WSLC Online - Home

Contact
What's New
Upcoming Events
WSLC Reports Today
President's Column
2000 Resolutions
Who We Are
Why Join a Union?
Legislative Issues
Political Education
Site Map

 

 

 

April 16, 2008


RECENT UPDATES:

Tuesday, April 8 

Wednesday, April 9

Thursday, April 10

Monday, April 14

Tuesday, April 15

WSLC Reports Today
Updated DAILY... Almost Every Day™ 

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.

 


WEDNESDAYAPRIL 16

 

'Families is where our nation finds hope, where wings take dream.'

 

Local News:

  • Longshoremen to close ports on West Coast to protest war -- US Labor Against War -- dockworkers of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union have decided to stop work for eight hours in all U.S. West Coast ports on May 1, International Workers' Day, to call for an end to the war.
  • Washington's jobless rate jumps to 4.9% in March --Seattle Times -- Although the overall employment level held mostly steady, an influx of new entrants into the labor market pushed up the jobless rate. All in all, the March jobs report showed Washington's jobs engine downshifting into first gear. But Employment Security economist Evelina Tainer said she didn't think the state was necessarily heading into reverse.
  • JOBS 08 -- Bellingham Herald Job Profile -- Our Jobs site details the outlook for job seekers with different levels of training, as well as a look at the hottest job sectors.
  • WaMu shareholders show anger, CEO Killinger asks for patience-- Seattle Times -- To save money, the company is cutting thousands of jobs and has sliced its quarterly dividend to just 1 cent a share. ... For many shareholders, however, their faith had clearly run out. Killinger was jeered several times — almost unheard-of in the staid, by-the-book world of corporate meetings — and several investors demanded that he, other executives and directors quit to take responsibility for the thrift's troubles.
  • Staff cuts at county follow housing woes  -- Everett Herald -- Snohomish County could lay off or reassign dozens of employees from its building department after a "huge loss in revenue" and a sharp drop in the number of building permits being issued. ...About 30 employees could find out Friday whether they will lose their jobs or be reassigned, said Craig Ladiser, county director of Planning and Development Services. Another 20 positions that are already vacant will be eliminated.
  • Airlines' merger may be good for Boeing, too -- Seattle Times -- Boeing may benefit from the merger between Delta Air Lines and Northwest Airlines as the carriers generate new cash from growth overseas that could help replace their aging fleets.

Political and Legislative:

AFL-CIO Congressional Records Available click here for more

  • Rossi's transportation plan would replace Seattle viaduct with tunnel-- Seattle Times -- Republican gubernatorial candidate Dino Rossi says he can solve Washington state's transportation problems with a tunnel, two bridges and $15 billion in taxpayer cash. His critics say that with a price tag like that, he'll need a little magic, too. Mark Hallenbeck, director of the Washington state Transportation Center at the University of Washington, said Rossi's numbers are "completely divorced from reality....He lowballs almost all the estimates and never says where all the funds are going to come from. It's a political statement. It's complete silliness," Hallenbeck said.
  • More on Rossi's plan -- Everett Herald -- Much of Rossi's plan is not new. His call for widening Highway 9 in Snohomish County was in the Proposition 1 ballot measure rejected by voters in November.

    He also backs building a tunnel to replace the Alaskan Way Viaduct and making a new Highway 520 bridge eight lanes wide, two other much-discussed ideas (that were rejected).

    On U.S. 2 specifically, one of Rossi's proposals is grinding rumble strips in the center median on a 15-mile stretch between Monroe and Gold Bar. The state is already paying to grind that stretch plus 30 miles more of the highway.

    He vows to overhaul the running of the state ferry system. He said new car and passenger ferries slated for construction will be built on time and on budget and the work contracted to non-Washington firms ...
    "I think his plan is bogus," said Aaron Toso, a Gregoire campaign spokesman. "He's taking $10 billion out of the general fund. He'll either be raising taxes or cutting education and health care."

  • Clinton picks up union endorsement  --NY Times -- The 45,000-member Operative Plasterers' and Cement Masons' International Association timed its endorsement for Clinton's speech Wednesday before the AFL-CIO's Building Trades National Legislative Conference. Clinton announced the support when she took the stage and said she was grateful and honored.
  • Darcy Burner continues torrid fundraising pace in first quarter -- Northwest Progressive -- It's been a good month for Darcy Burner. After releasing her Responsible Plan to End the War in Iraq, to great accolades, Darcy is continuing to set the fundraising pace, not only against her opponent, Congressman Dave Reichert, but among challengers nationwide.
  • Rep. McDermott Leads Legislative Drive to End Misclassification of Workers -- Press Release  --  The legislation would level the playing field for honest businesses that abide by the rules, ensure that employees receive the workplace benefits to which they are entitled, and make certain that every business properly pays its fair share of taxes to the Treasury. “Today, millions of American workers are incorrectly or deliberately misclassified as independent contractors, and the shock wave of abuse that ripples through the economy harms everyone and everything in its path, from an innocent worker to the honest business to the U.S. Treasury,”  Rep. McDermott said.

