|
March 25, 2010
CWA played a big part in getting health care reform through
Congress, and President Obama invited CWA President Larry Cohen
to the White House for the official bill signing to recognize
that hard work.
"After decades of working for quality health care for all,
this bill moves us forward and provides a framework for future
improvements," Cohen said.
Through CWA's Health Care SIF campaign, thousands of CWAers
called, wrote, participated in town hall meetings and visited
their members of Congress. They told their senators and
representatives how they worried about skyrocketing health care
costs and whether they would be able to maintain their health
care benefits.
They talked about how being laid off meant losing affordable
health care. Retired workers wondered how they would pay
sky-high premiums until they were eligible for Medicare, or how
they would afford their prescription drugs when they reached the
"donut" hole in Medicare's drug coverage.
Health care reform takes away a lot of these worries for
working families. How? Keep reading.
1. Children can continue to be covered by their parents'
health insurance until their 26th birthday, instead of being
forced off the plan by age 19. When? IN SIX MONTHS.
2. Insurance companies cannot exclude children under age 19
from health care coverage because of pre-existing conditions.
When? IN SIX MONTHS.
3. Insurance companies cannot charge higher rates for women,
whether they're covered by an employer's plan or have individual
coverage. When? IN SIX MONTHS.
4. Adults who can't get insurance because of a preexisting
condition can buy into a national pool until the exchanges start
operating in 2014. When? IN 90 DAYS.
5. Insurance companies can't cancel your policy because you
get sick. When? IN SIX MONTHS.
6. Insurance companies can't put a lifetime limit on your
medical coverage. When? IN SIX MONTHS.
7. Retired workers
who have hit the Medicare "donut hole," the gap in benefits that
hurts millions of seniors, will receive a $250 rebate. When?
THIS YEAR.
8. "Donut hole" completely gone in 2016.
CWAers are on the phone to their members of Congress, urging
them to sign on to Rep. Lucille Roybal-Allard's letter that
calls on President Obama to make recess appointments of Craig
Becker and Mark Pearce to the National Labor Relations Board.
So far, more than 100 U.S. representatives have signed
on. With a March 25 deadline, CWA activists are working the
phones, to let their representatives know that this is a top
priority for CWA.
What's our message to Congress? Workers need a fully
functioning NLRB. There are just two members now and that has
delayed justice for workers and made a huge backlog of cases
even worse.
With Senate Republicans continuing a campaign to stall these
nominations, the only way to get a functioning majority on the
NLRB is for President Obama to make appointments over the Easter
congressional recess.
Thanks to CWA's successful Verizon Strategic Industry Fund
campaign, the House of Representatives voted to close the
Reverse Morris Trust tax loophole that has allowed Verizon and
other companies to spin off parts of their operations tax-free.
The tax loophole ban was sponsored by Rep. Paul Hodes
(D-N.H.) and included co-sponsors Reps. Alan Mollohan and Nick
Rahall (D-WVa.) and Louise M. Slaughter (D-N.Y.).
Verizon took advantage of this tax loophole to sell landlines
to FairPoint Communications, a much smaller company that just
couldn't meet service requirements and later declared
bankruptcy, costing jobs and resulting in deteriorating customer
service.
The Small Business and Infrastructure Jobs Act, passed by a
vote of 246-178, now heads to the Senate. Verizon wants to sell
4.8 million landlines in 14 states to Frontier Communications,
but Frontier will be forced to borrow $3.3 billion to pay for
the deal. Verizon would realize $600 million in tax savings.
"The Reserve Morris Trust was designed by Wall Street, not
West Virginians," said District 2 Vice President Ron Collins.
"We're happy that Congress shares our view that the Reverse
Morris Trust is a tax break for corporations, not a job-creating
tool. Without this tax provision, I don't believe Verizon would
be so eager to sell to Frontier."
