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December 20, 2007
CWA Locals, Councils Begin Presidential
Endorsement Process
CWA locals and councils in many areas have begun the process
of endorsing presidential candidates and others running for
statewide and national office in Election 2008.
CWA in Nevada has endorsed John Edwards for president, citing
his commitment to the Employee Free Choice Act, "his willingness
to act and fight for working families and his leadership on
issues like universal health care and trade were essential in
securing the endorsement," said Local 9413.
CWA's Arizona State Council also endorsed Edwards, declaring
that "on issues important to working families, we believe John
Edwards pulls way ahead of the pack."
The CWA New York State Legislative and Political Action
Committee endorsed Senator Hillary Clinton for president, citing
her long record of support for working family issues in the
state and nationally.
CWA Local 1298, representing workers in Connecticut,
Massachusetts and Rhode Island, has endorsed Senator Christopher
Dodd for president, noting Dodd's 32-year record fighting to
protect collective bargaining rights, secure pensions, and fair
wages.
In Delaware, Local 13101 endorsed Senator Joseph Biden for
president, stating: "He's never wavered in his commitment
to the working men and women in Delaware and we would expect the
same of him as president."
In Indiana, CWA District 4 has endorsed Jill Long Thompson
for governor, stating that she is committed to working for a
better future for all Indiana working families.
Following the release of CWA's e-poll results, which
indicated that a majority of CWA members did not want the
International union to make an early national endorsement
for president, the Executive Board voted to release locals and
councils to make their own endorsements.
With Battista Gone, NLRB Deadlocks
On the stroke of midnight on Dec. 16, the term of NLRB
Chairman Robert J. Batista expired, effectively bringing to an
end the board's pro-corporate, anti-union Republican
majority. Prior to being appointed to the NLRB, Battista
served as a management attorney for a law firm that played a
prominent role in helping management at the Detroit Free Press
and The Detroit News bust their workers' unions in the
1990s.
With Batista gone, the five-member NLRB is now deadlocked,
with two Republican and two Democratic members.
Another board shakeup occurs in January when the terms of two
other members, Republican Peter N. Kirsanow, and Democrat Dennis
P. Walsh, both expire. This will leave the NLRB with just two
sitting members, Democrat Wilma J. Liebman, who has strongly
objected to the board's attacks on workers' rights, and
Republican Peter C. Schaumber.
To prevent the president from making recess appointments
– circumventing congressional approval – to restore
a GOP majority, Senate Democratic leaders will keep Congress
open in "pro forma session" until the current session of
Congress ends in January.
After January, Bush can nominate a new NLRB chair and name
candidates to fill the other vacancies, but each nominee must
first be confirmed by the Senate, now controlled by the
Democrats. An ideological standoff on the board is
expected to remain until a new administration takes office.
"Given the recent history of this board, we're better off
with an NLRB that can't act versus one that can," said CWA
President Larry Cohen. "But even more important, we must
dig even deeper in mobilizing over the next 18 monlths to enact
the Employee Free Choice Act and bring back workers'
rights."
'Connect Ohio' Project Embraces CWA's Speed
Matters Campaign
Determined to bring high-speed internet access to all of
Ohio, CWA's District 4 has helped launch a private-public
partnership in the state that will identify underserved areas
and build coalitions to attract investment.
Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland announced the program, called
Connect Ohio, this week at a news conference attended by CWA
District 4 Vice President Seth Rosen, as well as members of the
telecom industry.
"The digital divide in Ohio takes many forms – from
lack of access to computers and broadband services to a lack of
technological skills necessary for the jobs of the future,"
Strickland said. "The goal of Connect Ohio is to create
customized support for local communities to meet their
individual technological needs while helping expand
broadband service to all residents and businesses."
Rosen said Connect Ohio embodies the goals of CWA's Speed
Matters campaign. "It is a realistic, practical way to work to
get high-speed networks to every single citizen," he said. "We
do that by identifying where the need is and then start the real
work of building a network, community by community."
Rosen's office and CWA leaders around the state, including
Frank Matthews, president of the CWA Ohio State Council, started
talking with Strickland about high-speed internet during his
campaign for governor in 2006. In July, Strickland signed a
statewide video franchising bill that encourages broadband
investment, but not necessarily in all areas, Rosen said. To
expand coverage, CWA pushed for Connect Ohio, a program modeled
on a similar project in Kentucky.
The program will map the state by the access neighborhoods
and communities have to high-speed internet service. Once the
gaps are identified, CWA will be especially involved in working
in those areas to build coalitions with other unions, business,
government and higher education to show telecom companies that
there is interest. "We'll be helping to bring together groups of
people from different entities in a coordinated way to make it
more worthwhile for companies to invest," Rosen said.
Rosen hopes Connect Ohio, like Connect Kentucky, will serve
as a model for other states.
"Connect Ohio is a tremendous achievement already and its
success will be life-changing for residents in rural areas and
inner cities that don't have high-speed internet access," Cohen
said. "This is precisely what we want Speed Matters to do
in every state in the country."
CWA Leaders Blast FCC Vote on Media
Cross-Ownership
The FCC vote this week reversing the three-decade ban on
cross-ownership of a community's newspapers and broadcast
stations is one more blow to media diversity in the United
States, say CWA and its broadcast, newspaper and printing
sectors.
