[Educationforall] spam con huevos labor news, views and concerns, 2.25.12-I

Carlos Pelayo cgpelayo at hotmail.com
Tue Feb 28 04:36:30 UTC 2012


You "like" being healthy, right?‏Michael Winship | Mike Daisey Takes a Bite Out of Apple  Tentative Deal in Cooper Tire Lockout‏ UE Occupies Chicago Window Plant Again, and Wins Reprieve   In a Gamble for Cash, Sears Plans to Sell Stores AFL-CIO Back Pimping for Dems (the govt is a 2 headed snake, an executive committee and armed weapon of the rich UAW Sells Members to Obamagogue (Thanks for 50% Wages, 5 Year No-strike Clause) How Economists Tally Unemployment - and Its Affect on the Black Jobless Rate  FNS News: Immigrant Workers Score Victories‏EcoALBA: integración económica alternativa‏  
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 Dear SEIU-UHW Supporter,What if your hospital charged you $21 per aspirin? And what if the same hospital charged a patient hit by a drunk driver more than the value of her house because she had no insurance? That’s what we asked in an opinion piece published today on the Huffington Post. You can read it here on our new GetHealthyCa Facebook page. The piece talks about our two statewide ballot initiatives that would reduce the cost of healthcare and increase charity care for the needy in California. The hospital industry has responded as expected: they are defending their high prices and opaque billing practices. But we believe there IS a better way. Healthcare workers and members of SEIU-UHW have launched a major effort to improve the health of Californians and to fix California’s healthcare system. We are calling it Let’s Get Healthy California! Our ballot initiatives are just a piece of what we are working on.  Interested in learning more and helping build a healthier California? "Like" GetHealthyCA on Facebook and follow all the action and news reports! Sincerely,Elissa Underwood,
Kaiser LAMC    SEIU United Healthcare Workers - West 560 Thomas L. Berkley Way, Oakland, CA 94612
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Michael Winship | Mike Daisey Takes a Bite Out of AppleMichael Winship, Moyers & Co.: "Daisey says, 'If Apple would spend less energy finessing its public image, and instead apply its efforts to real transparency and accountability, it could be a true leader for the electronics industry. Apple today is still saying what it said yesterday: trust us, we know best, there's nothing to worry about. They have not earned the trust they are asking for.'" Read the Article 

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Feb. 24, 2012
Union member Lacy Gillespie is a graduate of the National Labor College (NLC) and you can be, too. Apply now for NLC’s summer term.A tentative agreement has been reached between the United Steelworkers (USW) and Cooper Tire, where workers have been locked out since November. Several Cooper Tire workers are part of this week’s 1,000-mile Journey for Justice to highlight the corporate greed that marks the growing number of lockouts. A ratification vote is set for Monday.
Got comments? Post them at blog.aflcio.org. Apply Now for Summer Term at National Labor College Report: Boosting Manufacturing Boosts Jobs, Economy Wisconsin Workers Sticking with the Union Finnish Corp. Ignores Mexican Workers’ Requests for Real Union Aer Lingus Flight Attendants Stand Strong in Face of Management Attacks Murder Strikes Guatemalan Banana Workers Union Again Bob Edwards—Radio Legend and Union Activist—Reads and SignsRead more important news of the day on the issues working families care about.Follow the AFL-CIO:
            Take the next step. Become a mobile activist
by joining the AFL-CIO Rapid Action Text Team.
Text NEWS to AFLCIO (235246) to receive action alerts and more.
(Message and data rates may apply.)
To find out more about the AFL-CIO, please visit our website at www.aflcio.org.