By an overwhelming margin, CWA members at Verizon West voted
last week to authorize a strike if a fair contract cannot be
reached during negotiations. Bargaining is continuing; the
contract expired March 13.
More than 90 percent of members approved the strike
authorization, with nearly 80 percent of members voting. The
contract covers about 5,500 workers mostly in Southern
California.
"The strike vote demonstrates members' solid support for
their bargaining team and their determination to achieve a fair
settlement," said District 9 Vice President Jim Weitkamp.
"Verizon can well afford to treat its workers fairly."
CWA and Verizon remain far apart on key issues, including
pay, health care cost-shifting, and off-shoring of work. Verizon
angered CWA workers when it moved some customer service
work from California to Tijuana, Mexico. The company also
has relocated some 911 jobs there.
Members are continuing to mobilize and are gearing up for a
rally in Long Beach to protest offshoring and other unfair
Verizon moves. Elected officials, including several Long Beach
City Council members who are concerned about Verizon's decision
to move jobs out of the community, will be joining CWAers at the
rally.
Cornell University will begin a comprehensive four-part
online "webinar" on March 31 to train union stewards, officers
and staff on how to investigate and handle private and public
sector grievances.
Sitting at your desk, you can learn the basics of grievance
handling, then advance to more complicated situations involving
investigation, meeting with management and dealing with
difficult supervisors.
Cornell's Industrial and Labor Relations School is offering
the first seminar at no cost. It will be held Wednesday, March
31, from 1 pm to 2:15 pm EDT, and will cover the basics:
types of grievances, rights and responsibilities of grievance
handlers, the basics of arbitration and more.
There is a $50 charge for each of the next three sessions,
which will provide lots of specific information for union reps
dealing with tough grievance and arbitration situations.
Click here to register or learn more about the
webinar. For information about other Cornell labor studies
opportunities, go to www.ilr.cornell.edu.
In the first round of bargaining with Dow Jones since it was
acquired by the notoriously anti-union Rupert Murdoch, the
Independent Association of Publishing Employees Local 1096, an
affiliate of TNG-CWA, "beat back each and every one" of the
company's assaults on core contract provisions and won some
improvements.
The tentative four-year agreement freezes wages the first
year, but provides for a 2 percent raise in each subsequent
year, plus keeps cost-of-living protection. Starting July 1, a
new health care plan that maintains current benefits but lowers
premiums goes effect.
The IAPE negotiating team also defeated the company's effort
to gut seniority rights and improved severance pay.
The IAPE bargaining team has endorsed the tentative
settlement, and President Stephen Yount is meeting with Dow
Jones workers nationwide to answer questions before the
ratification vote. A vote is expected to be complete by May
1.
Flight attendants at British Airways who are members of the
British union Unite are ready for a four day strike March 27-30,
said AFA-CWA. During last week's three-day strike, more than 80
percent of crew supported the action.
If the crew does strike, any British Airways flight operating
March 27-30 will be crewed by scab labor. So mark your calendars
and don't fly British Airways on those dates.
Unite flight attendants are fighting back against
management's demand to cut 1,700 jobs, impose a two-year wage
freeze and set up a two-tier job system. Unite has been working
hard to reach a settlement with management and has done
everything possible to avoid the strike, but so far, management
refuses to seriously consider the cabin crew's offer.
Don't miss the March 31 deadline to apply for CWA's Beirne
scholarships, which can help you attend college or pursue an
online distance-learning degree in the 2010-11 academic
year.
The annual scholarships from the Joe Beirne Foundation, named
for CWA's founding president, provide 15 students up to $3,000
toward their college tuition. The award can be renewed for a
second year if winners have a satisfactory academic record.
CWA members, spouses, children, grandchildren and dependents
of retired, laid-off or deceased members are eligible. Winners
will be chosen from a lottery of eligible applicants.
The applications are available online only at: www.cwa-union.org/members/beirne, where you'll
also find more information. Applications must be submitted
electronically no later than midnight Wednesday, March 31.
|