International Human Rights Day, December
10, less than two weeks away, the AFL-CIO and its affiliates are preparing
to commemorate the day with renewed vigor, resolve, and hope that we can
restore fundamental workers' rights in America.
For three years now the AFL-CIO has
maintained that restoring American workers' freedom to form unions and
bargain collectively is the Federation's top political and legislative
priority.
This election season was no different. The
Federation believes that politics and organizing must be linked and that
the nexus is legislation to restore workers' rights. Federation political
director Karen Ackerman said repeatedly that political activity must
generate organizing. President John Sweeney asked state federations and
central labor councils to make sure endorsed candidates were either
already co-sponsors of the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA) or pledged to
co-sponsor it if elected. The Employee Free Choice Act is the federation's
legislative vehicle to make the first major step to restore workers'
rights. EFCA would amend the National Labor Relations Act to allow private
sector workers to form unions by simply signing a card or petition, impose
real penalties on employers who violate the law, and allow for arbitration
to settle first contract disputes.
The stunning victory of Democratic
Congressional candidates created a pro-worker and pro-worker rights
majority in the House of Representatives and a much more supportive
Senate.
In the past three years the AFL-CIO has
commemorated International Human Rights Day with a nationwide grassroots
demand to restore human rights in America's workplace.
This year the AFL-CIO will commemorate the
day with an organizing summit. The summit will bring together 500 of the
nation's best organizers, union activists, union allies, and national and
grassroots labor leaders to plan the next stage of the campaign to win
workers' rights and pass EFCA in this very different political
environment. The summit will also showcase the best non-NLRB organizing
campaigns, campaigns that allow workers to win despite a failed law and
broken process.
The summit will begin December 8 at 11:00
a.m. at the Capitol Hyatt. John Sweeney and Larry Cohen will frame the
challenge and issue the charge for the summit. At noon, the 500 summit
attendees will march to the Senate Park to be joined by 2,000 union
activists, House Labor Committee Chairman George Miller, Senate Labor
Committee Chair Ted Kennedy, AFL-CIO President John Sweeney, CWA President
and AFL-CIO Organizing Committee Chairman Larry Cohen, AFT President Ed
McElroy, and NEA President Reg Weaver to call for the rapid passage of the
Employee Free Choice Act and the restoration of human rights in America's
workplaces.
The participation of the Chairs of both
Congressional Labor Committees, the very different Congress, the changed
political environment, and the role the AFL-CIO and union activists played
to change the political landscape provide a much more hopeful frame for
this year's Human Rights Day.
Friday afternoon at the summit, December 8,
three of America's best organizers will talk about their campaigns to
organize tens of thousands of workers outside the strictures of the
National Labor Relations Act. Ed Sabol, organizing director of CWA, will
talk about their campaign that organized 20,000 high tech workers at
Cingular Wireless. Jim Schmitz, organizing director at AFSCME, will talk
about their Chicago campaign to organize 10,000 healthcare workers at
Resurrection Hospital. Leticia Zavala, organizingresident of the Farm
Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC), will talk about their historic campaign
that organized 7,000 Mexican workers who work in North Carolina's fields.
The summit participants will then return to
working on the plan and campaign to pass EFCA, breaking into eight groups
to strategize next steps and to work on the training and plan to create an
array of 250,000 grassroots worksite leaders to push EFCA in this Congress
and to elect a president who will sign and enact it.
Saturday night the summit will recess to a
banquet to honor George Miller and former Senator John Edwards. Radio
host, actor, and comic Jackie Guerra will emcee the banquet. American
Rights at Work Chairman and former House Democratic Leader David Bonior
and grassroots organizing leaders will talk about all that Miller and
Edwards have done to fight for workers' freedom to form unions and pass
EFCA and earn the federation Paul Wellstone Aware. John Sweeney will
present the award to both men who will then speak.
Saturday's summit agenda will begin with
AFSCME President and federation political committee chair Gerry McEntee
speaking about the link between politics and organizing followed by a
panel discussion and Steelworkers President Leo Gerard.
Late Saturday morning we will break into
eight workshops to focus on how to run and win strategic, non-NLRB
organizing campaigns. Organizers will share what has worked for them, what
to avoid, how to better work together, and build the internal capacity to
organize in the most difficult environments.
Pat Friend, President of the Association of
Flight Attendants/CWA and chair of Global Union Federation will lead a
discussion global organizing featuring Violet Seboni of South Africa's
COSATU, Peter Olney of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union,
and Sharon Burrows of Australia's ACTU.
The summit at this historic moment will
focus on what it takes to organize and win in this climate and how to
change the climate to restore workers' freedom to form unions and bargain
collectively.