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UE Occupies Chicago Window Plant Again, and Wins ReprieveJane Slaughter|  February 24, 2012President Armando Robles and members of the United Electrical Workers won another reprieve for a Chicago window factory, re-occupying the plant they famously held in 2008. Photo: OccupyEverything.Login or register to post commentsPrint thisSend to friend Share this story   RSS Make text larger orsmallerMembers of the United Electrical Workers won another reprieve for a Chicago window factory, re-occupying the plant they famouslyheld in 2008.UE Local 1110 members took over the Serious Materials plant yesterday after being told by local management that the factory would close immediately.When they were confronted with the same news in 2008, workers voted unanimously to occupy their workplace, guarding the machines at the former Republic Windows and Doors for six days until the major creditor, Bank of America, released $1.75 million in wages and benefits owed the workers.Republic sold the plant to Serious and workers celebrated as the first sit-down strike in years won a favorable settlement in the teeth of the great recession.This week’s plant closing came with no warning. The union got a call from the boss that he wanted a meeting, but he wouldn’t say why. Officers and UE staff were summoned to the offices of the notorious union-busting law firm Seyfarth and Shaw at 9 a.m. yesterday.There executives said they would close the plant, effective immediately. Workers would be put on leave while management dismantled the window-making machinery and shipped it to the company’s other plants in Pennsylvania and Colorado.Workers would be paid what they were owed under the WARN Act, which requires employers to provide notice 60 days ahead of plant closings and mass layoffs. (The penalty for violations is up to two months of pay and benefits.)But the provisions typically only apply to businesses that would lay off 50 or more.Illinois has a stronger law, which requires notice when 25 or more full-time employees will lose their jobs, and gives the director of the state labor department the right to investigate the company’s books.Management provided nothing in writing to back up its promises.Union officers—Armando Robles, Ricky Maclin, and Vicente Rangel—and staffers spent three hours arguing with management that the closure was unacceptable. Serious had a legal and moral obligation to do more to try to save the jobs, they said.“We wanted to find a buyer,” said UE rep Leah Fried, “but they were not interested. They said it was not an option.”Meanwhile, the Serious workers were building windows inside the plant.February is not a big time for demand for windows, and their numbers were down to 38 after a recent layoff. Only 75 of the original 240 workers had ever been called back after Serious bought the plant from Republic.
All OutPresident Robles and Fried left the meeting with management Thursday and began calling laid-off workers, asking them to come to the plant. At 2 p.m., the end of the shift, 50 workers met to discuss their options.Robles presented them soberly: Do nothing, or fight—stay and occupy the plant again. Without much hullabaloo, matter-of-factly, the members voted unanimously to occupy.They had no food, no sleeping bags. Workers and leaders immediately started to phone fellow workers, allies, and the media. They called the local alderman and asked others to alert the mayor’s office. Occupy Chicago came with tacos. Stand Up Chicago arrived.Workers from other UE locals, including recently organized railroad van drivers, were there. Republic workers who’d never been called back to Serious but who still came to union meetings were there. The crowd inside grew to 65 and outside to 100.UE regional president Carl Rosen called Serious’s CEO Kevin Surace at headquarters in California and asked, “Do you really want to go this route? If it comes to it, we’ll be dragged out and arrested.”Fried wondered if Serious understood who they were dealing with. “These are people who won’t take this lightly,” she said. “They take this personally. They need jobs. And the political climate has changed. Now there’s a whole Occupy movement that was inspired by us. We’re sort of ground zero of Occupy.”Meanwhile, local management called the police. A half dozen cops informed the workers that they had five minutes to decide whether to leave peacefully or get arrested.They didn’t make good on the threat, but they refused to let the pizzas provided by Stand Up Chicago inside until a local pastor intervened, as local TV news cameras whirred. “Let the workers eat!” chanted the crowd.The cops backed off but wouldn’t let anyone leave and then go back inside.By 5 p.m. a crowd had gathered outside. Occupy Chicago started to raise tents, showing how a culture to prepare and