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The Postal Service has nine collective bargaining agreements with seven unions covering approximately 726,000 employees. Negotiations with Postal Service unions cover a full range of topics involving wages, benefits, and conditions of employment.
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- Transferring Crafts? The National Secretary-Treasurers from the NPMHU, APWU, NALC, and the NRLCA have created a booklet that will assist our union members through the process of reassigning their membership dues withholding because of a change from one postal bargaining unit to another... see the PDF or Word version of the booklet

 

- Robert's Rules of Order (Newly Revised, 10th Edition)- Robert's Rules of Order first published in 1896 has been the means to orderly, smooth, and fairly conducted meetings.



Latest Labor News
June 04, 2006 - California jury awards $61 million to two FedEx drivers in harassment lawsuit - A Superior Court jury awarded $61 million to two FedEx drivers of Lebanese descent who claimed a manager harassed them with racial slurs for two years. Edgar Rizkallah, 43, and Kamil Issa, 36, both of Pleasanton, said in the discrimination lawsuit they were called "terrorists," "camel jockeys" and other epithets in 1999 and 2000 by Stacy Shoun, terminal manager for the Oakland FedEx Ground facility where the two men were contract drivers. An Alameda County Superior Court jury on Friday awarded the men $50 million in punitive damages, on top of $11 million in compensatory damages the jury awarded them on May 24, a lawyer for the plaintiffs and a FedEx Corp. spokesman said Saturday. The company plans to appeal. Rizkallah and Issa, both Lebanese-Americans, accused FedEx and Shoun in the 2001 lawsuit of creating a hostile work environment based on their race and national origin and causing emotional distress, said their San Francisco lawyer, Christopher Dolan. The men complained to senior managers but the company ignored their claims, Dolan said. Shoun was ordered to pay $1 million to the drivers as part of the compensatory damages award under a California law allowing individuals to be held personally liable for workplace harassment.
June 02, 2006 - Postal Mail Handlers in Talks to Stay With AFL-CIO - LIUNA General President Terry O’Sullivan letter announcing the disaffiliation specifically notes that LIUNA has been focusing on the issue of solidarity charters, and their possible relationship to “the interests of our National Postal Mail Handlers Union.”  To quote Brother O’Sullivan, “[a]s a union representing workers in the federal sector, the Mail Handlers are faced with special considerations in their relationships with the AFL-CIO and with other postal unions.”  We agree, and therefore we are continuing discussions with the AFL-CIO, as it is the intention of the NPMHU, in conjunction with LIUNA, to try to stay affiliated with the AFL-CIO in some capacity.”
May 03, 2006 - Torrence Wins 2nd Term As APWU New York 'Metro' Leader - "Members of the New York Metro Area Postal Union have re-elected President Clarice Torrence to a second term, as she vanquished four opponents while getting 1,192 of 3,168 votes cast."

April 21, 2006 - DOL Sues Chicago APWU Local to Re-run Election - On March 24, 2006, the Department  of Labor filed a complaint in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois against Chicago APWU Local #1 . The complaint seeks to set aside the local union's April 30, 2005, election and hold a new election for 21 contested officer positions. The complaint alleges that the union violated Section 401(e) of the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act (LMRDA) by: failing to mail ballots to eligible members, thus depriving them of their right to vote; counting ballots cast by ineligible persons; and failing to preserve its election records for one year making it impossible to discern the accuracy of the tally. more information at Chicago Postal Worker


April 08, 2006 - White House, RNC Outreach To ... Labor Unions?