Regional:

  • TV workers claim they were denied overtime pay, meal breaks -- LA Times -- A dozen workers on various reality TV and game shows filed claims Tuesday with a state agency alleging that their employers improperly denied them overtime pay and meal breaks. 
    The group included writers, production assistants and craft services workers from "American Idol," "Amazing Race" and "Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader?"

Columbian Trade Deal:

  • Unions, Rights Leaders Vow to Keep Fighting Colombia Trade Deal -- AFL-CIO Blog -- AFL-CIO President John Sweeney reiterated the union movement’s opposition to a deal with Colombia: 

    Until our brothers and sisters can exercise core worker rights without fear of intimidation, threat or murder, we cannot seriously consider passing a trade agreement with Colombia. The test of trade should not be how much profit it generates. Should the Colombia FTA come up for a vote this year, we will mobilize our members and the resources of the federation to defeat it. 

  • Union Killings Peril Trade Pact With Colombia -- NY Times -- More than 2,500 union members in Colombia have been killed since 1985, with fewer than 100 cases resulting in convictions, according to the National Labor School, a labor research group in Medellín....400 union members have been killed since 2002, and dozens of Mr. Uribe’s supporters in Congress and his former intelligence chief are under investigation for ties to paramilitary death squads, which are classified as terrorists by the United States and responsible for some of the union killings.

McCain Myth Busters: 

  • Check out the latest on the AFL-CIO's website:

    McCain Revealed. There you will find the real story about Sen. John McCain (Ariz.), the Republican nominee for president. McCain has built a media-friendly reputation as a “maverick” and moderate. But there’s nothing moderate about McCain, a loyal ally of Bush who has consistently and perniciously voted against the interests of working families in his decades-long career in Washington.

     

    Click here to go to a page full of previously posted articles on John McCain. 

  • Under McCain, Every Day Would Be Tax Day -- AFL-CIO Blog -- McCain has proposed a health care plan that would force working families to pay taxes on more than just our wages. His plan would tax our health care benefits.

     

    But while millions of us would find it harder to pay for our health benefits under McCain’s plan, the same would not be true of the top 10 insurance companies: They would rake in nearly $2 billion in tax cuts. Just five oil companies, meanwhile, would see nearly $4 billion in tax cuts.

     

    What’s more, McCain’s changes to the tax code could lead employers to drop health care benefits altogether, leaving working families at the mercy of a private health care market plagued by high costs, bias against pre-existing conditions and outright denials.

  • Murtha says McCain too old to be president -- AP -- Murtha is 75, four years older than McCain. He says they are nearly the same age, and the rigors and stress of running the country is too much for guys their age. ''I've served with seven presidents,'' Murtha told a union audience. ''When they come in, they all make mistakes. They all get older....This one guy running is about as old as me,'' he said, drawing laughter and applause. ''Let me tell you something, it's no old man's job.''

National News:

  • Conflict Between 2 Unions Intensifies -- NY Times --  The A.F.L.-C.I.O. president, John J. Sweeney, denounced on Tuesday what he said was “a violent attack orchestrated” by the Service Employees International Union against members of other unions at a conference on Saturday in Michigan....The service employees’ union sent busloads of members from Ohio to the labor conference in Dearborn to confront leaders and members of the California Nurses Association. The service employees say the nurses sabotaged a major service employees’ unionizing drive last month.....Others at the conference said the fighting began when service employee members and officials tried to barge into the conference in a hotel banquet hall. Chris Kutalik, editor of Labor Notes, a magazine sponsoring the conference, said a retired member of the United Automobile Workers was pushed, banged her head against a table and was taken to a hospital for a head wound.
  • What would airline mergers mean for consumers? -- AP -- Airline consolidations aren't a winning deal for consumers, who can expect to pay more and have fewer flight options, experts say.
  • Bankruptcy in store for more retailers -- NY Times -- Even retailers that can avoid bankruptcy are shutting down stores to preserve cash through what could be a long economic downturn. During the next year, Foot Locker will close 140 stores, Ann Taylor will shutter 117 and jeweler Zales will close 100. ...The International Council of Shopping Centers estimates there will be 5,770 store closing in 2008, up 25 percent from 2007, when there were 4,603. Charming Shoppes, which owns women's clothing retailers Lane Bryant and Fashion Bug, is closing at least 150 stores. Wilsons The Leather Experts will close 158. And Pacific Sunwear is shutting down a 153-store chain called Demo.
  • Continental and United signal interest in possibly hooking up   -- Seattle Times -- A combination of the two carriers would create an even larger airline behemoth than Monday's proposed merger of Delta Air Lines and Northwest Airlines and drastically could alter the competitive landscape. In the end, the industry shakeout could mean substantially higher air fares leading to more people staying home, some aviation experts believe.
  • Witnesses Say Congress Must Act to End Slavery in Tomato Fields  --AFL-CIO Blog -- The mostly immigrant workers who pick tomatoes for the fast-food industry are among the most exploited workers in the country, Lucas Benitez told the committee. Benitez, co-founder of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW), said the workers sometimes are held against their will, beaten and forced to work for little or no pay. Thousands more are trying to survive on poverty wages with no sick leave and no freedom to join unions for a better life....The work is hard and dangerous, and workers suffer not only from the physical effects of the back-breaking work, Benitez says, but also from mental abuse, as multiple supervisors shout at them all day. And for a week of hard labor, many of the workers receive as little as $20 after they pay for their housing and transportation. 
  • Guild Chief for Actors Is No Pacifist --  NY Times -- Mr. Rosenberg, the president of the 120,000-member actors’ union, made Patric M. Verrone, his counterpart at the West Coast writers’ guild, look like a pacifist during the march down Hollywood Boulevard. While Mr. Verrone mostly smiled and waved, Mr. Rosenberg screamed, “On strike! Shut ’em down! Hollywood’s a union town.

