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June 21, 2007
IUE–CWA Pact at GE Boosts Pay and
Pensions
IUE-CWA GE Conference Board delegates unanimously recommended
ratification of a new four-year agreement reached with General
Electric on June 17. The tentative pact, covering about 10,000
workers, delivers a projected 16.1 percent wage increase,
significant pension gains, an extra holiday and other
improvements.
Even with some increases in health care costs, the average
IUE-CWA member will realize a net income gain of almost $17,000
over the term of the contract. The bargaining committee was able
to hold the overall health care cost share for represented
workers to about 20.5 percent vs. 26 percent for all GE
employees.
"GE and the unions have agreed to accelerate our joint
efforts to address the difficult health care issues our nation
faces," IUE-CWA President Jim Clark said, congratulating the
bargaining committee. "This will help to address a critical
issue for not only GE employees but all American workers."
Conference Board Chairman Bob Santamoor said, "At this time
when our troops are in harm's way, GE has agreed to now allow
its workers to honor U.S. veterans with the first new holiday in
a decade, Veterans Day. This package is a huge victory for our
members."
Other gains include:
- Two early retirement windows with combined opportunities for
900 members.
- A nearly $4,000 average improvement under a regular pension
update.
- Workers could see as much as a 30-percent improvement
from guaranteed pension tables when combined with income boosts
over the length of the contract.
- An extra week of vacation and 66-percent increase in night
differential for more recently hired workers.
- Preferential placement expanded to include laid-off
workers.
Additionally, GE said it is recommending to its board a
special pensioner increase, which would be the first since 2000.
The formula will give the biggest boost to those who have been
out the longest.
Local rallies and an action at the GE shareholder
meeting in South Carolina focused on the plight of older
retirees whose pensions have been losing ground to
inflation.
IUE-CWA, representing 10,000 workers in various GE industries
nationwide, and the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers
(UE), representing another 4,000 both reached agreements on the
final day of the old contracts, prior to their expiration at
midnight. GE has also been bargaining with the Machinists, IBEW,
Auto Workers, Steelworkers and other unions which, combined,
represent another 9,000. All belong to the 13-union Coordinated
Bargaining Committee, formed in 1966 to share information and
strategies and to prevent GE from playing one union against
another.
Unions Turn Up Heat on Capitol Hill for
EFCA
As the U.S. Senate began debating the Employee Free Choice
Act, more than 4,000 union activists turned out in 96-degree
heat Tuesday for a Capitol Hill rally to demand that lawmakers
pass the bill and begin restoring America's embattled middle
class.
The boisterous, sign-waving crowd included several hundred
red-shirted CWA members and staff along with others from AFSCME,
UAW, IBEW, AFT, Teamsters and virtually every other national
union.
CWA President Larry Cohen asked the entire crowd – as
he has asked all CWA members and their families – to call
each of their two senators to either thank them for
supporting the bill or urge them to do so. A vote in the Senate
could come as early as June 25.
"Every senator needs to know how serious we are about this
bill," Cohen said. "They need to know that tens of millions of
union members and workers who want to be union members want the
Employee Free Choice Act. The entire labor movement is watching
this vote," Cohen said.
The Employee Free Choice Act, which would restore workers'
badly eroded rights to organize unions and bargain collectively,
was passed by a wide margin in the U.S. House in March.
The Capitol Hill rally was one of more than 100 rallies
across the country this week supporting the bill. Meanwhile,
working Americans so far have generated 50,000 telephone calls
to the Senate, 156,000 faxes and e-mails, and 220,000 postcards,
including 120,000 delivered to the Senate on rally day, the
AFL-CIO said. .
Despite all of labor's energy and support from a majority of
senators, Republican leaders are determined to block the
Employee Free Choice Act with a filibuster. This tactic would
prevent an actual vote on EFCA by requiring at least 60 senators
first to vote to stop the filibuster before the actual bill
could be taken up.
But Cohen and AFL-CIO President John Sweeney said the massive
and ongoing campaign by labor will ensure that the bill is a top
priority for the next Congress in January 2009 – when a
new president will also take office. Should the Employee Free
Choice Act beat the odds in the Senate now, President Bush has
promised to veto it.
Rep. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) told the Washington crowd that
that bill is badly needed because, "The middle class is under
attack in this country and the wrong side is winning."
Other political leaders who spoke at the rally included Sen.
Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.), who introduced the bill in the Senate,
presidential candidates Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.), Sen. Joe
Biden (D-Del.) and Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio), Sen. Chuck
Schumer (D-N.Y.), Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) and Rep. George
Miller (D-Calif.), who sponsored the bill in the House, along
with many labor leaders.
Three workers who have struggled for union representation
told their stories of employers' fear and intimidation tactics
to keep unions out of the workplace.
"Obviously, the system is broken," said injured food factory
worker Lee Mabry, who has fought for a union for seven years to
improve worker safety. "Now more than ever, we need Congress to
pass the Employee Free Choice Act to protect our rights to form
a union so that we can improve our working conditions."
AT&T to Return 650 More Outsourced
Jobs
AT&T announced this week that it will be bringing back
from overseas nearly 650 Tier I DSL technical support jobs and
locating them in Las Vegas and Reno, Nevada, later this year.
The jobs are coming back to the United States as part of the
agreement CWA reached with AT&T last fall to return the tech
support work that had been contracted overseas.
It was the third announcement this year of the return of
AT&T Tier I customer support jobs. In El Paso, Texas, a new
center is now up and running with more than
400 CWA-represented workers, and another 400 are expected
to be on the job at a new call center scheduled to open in
Indianapolis, Indiana, this July.
Overall, more than 2,000 new jobs are expected to be created
as a result of CWA's 2005 National Internet agreement with
AT&T, reported Executive Vice President Jeff Rechenbach, who
heads the Telecom Office.
Retired Rep Crystal Roberts Led GOTV Efforts
in Ohio
Retired CWA Representative Crystal Roberts, well respected
for political mobilization work in Ohio, died on June 15 at age
54.
"Crystal was an outstanding example of a CWA union leader,"
said District 4 Vice President Seth Rosen. "She always worked
hard for our union and its members throughout her career."
Roberts joined CWA Local 4302 after going to work as a
maintenance administrator for Ameritech in August 1971. Over the
course of 27 years, she served as a steward, secretary-treasurer
and vice president of the local.
She joined the staff in November 1999 as a CWA representative
in Cleveland, where she bargained on behalf of members at
Verizon, Century Tel and other employers and had a major role in
CWA's get-out-the-vote efforts on behalf of friends of working
families during the 2004 and 2006 elections. She retired in
January.
Roberts is survived by her husband, Paul Roberts; mother,
Olga Kinsey; brother, John; sons Jason and Jeremy, stepchildren
Kelly Santiago and Paul Jr., and eight grandchildren.
IN BRIEF:
- WashTech-CWA representatives
testified before the U.S. House Ways and Means Committee last
week to urge lawmakers to extend and expand the Trade Adjustment
Assistance Act to include tech workers.
TAA
benefits help train workers who have lost their jobs because of
foreign competition. Legislation proposed a year ago would
expand the benefits to such workers as computer programmers,
testers, technical writers, system administrators, call center
workers, and others. But now Congress is debating whether to
continue the TAA program at all.
James Fusco, a New
Jersey WashTech member who testified along with President Marcus
Courtney, lost his 13-year job as a mainframe applications
developer with AT&T in 1999 when it was outsourced to
Canada. He became part of a class-action lawsuit that forced the
U.S. Department of Labor to certify the workers as eligible for
benefits. However, a government study shows that 40 percent of
workers applying for benefits are denied because the DOL doesn't
regard their work product (such as software) as covered under
the Trade Act, Courtney said.
Pending bills to improve
TAA are S.122, sponsored by Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.), and H.R.
4156, sponsored by Rep. Adam Smith (D-Neb.)
- Those who argue that workers
in unions are less productive than other workers are flat-out
wrong according to studies in both the United States and Europe,
where up to 90 percent of workers in some countries are covered
by a union contract.
The Economic Policy
Institute's weekly snapshot, titled "Strong unions, strong
productivity," says it is a "myth that unions hurt
productivity." In Europe, "Output per hour worked is higher in
the Netherlands, France, and Belgium, where more than 80 percent
of employees have union contracts," EPI said.
In the
United States, EPI said "a positive association (of unions and
high productivity) is established for the United States in
general and for U.S. manufacturing."
"If Congress is
concerned about protecting middle-class incomes, it should pass
measures to facilitate union organizing and collective
bargaining coverage, including the Employee Free Choice Act,"
EPI said. "There is no reason to fear that higher rates of
unionization will impede efficiency or labor productivity." The
full snapshot, with graphs, is available at www.epinet.org.
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