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<h1 style="font-family:Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;
font-size:18px;"><a
href="http://www.fightbacknews.org/forward/emailref?path=node/1785"
title=""><img
src="http://www.fightbacknews.org//sites/default/files/resiste_logo.png"
alt="" /> Fight Back!</a></h1>
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<a href="mailto:papasconchesse@hotmail.com">Antonio Perez</a> thought
you would like to see the Fight Back! web site. <h2
style="font-size: 14px;"><a
href="http://www.fightbacknews.org/forward/emailref?path=node/1785">Jacksonville
Workers Rally Against Construction Bosses </a></h2>
<div><p>Jacksonville, FL - Over 200 supporters of Jobs for Jacksonville
rallied to protest Turner Construction's unjust and unlawful labor practices,
Jan. 26. Union members from the Carpenters, IBEW, Boilermakers, Sheet Metal
Workers and the Teamsters are waging a campaign against Turner Construction.
Turner refuses to hire out-of-work construction workers in Jacksonville for
the Duval County Courthouse building project. This is a blatant breach of
Turner Construction's contract, which promised to provide many jobs for the
economically hurting building trades people in Jacksonville.</p>
<p>After the workers rallied at the construction site, they marched over to
Jacksonville's City Hall chanting, “Mayor Peyton sold us out, Turner get
the hell out!” They rallied one more time on the steps of City Hall before
flooding the City Council Chambers with red shirts reading “Jobs for
Jacksonville!” During the meeting of the Jacksonville City Council, workers
from many backgrounds and nationalities spoke, denouncing the council's
failure to take action against Turner's breach of contract and threatening to
return to the chambers with hundreds more if justice did not prevail and the
workers' right to jobs was not respected, as per the contract that managers
of Turner Construction signed.</p>
<p>The workers were joined by members of Gainesville Area Students for a
Democratic Society, who traveled to Jacksonville to support them. The
students came armed with demands that money go towards building jobs and
education, not wars and occupation. When asked for the reason why he
supported the rally, SDS member Jared Hamil replied, “These workers work
harder than most, aren't given a living wage and are the first to lose their
jobs during an economic recession. To not support these workers would mean
turning your back on people who are struggling for the same things we're all
fighting for. Companies like Turner Construction want to divide people so
they can get rich while we fight each other. That's why students and workers
should support each other in their struggles."</p>
<p>While some of the workers present at the rally were led by the managers of
Turner Construction to believe that it was immigrant labor that kept them
from being hired for the building project, leaders of the rally were quick to
point out that unions should organize workers of all nationalities if they
wanted to win and be treated with respect by companies like Turner
Construction. If there was a problem getting jobs, then it was a problem the
bosses created, not other workers, leaders of the rally said. John Parker,
President of the Sheet Metal Workers Union Local #435 in Jacksonville,
proposed that unions should organize all workers regardless if they are
immigrants, because that's the only way to make sure the bosses hire people
fairly and pay a living wage to everybody.</p>
<p>Overall, the rally proved how powerful workers can be once they band
together. The workers of Jacksonville are one step closer to justice because
of it.</p>
</div><p><a
href="http://www.fightbacknews.org/forward/emailref?path=node/1785">Click
here to read more on our site</a></p>
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