For the first time in years, the White House and the Republican National Committee have organized high-level briefings for some nation’s biggest labor unions, gatherings described by GOPers both as part of traditional midterm election outreach as well as a consequence of widening differences within the labor movement about tactics and strategy


February 28, 2006 - AFL-CIO announces partnership with largest teachers' union
The AFL-CIO and the nation's largest teachers union, the National Education Association, announced a partnership Monday that could help the labor federation regain some of the clout it lost when several unions defected last year. The 2.8-million-member NEA agreed to allow its local affiliates to join the AFL-CIO. The hope is that the AFL-CIO will give teachers more muscle when they campaign for political candidates and push legislation. National Education Association Partners with AFL-CIO

February 03, 2006 - NLRB rules FedEx drivers are employees -drivers in Northboro, Massachusetts, were wrongly classified as independent contractors, a regional office of the National Labor Relations Board has ruled, the Teamsters union seeking to represent the drivers said on Thursday. The union had argued that drivers for FedEx Ground should be considered employees, making them eligible for overtime and other benefits such as health care and overtime. The ruling was issued Jan. 24.The International Brotherhood of Teamsters, which represents some 1.4 million U.S. workers, said that the 23 drivers at FedEx Ground division FedEx Home Delivery can participate in an election on forming a union in the next month
January 23, 2006- Postal Job No Obstacle for NYC Transit Worker
Postal Worker Debra Orr’s case centered on her right to work a second job, was heard by an arbitrator in 2002, 2004 and then again in December 2005. Problems arose for Ms. Orr when she filed a notice of dual employment in 2002 as part of the Policy Instructions for working as a Conductor for NYC Transit. The agency’s policies state that workers must have at least 16 hours free prior to working an eight-hour shift for NYC Transit. Ms. Orr maintained that her job with the Postal Service fit within that time frame, and submitted documentation supporting her claim. But her next job pick as a Conductor was denied by NYC Transit and she was assigned to platform duties, leading her into an arbitration case that she won. (scroll down)

January 23, 2006- Unions kept pace with growing U.S. workforce in 2005-The number of workers belonging to labor unions rose last year for the first time in six years, as union membership kept pace with a growing American workforce, the U.S. Labor Department said on Friday. The number of union members rose by 213,000 to 15.7 million in 2005, the first increase since 1999, the department's Bureau of Labor Statistics said in an annual report. Unions' share of the workforce was unchanged at 12.5 percent in 2005, as the number of union members grew at the same rate as the number of all wage and salary workers, which includes managers and executives who are ineligible for union membership under federal labor law. The news was welcomed by the AFL-CIO, the country's largest labor federation, which has long complained that hard-core tactics by many nonunion employers, including illegal measures like firing union activists, has intimidated many workers who would like to have a union. "In a political climate that's hostile to workers' rights, these numbers illustrate the extraordinary will of workers to gain a voice on the job despite enormous obstacles," AFL-CIO President John Sweeney said in a statement.
January 18, 2006 - Labor unions target Republicans to sway budget cut vote
Two labor unions announced Tuesday they will run ads targeting 11 House Republicans  designed to pressure them to withdraw their support for a budget bill that would save $39 billion within five years. The $500,000 ad campaign, which begins running today, informs low-income senior citizens that they would face higher co-pays for Medicaid health services and new rules that make it more difficult to qualify for nursing-home care.

January 16, 2006- MLK Jr. Died at a Union Picket Line - Most people have seen clips of Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I've been to the Mountaintop" speech in Memphis where he died, but relatively few know that he was there as part of a sustained campaign to support an AFSCME strike of santitation workers demanding a union. In the dumbing down of celebrations of Martin Luther King Jr. as a national icon, the relatively radical demands for economic justice that he was making in his later years tend to disappear.
But Martin Luther King Jr. had made a strike of public employees in Memphis a centerpiece of his efforts to launch the "Poor Peoples Campaign" of his final year. You can read more details about the strike at this website commemorating the strike, but it's worth understanding that Martin Luther King Jr., even as he rightly criticized the exclusionary rules of some individual unions, always saw a strengthening of unions and labor as critical to achieving long term justice for African Americans.