stick it out has developed since the last occupation, Fried said. The cold rain started to freeze.Inside, workers played dominoes and tried to watch the coverage on an old, snowy TV. They had plenty of donated food—enough to share with their supporters outside.Negotiations shifted when corporate decision makers got on the phone. Management in California took over, apparently deciding they didn’t want a big showdown.At 1 a.m., a tentative agreement was reached that met all of the workers’ concerns. The plant will remain open, making windows, for 90 days. That’s in writing.Serious is committed to finding new ownership. Local union leaders are also interested in the possibility of a worker-run enterprise and are talking with consultants who specialize in converting factories to co-ops.Serious said it had never been able to get a foothold in Chicago and Midwest markets. Workers for years had offered help and suggestions, to no avail.“We started the morning with the plant closing and ended the day with work and a chance to save our jobs,” said Robles. “We are committed to finding a new buyer for the plant or if we can, buy the place ourselves and run it. Either way, we are hopeful.”
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In a Gamble for Cash, Sears Plans to Sell StoresBy PETER EAVISSears Holdings tacitly acknowledged the attention on its cash flows with a plan to sell some stores to shareholders, but it risks losing some of its best properties.
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AFL-CIO Back Pimping for Dems (the govt is a 2 headed snake, an
executive committee and armed weapon of the rich Last May, AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka stood a few blocks from the White House and
issued a stern warning: Union members could not be counted on as the
Democrats' foot soldiers anymore. 
"If leaders aren't blocking the wrecking ball and advancing working
families' interests, then working people will not support them," he
said in a speech at the National Press Club.  Flash forward to today:
Labor appears squarely back in the Democrats' corner for the 2012
election — pushed there in large part by Republican attacks on
collective bargaining rights for public employees. 
Those and other anti-union measures are rallying organized labor to
the side of its longtime Democratic allies, and not just in states
such as Wisconsin, Ohio and Michigan, where they are battling efforts
aimed at curbing union organizing. 
The country's biggest unions also have played a central role in
helping a network of federal pro-Democratic "super PACs" get off the
ground, pouring more than $4 million into those groups in 2011, even
as many wealthy liberals kept their checkbooks closed. 
And some major labor groups have even inserted themselves into the
Republican presidential primaries with ads that take aim at White
House hopeful Mitt Romney. 
The decision by unions to act again as an early firewall for Democrats
speaks to how stepped-up hostility by Republicans has curtailed
labor's hope to be an independent political force.  
http://articles.latimes.com/2012/feb/19/nation/la-na-labor-politics-20120220
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UAW Sells Members to Obamagogue (Thanks for 50% Wages, 5 Year
No-strike Clause) The United Automobile Workers union, a primary
beneficiary of President Obama’s decision to rescue domestic
carmakers, is now trying to return the favor.    deliver an economic
address here on Friday declaring Mr. Obama’s three years in office a
“failed presidency,” hundreds of union members gathered on the top
level of a parking deck as a freezing drizzle fell. 
“Thank you, President Obama!” shouted the union’s president, Bob
King. He gripped a bullhorn as he exhorted the crowd, “Everyone!”
They roared back, “Thank you, President Obama!” 
It was the beginning of an effort by the U.A.W. and others in the
labor movement to put their vast political organizations into motion
behind Mr. Obama, testing their power in∓ a difficult economy after
years of declining membership.  
 http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/25/us/politics/uaw-tries-to-help-obama-win-working-class-voters.html?emc=tnt&tntemail1=y@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
How Economists Tally Unemployment - and Its Affect on the Black Jobless RateShani O. Hilton and Hatty Lee, ColorLines: "When the black unemployment numbers dropped so steeply in January - from 15.7 to 12.7 percent - a lot of analysts were scratching their heads to figure out why. One told us that it was ‘quite surprising,’ but there would be no way to know what the numbers meant or whether they were accurate until we saw if the trend continued in later months. But why is that? We dug a little deeper into the process of tracking joblessness to find out." Read the Article 

