Wednesday, January 19, 2011

GOP Attacks California Unions

Public Workers, and All Unions are Under Fierce Attack
from New GOP State Leaders

CWA (Communication Workers of America) the labor movement and
its allies are preparing for battle as States across the country declare a renewed war on Unions, with special attacks on the rights, wages and pensions of public employees. Republican lawmakers in at least 10 states have or plan to introduce anti-union, so-called "right to work" legislation and other bills aimed at stripping workers of their rights to organize, to strike and to negotiate fair wages and benefits to support their families.

In Minnesota, lawmakers are even pursuing a "right to work" constitut-ional amendment to make it harder for workers to form and join unions. Among new governors, Ohio's John Kasich is "planning the most comp-rehensive assault against unions," the New York Times said. He wants to take away the right to unionize from 14,000 state-paid child care and home care workers, ban teacher strikes and kill rules requiring that contractors on public projects pay union-scale wages.

In Ohio and "throughout the battleground Midwest, there is a serious attack on our jobs and communities," CWA District 4 Vice President Seth Rosen said, explaining that district activists are already working to build coalitions to show lawmakers and the general public that it's not just unions that care about workers' rights. "These attacks affect all of us, public and private sector workers, both at work and in our communities," Rosen said. "By uniting labor, community, civil rights and enviro-nmental groups, we can wage a powerful fight for good jobs and strong communities.

"Ohio's Kasich appears to be competing with New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie to be the country's most anti-union, anti-public worker governor. Christie has become infamous over the last year for his loud, mean-spirited assaults on his state's employees, despite the fact that 60,000 CWA members and other unionized public workers have made a half-billion dollars in wage and benefit concessions over the last three years.
CWA New Jersey continues to aggressively lobby, mobilize and rally to oppose Christie’s extreme agenda.Learn more about the assaults on and myths about public workers at these links:

Click HERE or go to http://www.youtube.com/ for a brief film by Robert Greenwald, "Wall Street Fat-Cats Flip Public Service Workers the Bird."

Click HERE (Acrobat PDF) or go to http://www.epinet.org/, for a Rutgers University study debunking the myth that public workers are paid more than private-sector employees.

Click HERE for "The Shameful Attack on Public Employees," a column by former Labor Secretary Robert Reich. "It's far more convenient to go after people who are doing the public's work—sanitation workers, police officers, fire fighters, teachers, social workers, federal employees—to call them "faceless bureaucrats" and portray them as hooligans who are making off with your money and crippling federal and state budgets. The story fits better with the Republicans' Big Lie that our problems are due to a government that's too big," Reich says.Virginia CWA, Sierra Club Activists Get Fired Up at Joint Training CWA and Sierra Club members in Virginia met in early January to discuss shared goals and projects they can undertake together.

Strengthening a partnership that began a year ago, enthusiastic CWA and Sierra Club members in Virginia met last week for joint training to discuss their shared goals and how to work together to accomplish them.

CWA led half of the sessions and Sierra led half, allowing both organizations to learn about each other's priorities."We were all struck by the similarities that we face," said CWA Local 2201 Executive Vice President Richard Hatch, who is coordinating the partnership in Virginia. "Our people formed great relationships with the Sierra Club folks and now the challenge will be to build upon this."CWA and the Sierra Club already are working together on a Speed Matters campaign to bring high-speed broadband to Charles City County, a sprawling rural area that lags behind Virginia's big cities in Internet access.

Following the success of the two-day workshop, leaders of both groups say they’re optimistic about future collaboration."We started with 30 wary but willing participants and ended with 30 CWA-SC ambassadors eager to take our experiences back to our respective organizations," said Allison Chin, a national board member for the Sierra Club.

Like Hatch, she said similarities in "our organizations, our motivations, our allies, our opponents, and the issues we care about" far outweighed differences. Praising Hatch and the activists who attended, CWA President Larry Cohen said, "This is a great example of the deeper coalition-building we will need to do to build majority support on the key economic justice issues facing our members."

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