Transcript: MLK Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech


January 2, 2006 - AFL-CIO president upbeat for labor's future
AFL-CIO President John Sweeney failed to prevent the Teamsters and several other major labor unions from breaking away from his umbrella federation earlier this year. The breakaway Change to Win Federation consists of seven unions, including some not previously affiliated with the AFL-CIO. Despite that setback and the declining number of labor union members, Sweeney was optimistic that unions can begin growing again if they organize 1 million workers a year.
December 18, 2005 -36% Of Public Sector Workers Unionized -
The share of the nation's workforce represented by union members has declined steadily since it hit 20.1 percent in 1983, the first year federal tracking data became available. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) figures-compiled from monthly surveys of 60,000 households-show union membership nationwide had fallen to 12.5 percent in 2004. The BLS reported that, after seasonal and other adjustments:

* 15.5 million of the 123.6 million people employed nationwide belonged to unions in 2004, compared to 15.8 million of 122.4 million employed nationwide in 2003

* 36.4 percent of public-sector employees nationwide were union members in 2004, compared to 7.9 percent of private-sector employees. In 2003, union members accounted for 37.2 percent of public-sector employees and 8.2 percent of private-sector employees.
 
December 12, 2005 -  Canadian postal workers alarmed about possible fallout of UPS trade complaint
Canadian postal workers say they're worried that trade tribunal hearings that started Monday in a case pitting Ottawa against giant courier company UPS could devastate Canada Post and hurt other public services. The hearings, which will run all week at the World Bank, centre on a complaint from UPS that the publicly funded Canadian corporation has an unfair advantage over competing private companies. UPS, the world's largest package delivery firm, first filed a claim for $160 million US against the Canadian government in April 2000 under the North American Free Trade Agreement
November 22, 2005 - Higher Court Calls Bush NLRB Out on a Bad Decision
A federal appeals court recently joined the growing chorus of critics of the National Labor Relations Board’s Republican majority. The Seventh Circuit Court issued a harsh assessment of the Board last month when they ruled to overturn its finding that an employer’s partial lockout of pro-union workers was legal. The decision wasn’t handed down by “liberal activist judges,” as you might have expected. Rather, a trio of Republican-appointed judges denounced the Bush Board. Public scrutiny over the policies of the Bush administration is at an all-time high, but the extreme decisions and willingness of the Board to undermine workers’ basic legal protections are still under the radar. Now that Republican-appointed federal judges have sharply rebuked the views of the Bush Board, will more eyes be on the NLRB?
November 21, 2005  - US corporate excess under fire as unions go on the attack - US unions, weakened by public apathy and internal splits, are fighting back with an online database that accuses corporate supremos of lining their own pockets while grinding down their employees. Business leaders are deeply unhappy at the online initiative of the AFL-CIO workers' federation, accusing union bosses of taking a cheap shot when complex issues are at stake. But the AFL-CIO affiliate behind the site, Working America, says there is nothing cheap about the pay packages on offer to the favoured few while millions of blue-collar Americans fret about losing their jobs and benefits. "The public should be able to question the outrageous pay of CEOs at a time when jobs are being outsourced every day and their health and safety is endangered every day," Working America deputy director Robert Fox told AFP. The site at www.workingamerica.org has information on more than 60,000 US companies, detailing their violations of health and safety legislation, their outsourcing of jobs overseas and the pay deals for chief executives.
 
November 21, 2005 - G.M. to Cut 30,000 Jobs and Close 12 Facilities in 3 Years -Recently, U.A.W. members at G.M. voted to accept modest changes in their health care benefits, which had been virtually free. Despite that, G.M. still faces huge liabilities for retiree health care and pension benefits.
 
November 20, 2005 - US DOL Office Of Labor Management Standards (OLMS) has been busy

On October 18, 2005, in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, Steven R. Fairfax, former Secretary-Treasurer of Branch 3939 of the National Association of Letter Carriers, was sentenced to ten months home confinement with electronic monitoring, five years probation, and was ordered to pay full restitution and a $100 assessment. Fairfax previously pled guilty to one count of embezzling union funds totaling $53,990.04. The sentencing follows an investigation by the OLMS Washington District Office.