Health Care:

  • Seattle scientists accuse Merck of misrepresenting Vioxx  -- Seattle PI -- Two Seattle researchers have completed a scientific analysis that they say shows Merck misrepresented, and minimized, the risk of death in studies the international pharmaceutical company performed in 2001 exploring the use of Vioxx for people with Alzheimer's disease.
  • Union Plus Offers Prescription Savings for Union Members -- AFL-CIO Blog -- A new prescription drug program from Union Plus could save union members and their families an average of 20 percent on brand-name drugs and up to 55 percent on generics. The new online prescription discount card—part of the Union Plus Health Savings program—is free for union members and its benefits apply to all family members in your household.
  • Drug companies to reveal grants they give doctors -- Seattle Times -- For years, the nation's largest drug and medical device manufacturers have courted doctors with consulting fees, free trips to exotic locales and sponsoring the educational conferences that physicians attend. Those financial ties in most cases need not be disclosed and can lead to arrangements that some say improperly influence medical care. Now, under the threat of regulation from Congress, the two industries are promising to be more forthcoming about their spending.


From a new report by Families USA -- this is just a snapshot... 

click here for the full report: Dying For Coverage

 

Democracy: The Cornerstone of Community

By Paul Lee

(Paul is a shop steward at OPEIU Local 8)

           Saturday April 5th was the date that I discovered the power of democracy and why it is so integral to the formation of community. This year the 37th Legislative District held their caucus at Cleveland High school , home of the fighting Eagles. The energy was high and people seemed enthusiastic. We heard from party notables and elected officials. Both Clinton and Obama supporters were out in force! But something happened that night that was truly transcendent.  

            It was about 4:30PM and all the festivities had ended, people had already given their speeches, and voted on their ballots. The janitors had arrived and cleared the chairs of the floor. We were instructed to make our way into the lunchroom and wait there for the final votes to be tallied. As time pressed on, we all became tired and anxious. Then suddenly, the caucus chair announces over the microphone that Pat Wright of the Total Experience Gospel Choir was going to share a couple of songs with us. I began to feel the spirit in the room begin to lift as everyone shared in singing some old time hymns. Following Pat were others that shared jokes with us, which also included Dawn Mason former State Representative from our district. Soon people were reciting poems and sharing stories, the kind that are usually reserved for the kitchen table. I don’t think it was just me that noticed what was beginning to happen. Others began talking about what a special experience this caucus process was becoming. By the time the votes were tallied, which was about 11PM I don’t think there was a person in that room that wanted to leave. We all wanted to share what had happened in the room and spread it out to our other neighbors and community.

             As I reflect on what I experienced that day, I realized that democracy is all about giving voice to each and every common man. Perhaps what draws me to the process is this notion that each person’s voice is regarded equally and that this empowers people to stand up and be heard.

    

AFL-CIO 2007 Congressional Voting Records Available

Photo credit: cspence

Do you want to know how Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) voted on a move to repeal the federal minimum wage?

Are you interested in Sen. Hillary Clinton's (D-N.Y.) vote on a measure to rein in the soaring cost of prescription drugs for seniors and working families?

How about finding out where Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) stood on a bill that would restore the freedom of airport screeners to join a union?

Or maybe you just want to know if your U.S. House member voted with working families last year?

All that information and more about your U.S. senators and representatives is just a click or two away in the AFL-CIO's final 2007 House and Senate Voting Records. The congressional scorecards track 19 Senate votes and 24 House votes from the first session of the 110th Congress.

Workers Memorial Materials Available Online Now -- AFL-CIO Blog -- 

Each year, thousands of workers are killed on the job and millions more are injured or become ill because of their jobs.

 

This April 28, workers in the United States and around the world will honor those killed and injured on the job and call for improved workplace safety on Workers Memorial Day.

You can start planning and organizing a Workers Memorial Day event in your workplace or community with materials now available online from the AFL-CIO.

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 Kathy Cummings 

or via fax to 206-285-5805.

Copyright © 2008   Washington State Labor Council, AFL-CIO