

From Yahoo.com

Verizon is another company not paying taxes, but they apparently don't want to share.

 

45,000 Verizon workers go on strike over contract

NEW YORK (AP) — Tens of thousands of unionized Verizon Communications Inc. workers from Massachusetts to Washington, D.C., went on strike early Sunday after they failed to agree on a new labor contract with the telecommunications company.
The Communications Workers of America said negotiations in Philadelphia and New York stalled Saturday night after Verizon continued to demand more than 100 concessions from workers and the unions refused to budge.
Mark C. Reed, Verizon's executive vice president of human resources, called the outcome of the unions' actions "regrettable" for customers and employees.
"We will continue to do our part to reach a new contract that reflects today's economic realities in our wireline business and addresses the needs of all parties," he said in a statement.
The contract that expired midnight Saturday covers 45,000 workers, including 10,000 represented by the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, who serve as telephone and repair technicians, customer service representatives, operators and more.
"Even at the 11th hour, as contracts were set to expire, Verizon continued to seek to strip away 50 years of collective bargaining gains for middle class workers and their families," CWA said in a statement Sunday.
Verizon, the nation's largest wireless carrier, has 196,000 workers; 135,000 are non-union.
At the center of the contract negotiations, which began June 22, are the costs of health care, pensions and work rules.
The CWA said the concessions are unjustified and harsh, given that Verizon is highly profitable — the company's revenue rose 2.8 percent to $27.5 billion in the second quarter. Its growth was largely attributed to its wireless business.
But Verizon said its wireline business has been in decline for more than a decade, and that it is asking for changes in the contract to strengthen the unit. The company said union employees contribute nothing to their health care premiums.
Verizon activated a contingency plan to ensure customers experienced "limited disruption in service" for the length of the strike.
"Tens of thousands of Verizon managers and other personnel have been trained to step in and perform emergency work assignments," Verizon spokesman Rich Young said.
A customer satisfaction survey released in May showed Verizon Wireless and Sprint Nextel Corp. ranked highest among the Big 4 wireless carriers. The survey polled 8,000 households in the first quarter of this year.
Verizon added 1.26 million wireless subscribers under contract in the April to June period this year, a result that flies in the face of the slowdown in new subscribers across the industry in the last two years. A year ago, Verizon added just 665,000 subscribers under contract.
Verizon ended the last quarter with 106.3 million devices connected to its wireless network. No. 2 and chief rival AT&T is trying to leapfrog Verizon in size by buying No. 4 T-Mobile USA for $39 billion.

Friday, July 1, 2011

Not just a state or a national issue

Anyone who has seen the news lately might be excused for wondering if they're witnessing the 1930s rather than the 2010s. There have been riots and strikes in Greece and now England. In many ways labor's issues there are linked to labor's issues here. Today it was announced that though the government appears to have done nothing to solve the unemployment crisis the recent unemployed will not have the extended unemployment like those who were unemployed earlier. A turbulent fact in The Great Depression that often goes overlooked is what role capitalism extreme failure played in the rise of fascism. Hitler's SA were largely made of Germany's employed. The Nazis were wise enough to give them a uniform, some dignity, a little food, some alcohol and suddenly they had an extremely effective storm trooper army to take on their enemies. The banks, big business, and their employees in federal government would be foolish to ignore the fact that a vast pool of underemployed people in their midst. From the book the Age of Extremes The Times on January 23, 1943 reported, "Next to war, unemployment has been the most widespread, the most corroding malady of our generation: it is the specific social disease of Western civilization of our time."


It is clear one of the major problems is that capital is internationally mobile while labor, though it has gotten better, has been less so. It's like to this point the sides have been playing with two different sets of rules. To get a sense of the international nature of our times check out the video.