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January 24, 2008
Victory for Upstate New York Hospital
Workers
"We did it" was the word from CWAers throughout New York
State when the Department of Health announced that key hospitals
in upstate New York – where CWA members work – would
remain open.
The department determined that St. Joseph Hospital in Buffalo
and DeGraff Memorial in North Tonowanda will remain open as
acute care and emergency facilities, providing critical services
for residents and maintaining jobs for workers – including
members of CWA Local 1168 in the Buffalo area.
The state government also will provide grants to the Kaleida
Health system to relocate the services now provided at Millard
Fillmore Gates Hospital to the Buffalo-Niagara Medical Campus.
CWA is continuing to work with Gates Hospital management to make
the transition as seamless as possible; the hospital committed
that "no jobs would be lost" after the state Berger Commission
announced plans in December 2006 to close hospitals throughout
the state, said CWA Local 1168 President John Klein.
"When the closings were first announced in December 2006, CWA
started mobilizing across the state to build community and
political support to keep the hospitals open," said District 1
Vice President Chris Shelton.
"Members collected tens of thousands of 'We Believe' and
'Save Our Emergency Room' postcards, held news conferences and
rallies and in the winter's cold, marched 300 miles from Buffalo
to the state capitol in Albany to show legislators that we were
determined to keep open these critical facilities," he said.
Local 1168 members Dawn Mele and Pat Sullivan walked the
entire distance, joined for most of the journey by Klein, with
CWAers providing companionship and support along the way. The
marchers braved temperatures as low as 10 degrees, along with
rain and driving winds. Shelton and CWA President Larry Cohen
joined marchers just outside of Albany.
"We were determined to get our message across to our
political leaders that these hospitals are needed, and closing
them would be a hardship for many thousands of people," Klein
said.
Jackson City Workers Reach First Tentative
Contract
A little over a year and a half since gaining collective
bargaining rights in June 2006, Jackson, Mississippi's 1,200
city employees achieved another milepost in their remarkable
struggle to organize and improve their jobs, negotiating their
first union contract with the city. The workers are represented
by CWA's Mississippi Alliance of State Employees (MASE-CWA Local
3570).
The tentative agreement, up for a ratification vote in mid
February, "lays a strong foundation and real economic gains for
workers who have suffered for years under our city's tight
budgets," said MASE-CWA President Brenda Scott.
The workers will have a voice in their pay and benefits. The
contract provides for a wage reopener in March/April 2008, and a
union seat on the city's insurance committee which determines
the cost and coverage of workers' health insurance. The
agreement contains payroll dues deduction, rare in public
employee contracts, and especially union contracts in
Right-to-Work states. The contract provides workers with dues
process rights through a grievance procedure and provides time
off with pay to up to 15 union stewards while handling and
investigating members' grievances.
A majority of the workers have already signed up for union
membership. "These workers have demonstrated what can be
achieved through sheer determination," commented District 3 Vice
President Noah Savant. "When the workers first sought to
organize, they did not even have the right to organize," he
said. "Now they have not only a union, but bargaining rights and
their first tentative agreement."
Lexington Guild Reaches Tentative Pact after
Year-Long Battle
After battling a long list of concession demands for more
than a year, Lexington (Ky.) Newspaper Guild leaders are urging
approval of a tentative five-year agreement at the Lexington
Herald-Leader that was worked out with the help of mediation
last week. The local represents 90 newsroom workers who
are set to vote on the pact next Tuesday.
The sticking points in recent weeks involved company demands
that could have cut health insurance for part-time workers and
overhauled personal and sick leave policies for everyone. Under
the tentative pact, nothing will change in those areas for at
least two years. After that, shifts in part-timers' insurance
must be preceded by 90 days' notice and the company would have
to bargain over any new leave provision.
The Guild also beat back other severe takeback demands. "The
company had wanted to limit overtime, cut wages without
bargaining with the Guild, gain the right to replace future
employees with freelancers and temps and the right to layoff
workers displaced by technology or new processes. It eventually
dropped all those proposals," the bargaining team said.
In addition to staving off concessions the local maintained
important benefits and won new ones, including what's believed
to be the highest Guild night differential in the country -- $10
by the end of 2011 – and having the company pay 50 percent
of COBRA health insurance benefits for 60 days in the event of
layoffs. Other improvements include seniority benefits for
workers who come from other McClatchy-owned papers, longer
lay-off notices and higher pay for news assistants who write
stories.
TNG-CWA sponsored radio ads and billboards explaining the
issues and the local launched a community petition drive to
build support for the workers, whose last contract expired at
the end of 2006. TNG-CWA President Linda Foley said the local
built a support network that was key to its ultimate success at
the bargaining table.
