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April 11, 2007


RECENT UPDATES:
Tuesday, April 10
Monday, April 9
Wednesday, March 28
Tuesday, March 27
Monday, March 26

WSLC Reports Today
Updated DAILY... Almost Every Day™ by 9 a.m.

Links are functional at date of posting, but sometimes expire. Some links require free registration.  WSLC Reports Today links to stories of interest to organized labor; some positive, some negative.  The intention is to inform.



WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11  ▪  Rally TODAY in Seattle to support children of immigrants -- Help deliver the message -- "Stop Tearing Families Apart!" -- and demand comprehensive immigration reform at a rally and march in downtown Seattle today from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
▪  In today's Seattle Times -- The challenge of immigration reform (editorial) -- In negotiating immigration reform, Bush should consider the young people taking to Seattle's streets today to to highlight the impact of recent immigration crackdowns on children and families.

Legislative news:
▪  Today from AP -- Gregoire signs construction crane safety law
▪  In today's Seattle Times -- Sonics proposal tweaked as clock ticks down in Olympia -- Legislative leaders are skeptical that the changes will be enough to kick-start serious negotiations.

Local news:
▪  Today from AP -- Northrop submits its bid for Air Force tanker deal -- Northrop's latest bid, which comes ahead of Thursday's deadline, includes joining with the parent company of Airbus. A decision on the $40 billion contract is expected by October.
▪  In today's Everett Herald -- Boeing pier work far from complete -- The Port of Everett pays a contractor $13.9 million of what's expected to be a $30 million project.
▪  In today's News Tribune -- Highway 167 project vital, state says -- Extending the highway from Puyallup to the Port of Tacoma is essential for the creation of 79,000 jobs and $10.1 billion in wages statewide, according to a new state DOT report.
▪  In today's News Tribune -- Downtown Tacoma and Wal-Mart: A perfect match? (Voelpel column) -- Ask folks to identify two things downtown Tacoma needs and you’ll usually get the same answers – some big-name retail and a grocery store. What if both came in one big box? A box called Wal-Mart. Imagine the barbs from those uppity Seattle pundits.

National news:  ▪  Bush, business elite oppose EFCA to keep workers down  (a MUST-READ column by Harold Meyerson) -- Once upon a time, American prosperity actually benefited Americans. From 1947 to 1973, productivity in the U.S. rose by 104%, and median family income rose by an identical 104%. Those were also the only years of real union power in the U.S., years in which one-quarter of the workforce -- in some years one-third -- was unionized. Apparently, this level of worker power and prosperity proved intolerable to our financial elite and their political flunkies. Since the '70s, American business has generally done its damnedest to keep its workers down. 
▪  In today's NY Times -- Citigroup to lay off 17,000 in overhaul -- About 9,500 jobs will be moved to locations overseas or around the United States where the cost of doing business is lower.
▪  Today from AP -- When CEO buys mega-mansion, is it time to dump stock? -- The bigger the CEO home, the worse the company's stock fares, according to researchers, who also found that companies with CEOs living in more modest abodes often see their shares outperform.
▪  In today's LA Times -- Effort to divest from Sudan picks up steam -- The campaign to use America's economic heft to halt the violence has expanded from college campuses to Jewish groups, evangelical Christians, African American leaders and security-minded conservatives.

Political news: 
▪  Today from AP -- John Edwards works a shift in nursing home -- The Democratic presidential candidate gets a taste of low-wage life, rising before dawn to help to dress, shave and deliver breakfast to elderly residents of a nursing home outside New York City. His visit was part of the "Work a Day in My Shoes" program sponsored by the Service Employees International Union.
▪  In today's NY Times -- Panel said to alter finding on voter fraud -- A federal panel responsible for conducting election research played down the findings of experts who concluded last year that there was little voter fraud around the nation. Instead, the panel issued a report echoing the  complaints made by Republican politicians who suggested that voter fraud is widespread and justifies the voter identification laws that have been passed in at least two dozen states.
▪  In today's NY Times -- Some in GOP express worry over '08 hopes -- Public dissatisfaction with Bush, political fallout from the Iraq war and problems the leading GOP presidential candidates are having generating enthusiasm among conservatives are all cited by hand-wringing right wing.

Last Throes update:
▪  In today's Everett Herald -- Whidbey sailors death brings war close to home 
▪  In today's Everett Herald -- Pain behind casualty numbers is all too real (editorial) -- Each of these brave men and one woman, like all the other U.S. troops killed and wounded in the war, leaves behind loved ones whose grief can only be imagined by most of us. But we owe it to them to try.
▪  Today from AP -- 16 U.S. soldiers wounded in raging, daylong battle in Baghdad 
▪  In today's Washington Post -- Three generals spurn Bush-sought position of "war czar"
▪ 
Of the 3,292 U.S. troops killed in Iraq so far, 3,153 have died (see a list) since President Bush declared "Mission Accomplished" and an end to major combat operations on May 2003; 2,831 have died since Saddam's capture. Five-and-a-half years after 9/11, Osama bin Laden is at large.
▪  The WSLC's affiliated unions have called for an end to the U.S. occupation of Iraq.


WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11, 2007
Rally, march TODAY in Seattle
to support immigrants' children

The following press advisory has been distributed by Washington CAN:

Hundreds of Children have been forcibly separated from their loving mothers and fathers, sisters and brothers by Homeland Security.  The children and their supporters will march from Westlake Park , Downtown Seattle to Federal Building on April 11, 2007 , from 11am-1pm .

Immigration and Custom Enforcement (ICE) and their "Return to Sender" operation have terrorized our communities of color by racially profiling and detaining families.  Hundreds of children are suffering with their parents locked away.  They want their families reunified, and they want Comprehensive Immigration Reform now.