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February 25, 2012

Immigration/Labor News 

Immigrant Workers Score Wins 


Despite an adverse economic and political landscape, immigrant and low-income workers celebrated victories this past week. 

In California, labor and community activists announced the winning of two new union contracts for car washers, or carwasheros, as they are called locally. The agreements with the Vermont Car Wash and Nava's Car Wash in the south Los Angeles area were the latest in a campaign uniting the Community Labor Environmental Action Network with allies in organized labor. Last September, workers at Santa Monica’s Bonus Car Wash were the first shop unit to gain union recognition. 

Edwin Leones, Nava’s Car Wash employee, said his fellow workers were “excited” to be union members. The victory, Leones said, now ensures that workers will have a “voice on the job and a say in our conditions.” In addition to a pay increase, the contracts will provide for extra safety equipment and on-the-job occupational health and safety training. 

The car washers will be represented by the United Steelworkers, an affiliate of the AFL-CIO. According to the national labor federation, the workers employed at the three southern California businesses are the only car washers nationwide to enjoy union representation in an industry that depends heavily on immigrant workers. 

Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa hailed the union agreements, saying the contracts represented an improvement in the lives of “some of our city’s most exploited workers…”

The car washers’ movement and related struggles were on the agenda of AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka, who visited California last week. In a speech to the annual convention of the National Day Laborer Organizing Network (NDLON), Trumka heartily endorsed the struggles of immigrant workers. He also blasted “armed vigilantes like the Minutemen,” and lashed out against “terrible, inhuman” state immigration laws in Arizona, Georgia, Alabama and elsewhere. 

Inspired by immigrant workers, the US labor movement will continue pressing for the legalization of undocumented workers, Trumka said in a Los Angeles speech. To reclaim and honor the history of all workers, organized labor will celebrate May Day 2012, he added. The national union leader also contended that anti-immigrant and anti-labor forces constituted the same adversary. 

“And let me tell you, it’s no coincidence that rogue state officials, like those in Arizona and Alabama who passed America’s worst anti-immigration laws,” have also targeted unions,” Trumka said. 

Trumka’s words were delivered as the NDLON, a network of worker centers spread across the United States, marked its tenth anniversary fighting for the rights of immigrant and low-paid who make a living on unpredictable, temporary work. 

The contemporary victories of immigrant workers were celebrated as Chicano and labor activists remembered the 60th anniversary victory of the epic Empire Zinc Strike in southwestern New Mexico. The conflict erupted after Mexican and Mexican-American miners, many of whom were World War Two vets, rebelled against local segregation in housing and other services as well as discriminatory company employment policies . 

The strike was notable for the participation of miners' wives, who assumed picket-line duty after a judge slapped an injunction against their husbands that prohibited the men from picketing the company’s gates. 

According to New Mexico labor activist and historian Hueteotl Lopez of Juntos en La Union, the women “persisted and proved to be strong and brave fighters even when they were thrown into jail and threatened.”

The long strike was depicted in the film Salt of the Earth, which included many of the original strikers in the cast. The film’s producers and actors faced blacklisting in the anti-communist atmosphere of the McCarthy Era, FBI investigations and other forms of harassment. Leading actress Rosaura Revueltas was deported to Mexico. Much later, Salt of the Earth was inducted into the Library of Congress as one of the top 100 films representative of the United States, according to Lopez. 

In an essay circulated on the Internet, Lopez took the occasion of the Empire Zinc anniversary to analyze the history of the strike and its long-term significance. Wrote Lopez : 

“It is one magnificent example out of many in U.S. history that set a precedent for the rest of the country and for the world to follow-that struggle and sacrifice in the name of humane and equal treatment is not in vain and that standing together in the face of adversity, persecution, incarceration and isolation for your belief in change is a testament to the power of right to win out over wrong.” 


Frontera NorteSur: on-line, U.S.-Mexico border news
Center for Latin American and Border Studies
New Mexico State University 
Las Cruces, New Mexico@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
Entrevista con Diego Borja
EcoALBA: integración económica alternativa

ALAI

ALAI AMLATINA, 22/02/2012.- La integración regional
dio un nuevo paso en 
la reciente Cumbre de la Alianza Bolivariana para los
Pueblos de Nuestra 
América –ALBA-, realizada a inicios de febrero,
cuando se conformó el 
Espacio Económico del ALBA (Ecoalba) cuya
coordinación quedó a cargo del 
economista ecuatoriano Diego Borja. El día de hoy el
Enlace de Medios 
para la Democratización de la Comunicación
entabló un diálogo con Borja, 
quien destacó que los ochos países miembros
del ALBA tienen en conjunto 
un producto interno bruto (PBI) de 650 millones de
dólares y agrupan a 
80 millones de personas, con lo cual se perfila como la
tercera economía 
más importante de América Latina.