On September 22, 2005, in the United States District Court for the District of Wyoming, Richard Carlson, former Secretary-Treasurer of Postal Workers Local 769, was indicted on 18 counts of embezzling union funds totaling $7,089.14, and one count of making a false statement in a Labor Organization Report. The indictment follows an investigation by the OLMS Denver District Office

On September 19, 2005, in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida, Lenin V. Perez, former President of the National Association of Letter Carriers, Branch 599, pled guilty to knowingly and willfully receiving cash kickbacks in return for referring postal employees to certain medical specialists under a Federal health care program. The guilty plea follows an investigation by the OLMS Tampa Resident Investigator Office. Sentencing set for 12/30/2005

On September 19, 2005, in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida, Lenin V. Perez, former President of the National Association of Letter Carriers, Branch 599, pled guilty to knowingly and willfully receiving cash kickbacks in return for referring postal employees to certain medical specialists under a Federal health care program. The guilty plea follows an investigation by the OLMS Tampa Resident Investigator Office.

On August 31, 2005, in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware, Paul Himmelstein, former Secretary-Treasurer of Branch 1977, Letter Carriers, pled guilty to one count of embezzling union funds in the amount of $34,683.20. Himmelstein was indicted on May 24, 2005. Sentencing is scheduled for November 29, 2005. The guilty plea follows an investigation by the OLMS Philadelphia District Office.

On August 25, 2005, in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey, the Department filed a complaint against American Postal Workers Union Local 190. The complaint seeks a new election, supervised by OLMS, for the offices of president, executive vice-president, recording secretary, secretary-treasurer, administrative aide, director of organization, motor vehicle service craft director, clerk craft director, and maintenance craft director. The complaint alleges that the union allowed discriminatory access to its membership list; provided incorrect ballot return instructions; refused to count mail ballots received in accordance with ballot instructions; allowed a union officer to use union resources for campaign purposes; applied moneys of an employer to promote the candidacy of an incumbent and his slate; and allowed confidential union resources to be used for campaign purposes. The lawsuit follows an investigation by the OLMS New York District Office.

On August 18, 2005, in the United States District Court for the District of North Dakota, Robb Dutchuk, former Secretary-Treasurer of American Postal Workers Local 349, was indicted on charges of embezzling $34,919.90, making a false statement in a labor union report, making a false statement to the Postal Service, and making a false entry in and the destruction of labor union records. The indictment follows an investigation by the OLMS Minneapolis Resident Investigator Office and the United States Postal Service Office of the Inspector General

On July 7, 2005, in the United District Court for Nebraska, Terry L. Gloe, former treasurer of Local 11, American Postal Workers Union, was sentenced to six months imprisonment followed by three years of supervised release with a special condition of six months continuous home confinement. In addition, he was ordered to make restitution in the amount of $113,377. On February 3, 2005, Gloe pled guilty to embezzling union funds following an investigation by the OLMS Kansas City Resident Investigator Office

 

November 20, 2005 -Employers slapping fees on workers who smoke - Employers straining to hold down soaring health care costs have turned to more aggressive tactics, such as penalizing workers who smoke. A few employers — including Northwest Airlines, Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co. and the state of Georgia — have started levying surcharges for employees who smoke. Gannett Inc., which publishes The Des Moines Register and has 1,150 employees in Iowa, will add a $50 monthly surcharge starting in January for smokers who use its insurance plans. To support surcharges, companies cite federal government studies showing that a smoker costs an employer $5,606 extra per year because of higher medical expenses and absenteeism.
October 31, 2005 - California NALC Members Urged to Oppose Prop. 75 -Vicious Anti-Union Effort Dangerous to All Workers
NALC President William H. Young urges all active and retired members of the union in California to make a special effort to go to the polls on Tuesday, November 8, and cast a ballot against Proposition 75, which seeks to reduce the ability of public employee unions in that state to represent their members on political and legislative issues. Young plans to meet with letter carriers at several locations in California prior to the special election and emphasize to them the importance of their vote and the potential danger posed to all federal and postal employees should Proposition 75 be approved. The chief advocate of Proposition 75 is Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who has made union-bashing his mantra while his popularity wanes. The initiative would prohibit public employee unions in the state from using dues for political purposes without written consent from members. It would not, however, require business corporations to have a similar consent from stockholders before funneling money from their political war chests to candidates