"Our members know what happens when one company owns more
than one TV station or a major TV station and the monopoly
newspaper in the same market. The owner merges operations,
slashes jobs, and reduces the quantity and quality of the news,"
said John Clark, president of NABET-CWA.
Linda Foley, president of The Newspaper Guild-CWA, said
protecting what's left of media diversity demands more, not
fewer, safeguards as local TV and newspaper markets already are
highly concentrated and most cities are one-newspaper towns.
"The FCC's action means that fewer distinct, local media voices
will be available as news sources for citizens," she said.
"These changes fail to protect the public interest."
William Boarman, president of the CWA Printing Sector,
expressed concern about how the rule change will affect the
ability of communities to discuss and disseminate different
points of view, as well as its impact on quality jobs.
The five-member Republican-controlled commission voted 3-2
along party lines to change the rule despite huge public
opposition. CWA members joined thousands of Americans nationwide
at hearings and tens of thousands wrote letters and contacted
members of Congress. In the weeks before the vote, angry U.S.
senators grilled FCC Chairman Kevin Martin about his lack of
attention to public comment and many pledged to overturn the
ruling.
TNG-CWA, NABET-CWA, and the Printing Sector spoke out
after Tuesday's vote in conjunction with the American Federation
of Television and Radio Artists, which has worked with CWA to
fight the erosion of FCC ownership rules.
Sen. Byron Dorgon (D-N.D.), one of the Senate's most vocal
opponents of the media rule changes told reporters afterwards
that, ""We're not done with this. Not by a long shot."
Dorgan called the vote "needlessly rushed" and said he'll
follow through on legislation to revoke it. "We've got a lot of
people from both parties, as well as millions of American
citizens, saying hold on a minute here, don't do this," he said.
"Instead, the FCC is rushing to do the bidding of big
corporations at the expense of the public interest."
IN BRIEF:
- AFA-CWA's persistence on two vital
issues paid off Wednesday as Congress passed an omnibus bill
that includes seniority protections for airline workers and
funding to follow-up on a study of the effects of fatigue on
flight attendants.
"For years, AFA-CWA members
have been urging their Congressional leaders to take action on
these very important issues," AFA-CWA President Patricia Friend
said. "Those leaders listened and because of their
determination, flight attendants across the country are better
off. Today we made a giant stride in protecting our futures and
came one step closer to ending the dangerous effects of
fatigue."
A study last year authorized by the Senate
Transportation Appropriations Committee determined that flight
attendants are frequently "experiencing issues consistent with
fatigue and tiredness" and urged further evaluation. The funding
approved this week will pay for a two-year study by the FAA's
Civil Aerospace Medical Institute.
AFA-CWA has also been
at the forefront of the fight for seniority protections, noting
that 3,000 TWA flight attendants were placed at the bottom of
the seniority list when American Airlines bought TWA. After the
September 11 attacks, all of the former TWA flight attendants
lost their jobs at American, even though many had more than 25
years of service. Neither group of workers were represented by
AFA-CWA, but the union fought for congressional action to ensure
that all flight attendants are protected.
- Republicans on Dec. 18 broke their
own record for filibusters in the Senate when they forced the
62nd cloture vote of the current legislative session on a
portion of the omnibus federal appropriations bill dealing with
funding for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
In seeking to tie war funding to timetables for troop
withdrawal, Democrats sought a cloture vote to try to end a GOP
filibuster, but fell short of the 60 votes needed. The
final budget measure eventually passed with $70 billion for
continued war funding with no strings attached.
The
previous record of 61 cloture votes in a two-year term was set
in 2001-2002, the last time the GOP comprised the minority in
the Senate. From refusing to allow the Senate to vote on
the Employee Free Choice Act, to denying a roll call on a
prescription drug bill, to preventing a vote on implementing the
recommendations of the 9/11 commission, GOP senators have used
the filibuster to block senate votes on pressing
problems.
- Journalists covering Iraq and other
hot spots around the world were killed in near-record numbers in
2007, with 64 job-related deaths reported with two weeks still
left in the year, according to the Committee to Protect
Journalists.
The only year CPJ has recorded a
higher death toll was 1994, when 66 journalists were killed,
many in conflicts in Algeria, Bosnia and Rwanda. Last year, 56
journalists were killed around the world. The numbers are
even higher when all media workers – including translators
and other support staff for journalists in foreign countries
– are counted. The International News Safety Institute
reports that 173 media workers had been killed as of Dec. 13,
2007.
For the fifth straight year, Iraq was the
deadliest country in the world for the media, with 31 victims.
Most of them, 24 victims, were targeted and murdered. The other
seven died in combat-related crossfire. Almost all were Iraqi
nationals working for international news agencies and
newspapers, such as the Washington Post.
The deaths are
of extreme concern to The Newspaper Guild-CWA, which has members
in Iraq and Afghanistan, and many of whom have covered past
wars. Journalists say the targeting of media workers today is a
new and grave risk in what has always been hazardous work.
- IUE-CWA Local 81320 is helping kids
connect with Santa Claus this holiday season, through the Santa
hotline hosted at the local's hall in Syracuse,
N.Y.
Dressed as Santa, local vice
president Bob Walter fields calls from children starting about
two weeks before Christmas. Santa's helpers include financial
secretary Mike Zarzecki – who dresses as an
elf – and Mrs. Claus, Walter's wife Sally; the North
Pole crew answers from 30 to 100 calls a day from
children.
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