El coordinador del Ecoalba precisó también
que, a diferencia de otros 
tratados económicos, este proceso de
integración no nace con un 
fundamento estrictamente mercantil. No es una
integración basada 
únicamente en el comercio sino que está
vinculada con voluntades 
sociales, políticas, comunicacionales y de una
visión compartida de 
futuro entre los países miembros.

Una de las primeras decisiones de Ecoalba ha sido fortalecer
el Banco 
del ALBA que estaba funcionando como un fondo que apoyaba a
ciertos 
proyectos. En adelante, el banco será capitalizado
con el 1% de la 
reservas de los países miembros y funcionará
como un banco de desarrollo 
que fomente la producción, el empleo, que contribuya
a financiar 
proyectos binacionales o multinacionales de los
países miembros, 
especialmente en el área de la seguridad alimentaria,
la salud, la 
energía, los conocimientos y el transporte.

En este marco también se ha puesto énfasis en
la necesidad de la 
integración física y logística, a
través de los sistemas de puertos, de 
líneas aéreas y ferroviarios, al servicio de
la integración del 
continente. Ello es particularmente importante para el ALBA,
debido a la 
distancia geográfica entre los países
miembros. “Sin integración física, 
probablemente esta voluntad muy grande que existe entre
nuestros 
presidentes puede morir”, advierte el economista
ecuatoriano. En este 
sentido, uno de los elementos prioritarios será la
integración aérea, 
para “que tengamos la posibilidad de usar las
líneas nacionales entre 
nuestros países”, señaló.

Asimismo, se acordó la elaboración de un mapa
de las mercancías para 
conocer con exactitud qué venden y compran los
diferentes países, con el 
objetivo de buscar reorientar el comercio exterior de estos
países hacia 
un mercado regional que opere con lógicas diferentes
al de una economía 
capitalista.

Otro aspecto importante ha sido la decisión de
fortalecer el Sistema 
Único de Compensación Regional (SUCRE) como
moneda virtual que permite 
evitar recurrir al dólar en las transacciones
regionales, de tal forma 
que los venezolanos lo hagan en bolívares, los
cubanos en pesos, es 
decir que cada país utilice su moneda nacional.

En este punto Borja hizo hincapié en que se
tendrá que luchar con el 
peso de los hábitos y de grandes intereses que
impiden que se generalice 
el uso del SUCRE. Por ejemplo, se tendrán que
solucionar problemas 
concretos de carácter administrativo, de
carácter legal, de carácter 
operativo, porque a veces los bancos no tienen los sistemas
informáticos 
para poder usar el SUCRE. Otras veces también es un
problema de 
comprensión de los funcionarios o de intereses
económicos de gente que 
gana al comercializar en dólares. Pero definiendo
dónde están los 
problemas, se podrá acudir a los niveles
políticos para remover las 
dificultades que impiden que se generalice este sistema de
intercambio 
comercial, afirmó.

Sin embargo, a pesar de las dificultades, el economista
destacó, como 
ejemplo, que las transacciones entre Ecuador y Venezuela,
utilizando el 
SUCRE pasaron de un monto equivalente a 7 millones
dólares en el 2010 a 
290 millones de dólares en el 2011. Además,
otros países como Brasil y 
Argentina están viendo que el sistema ayuda a
fortalecer sus propias 
monedas porque brinda un margen de maniobra mayor al hecho
de tener que 
utilizar dólares, que elevan los costos de
transacción.

Oportunidad

Toda esta plataforma plantea una alternativa a los
mecanismos 
tradicionales de gestión económica en los que
operan los oligopolios, 
los poderes políticos transnacionales e incluso los
poderes militares. 
Por ejemplo, dijo, el poder del dólar está
centrado en el poder militar 
de los Estados Unidos. Si no, cómo se explica que en
la vida real en 
plena crisis del dólar, todavía siga siendo la
moneda de uso común. Para 
comprender el tema, según Borja, “tenemos que
remitirnos a otros 
elementos que no están necesariamente en las
características de la 
moneda, sino en la geopolítica y la fuerza
militar”.