"The Lexington Guild achieved this victory with the help of
the central Kentucky community, especially the support of their
sisters and brothers from CWA Local 3372 who pitched in with
people, resources and solidarity," said Foley, who began her
newspaper career as a copy editor at the Herald-Leader.
Nelle Horlander's Legacy: 'She was CWA in
Kentucky'
A savvy political activist and outspoken feminist, Nelle P.
Horlander, retired CWA Kentucky state director, died Jan. 21 at
a care center in Louisville at age 78.
"Nelle was a pioneer in the early implementation of our
union's nationwide legislative and political programs," said CWA
Secretary-Treasurer Barbara Easterling. "She was a close
confidant and labor adviser to several Democratic governors and
state legislators. She was CWA in Kentucky."
After working her way through two years at the University of
Louisville, she gave up her dreams of becoming a doctor or
chemist, realizing that those jobs would be filled by men
returning from World War II. Instead, in 1949, she became an
operator for Southern Bell Telephone in Louisville and
immediately joined CWA Local 3310.
Over the years Horlander worked her way through the ranks at
the local, serving as steward, secretary-treasurer and
treasurer, and in 1969 she was elected local president.
After working to enact the tax referendum that created the
Transit Authority of River City, she was in 1973 appointed to
its board. She was elected board chair in 1974 – the same
year she joined the CWA staff as Kentucky director – and
was reelected every year through 1979.
Politically active throughout her career, Horlander served as
her state's legislative-political coordinator for CWA and she
was a Democratic precinct captain for 30 years.
Active in several women's organizations, she served on the
executive committee of the Kentucky Commission on Women until
1993. Horlander retired from CWA in 1996.
IN BRIEF:
- Apparently still fuming over having
to fork over $65 million to settle a lawsuit by technical
support employees who charged the company cheated them out of
overtime, IBM discovered a way to pay them back. It will be
reclassifying 7,600 of the workers as being eligible for
overtime, however, it will also be cutting their pay by 15
percent. Despite IBM's claims that overtime would make up for
the salary cut, internal IBM documents contradict those claims
and indicate that many will lose money.
The
move has outraged the workers, according to CWA Local
1701/Alliance@IBM, whose website is overflowing with their
reaction: "Thank you IBM for helping me to awaken to the
greediness of the corporate world. . .At first I did not want to
believe that the company I work hard for was driving me out, but
it becomes more obvious as time goes on. This is complete
retaliation taken out on the employees," said one 12-year
employee.
- Keep up with the latest news and
communications tips on The Source,
www.cwa-union.org/source,
CWA's website for union editors and communicators. Besides
including an archive of CWA's weekly newsletters, union
communicators can download topical photos, artwork and clipart
for their newsletters, listen to or view CWA audio and video
files about union campaigns and key issues, or take advamtage of
the site's unique "Ask the Experts" to get answers to quandaries
or questions about how to be an effective union
communicator.
- Corporate America is positively
giddy over the NLRB's decision last month to let companies bar
employees from using work e-mail accounts to communicate about
union business.
"Take this gift from the NLRB
and use it well in the coming year," union-bashing management
consultant Walter Orechwa is telling his clients. "Complacency
will open the door very wide for union organizers. This is one
resolution with which I hope everyone can stick."
Orechwa's pitch cautions employers about any "direct
solicitation" by union organizers, calling it the "best shot at
convincing non-union employees they should join up today.
The most effective method of curbing direct or on-the-job
solicitation is to create—and strictly enforce—a
no-solicitation, no-distribution policy."
The AFL-CIO
reports that Orechwa's Atlanta-based company specializes in
anti-worker propaganda that includes "union-avoidance" videos
such as "Supervisors Can Keep You Union Free" and flyers
describing organizing campaigns as a "Declaration of
War."
- Though many details are yet to come
about the Bush administration plan to stimulate the sagging
economy, the Economic Policy Institute says one thing is already
clear: The poorest Americans will get little or nothing from the
$145 billion proposal.
"While such a
rebate can help boost lagging demand by putting more money in
consumers' pockets, the White House plan suffers from very poor
targeting, and thus fails on two critical criteria: efficiency
and equity," EPI says in its weekly economic snapshot, available
at www.epinet.org.
Less than 10 percent of
the funds will reach the bottom 40 percent of Americans and 55.9
million households will get nothing at all. EPI says that while
many of those households don't pay federal income tax, they do
pay other taxes, including payroll taxes on their earnings.
"The economic research on effective stimulus is quite
clear: there is a greater bang-for-the-buck from rebates
targeted at lower-income households than higher-income ones.
Given the well-documented increase in income inequality in
recent years, excluding low-income households from the rebate
also fails on the criterion of fairness."
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