From May 26, 2006 to this date, ICE agents and have apprehended approximately 2,179 people in what they called “Operation Return to Sender.”  Many of them left their children at home, schools or daycares, went to work and never returned.  They were forcibly detained on administrative immigration violation, imprisoned and placed on deportation proceedings.  Bail is so high that most people are unable to post it.  Children were suddenly separated from their families.  The families have been torn apart, the children shocked and traumatized.

When a 10-year-old saw the grief of a lactating baby who had no access to his mother, she suggested that the children be seen and heard.  Children should march to the authorities, she said.  The Children’s demonstration will do just that.  Children will walk in the center of the march, surrounded and protected by adults, so they can explain to the authorities the needs of their families.

The demonstrators march to demand comprehensive immigration reform that will stop shattering families.  They ask that parents and children be reunited, that due process be assured to all and in particular to those arrested by Homeland Security on immigration charges, and to provide a clear and feasible path to US citizenship.

Endorsers: Washington CAN, Hate Free Zone, NWFCO, Children's Alliance, NWIRP, Latino Heat, Washington Association of Churches, Somali Banadir Community Services of Washington, Minority Executive Directors Coalition, Community to Community, COMUNIDADES, CASA Latina, Somali Banadir Cultural and Education Center, Latino Liberation Movement, Nonprofit Assistance Center and others.

For more information, contact Maru Mora Villalpando at Washington Community Action Network at 206-389-0050 x106.  

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11, 2007
Bush, business elite oppose EFCA
to keep workers down

The following column by Harold Meyerson appears in today's edition of The Washington Post:

A DREAM SHORT-CIRCUITED

On March 28, Circuit City announced that it was laying off 3,400 of its salesclerks. Not because they had poor performance records, mind you: Their performance was utterly beside the point. They were shown the door, said the chain, simply because they were the highest-salaried salesclerks that Circuit City employed.

Their positions were not eliminated. Rather, the store announced that it would hire their replacements at the normal starting salary.

One can only imagine the effect of Circuit City's announcement on the morale of the workers who didn't get fired. The remaining salesclerks can only conclude: Do a good job, get promoted, and you're outta here.

It was, in short, just a normal day in contemporary American capitalism.

Over at Wal-Mart, the employer that increasingly sets the labor standards for millions of our compatriots, wage caps have been set for certain jobs, and many longtime employees are now required to work weekends and nights in the hope that they'll quit. A memo prepared by a Wal-Mart executive in 2005 for the company's board noted that, "the cost of an associate with 7 years of tenure is almost 55 percent more than the cost of an associate with 1 year of tenure, yet there is no difference in his or her productivity."

(That, of course, is because Wal-Mart does nothing to raise its employees' skills lest it have to raise their wages.) Coincidentally, in the same week that Circuit City axed its clerks, an analysis of Internal Revenue Service data from 2005 that became available showed that the bottom 90 percent of Americans made less money that year than they had in 2004. According to a study by economists Emmanuel Saez of the University of California at Berkeley and Thomas Piketty of the Paris School of Economics, total reported income in the United States increased by 9 percent in 2005 over its level in 2004. All of that increase, however, came from the wealthiest 10 percent of Americans, and the wealthiest 1 percent experienced an increase of 14 percent. Among the remaining 90 percent, income actually decreased by 0.6 percent.

And 2005, let us remember, wasn't a year of economic downturn. The American economy was humming along. It was only the American people who weren't doing very well.

What all this amounts to is a triumph of corporate and financial power, and of the conservative economics that shores it up. Once upon a time, American prosperity actually benefited Americans. From 1947 through 1973, productivity in the U.S. rose by 104 percent, and median family income rose by an identical 104 percent. Those were also the only years of real union power in the United States, years in which one-quarter of the workforce, and in some years one-third, was unionized. Apparently, this level of worker power and mass prosperity proved intolerable to our financial elite and their political flunkies.

Since the '70s, American business has generally done its damnedest to keep its workers down. Employers routinely opted to pay the negligible penalties for violating the National Labor Relations Act rather than permit its employees to join unions. In 1969, according the National Labor Relations Board, the number of employees who'd suffered illegal retaliation for exercising their right to join or maintain a union was just over 6,000; by 2005, that number had risen to 31,358. According to a study out this January from the Center for Economic and Policy Research, fully one in five activists on unionization campaigns are illegally fired. And as worker power declines, so do living standards. Secure retirement pensions are history; employer-provided health benefits are going fast.

To all of this, conservatives offer no remedy whatever save to make things worse. Employer-provided pensions collapsing? Let's gut Social Security, too. Health insurance tottering? By all means, let's preserve our private, for-profit system, which currently fails to cover 47 million of our fellow Americans. All income increases going only to the rich? Let's switch to a flat tax (Rudy Giuliani's most recent brainstorm), which further shifts the tax burden from the upwardly mobile rich to the downwardly-mobile everyone else.

And restoring the right of workers to join unions, which is the key to rebuilding a vibrant middle class? There's a clear way to do that. Next week, the Senate will take up the Employee Free Choice Act, which the House has already passed. By compelling employers to recognize unions if a majority of their workers sign affiliation cards, the legislation would bring a modicum of balance to workplace relations, and to the American economy as well.

Business, the president and the Republican leadership are fighting the measure with everything they have.

What they don't have, however, is their own theory of how to regain mass prosperity. How could they? Mass prosperity is precisely what they've labored mightily, and successfully, to destroy.

If you have news items regarding unions or workplace issues in Washington state that you would like to see posted here, please submit them via e-mail to David Groves or via fax to 206-285-5805.

Copyright © 2007   Washington State Labor Council, AFL-CIO