Por otra parte, se apunta a no depender de inversiones
extranjeras 
depredadoras que tengan como único objetivo generar
una utilidad sin 
importar como lo hacen. Es decir, aquellas inversiones a las
que no les 
importa depredar recursos naturales o la institucionalidad,
sin pagar 
impuestos, corrompiendo a los funcionarios, etc.
“Inversiones que vengan 
a depredar, a generar problemas con nuestras comunidades
campesinas en 
las áreas del agronegocio, no pueden ser
bienvenidas”, recalcó.

Por estas razones, Borja considera necesario contar con
mecanismos 
viables en la financiación del desarrollo propio. Es
decir, hay que 
asegurar que “nuestros objetivos nacionales y
populares –y allí entra el 
campo de la economía popular- estén
debidamente resguardados de poderes 
que son muchísimo más grandes.”

Sin embargo, hay inversiones que sí son
complementarias a la inversión 
nacional, como por ejemplo, en el caso de Ecuador, con la
inversión 
China en la hidroeléctrica Coca Codo Sinclair, que
está encausada en el 
plan nacional de desarrollo, explica Borja.

Posibilidades de Latinoamérica

Diego Borja enfatiza en que no se puede seguir avanzando si
se sigue 
viendo solo a Europa, a Estados Unidos o a la firma de los
TLC como 
supuestos motores para el desarrollo. Mientras el Norte
está en crisis, 
por primera vez en muchos años América del Sur
tiene excedente de 
dinero, capacidad de inversión, gobiernos volcados al
servicio a sus 
pueblos. Entonces, pregunta, “¿por qué
no nos volcamos más al Sur?”.

Borja considera que actualmente, América del Sur
necesita construir un 
sistema de ferrocarriles. Esto generaría una inmensa
inversión, 
movilizaría trabajo y conocimientos y
resolvería problemas. Asimismo, se 
podría organizar un sistema de seguridad
agro-alimentaria desde Caracas 
hasta la Patagonia, generando trabajo y producción
con los campesinos, 
con recursos propios. En tal sentido, la actual crisis
capitalista puede 
ser una oportunidad para la región, pero viendo hacia
dentro y no solo 
hacia fuera.

Sin embargo, Borja advierte que no se debe cantar victoria,
porque hay 
instituciones que han quedado de la vieja arquitectura
financiera que 
parecieran estar resucitando. Vuelven a revivir viejas ideas
con nuevos 
empaques. Es una disputa simbólica, una lucha de las
ideas en la que “no 
se puede ceder terreno… en términos de
profundizar una transformación”, 
enfatiza.

Por ejemplo, Borja considera inconcebible que el FMI
esté dictando 
cátedra en Europa. Tampoco se explica cómo
Brasil y otros países 
aprobaron la capitalización del BID; ni se entienden
planteamientos del 
Fondo Latinoamericano de Reservas (FLAR), que hace poco
propuso invertir 
las reservas regionales en papeles del tesoro de Estados
Unidos, en vez 
de invertir en las economías de la región.
Estas viejas estructuras “no 
se van a morir de muerte natural –opina-. Hay que
generar las nuevas 
alternativas (Banco del Sur, Fondo del Sur, SUCRE), y
demostrarles, 
frente a lo que ya está caduco, hoy existe esto; y
así lo nuevo, con 
voluntad y con eficiencia, creo que va a remplazar a lo
viejo”.

_____

La entrevista completa se puede escuchar en www.aler.org

El ALBA está integrada por Venezuela, Cuba, Bolivia,
Ecuador, Nicaragua, 
San Vicente y las Granadinas, Dominica y Antigua y Barbudas.
Además 
están en camino de adhesión Haití,
Santa Lucía y Surinam.

Enlace de Medios para la Democratización de la
Comunicación es 
conformado por 26 medios y redes de comunicación de
distintas partes de 
América Latina. www.enlacemedios.info



Mas informacion: http://alainet.org
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Twitter: http://twitter.com/ALAIinfo
______________________________________
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