 
October 23, 2005  - Labor federations make progress on cooperation agreement -The AFL-CIO and Change to Win are citing progress toward an agreement to allow the two labor federations to cooperate at the state and local level. Change to Win was formed in July when the Teamsters, SEIU and UFCW split from the AFL-CIO to form their own labor federation. Leaders said they differed with the AFL-CIO on its focus at the national level, but wanted to continue working with the AFL-CIO's state federations and local central labor councils. The AFL-CIO, however, said its constitution prohibited its state and local organizations from working with Change to Win unions. In recent weeks, both federations have been in negotiations to soften that position.
October 23, 2005 - Desperation Deal at General Motors - The United Autoworkers union has agreed to save General Motors over a billion dollars a year in health insurance costs. This is a disguised pay-cut, since workers will now pay more out of pocket for their healthcare. The union agreed to this desperation deal to help keep GM alive. The once-dominant auto-maker posted a record $1.1 billion loss in the third quarter; and its former parts division, Delphi, with 34,000 union jobs, has just gone into bankruptcy. If and when it emerges, Delphi's $26-an-hour workers will be cut to something like $12. That gets your attention. The union leadership was so eager to help GM survive that the UAW filed an unusual suit intended to block its own union retirees from challenging the negotiated health-benefit cuts. Now Ford has just reported a $284 million third-quarter loss, and wants the same kind of deal the UAW gave GM. Even with these concessions, the industry that once was the core of America's blue-collar middle class is continuing its downward spiral, cutting jobs and cutting the pay and benefits of the workers that remain. General Motors, which a generation ago had about half a million union workers, will soon be down to 84,000.
September 26, 2005 - Black Caucus Labor Forum—Members of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) and several union leaders took part in a special CBC Labor Issues Forum Sept. 22. The participants, including Postal Workers President William Burrus, AFSCME Secretary-Treasurer William Lucy and AFT Secretary-Treasurer Nat LaCour, explored ways to boost union membership and the challenges of organizing African Americans and other people of color. The CBC also condemned the Bush administration’s suspension of Davis-Bacon prevailing wage and affirmative requirements for federal Hurricane Katrina recovery and rebuilding contracts. At a Sept. 27 luncheon, the AFL-CIO will honor the CBC for its support of organizing drives around the country and of key union legislative issues, including the Employee Free Choice Act, as well as its opposition to schemes to privatize Social Security and such bad trade deals as the Dominican ­Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement.
September 26, 2005 - Dissident unions get organized -Labor unions that split with the AFL-CIO earlier this year will meet in St. Louis this week, and leaders say they'll lay the groundwork for growing organized labor's depleted ranks and creating greater economic opportunity for workers. As part of its plans to create greater economic opportunity for workers, the coalition said it is teaming with community groups, including Rainbow/PUSH and the Black Leadership Forum, in rolling out a multi-industry training program to train workers to rebuild the hurricane-ravaged Gulf Coast
September 14, 2005- UNITE HERE Leaves AFL - CIO - A union representing almost half a million apparel and hospitality workers has decided to bolt the AFL-CIO and join a half-dozen other unions seeking to focus labor more on recruiting. ''It is time for the labor movement to make some changes,'' said UNITE HERE's general president, Bruce Raynor, on Wednesday. UNITE HERE joins the Service Employees International Union, the Teamsters, the United Food and Commercial Workers and the Carpenters in forming a dissident federation that calls itself the Change To Win Coalition. The Laborers International Union of North America and the United Farm Workers are also part of the new federation, but have not left the AFL-CIO. UNITE HERE leaders said the biggest change for the breakaway unions would be devoting most of their resources to organizing. (New York Times)
September 14, 2005- Labor fights to preserve Davis-Bacon
Among the litany of regulations in line to be eased or suspended during the daunting rebuilding process on the Gulf Coast are several that have greatly alarmed labor unions, whose furious lobbying efforts are hitting a brick wall of conservative might. Union officials are concerned that President Bush’s Sept. 8 suspension of the Davis-Bacon Act, which requires federal contractors to pay construction workers a prevailing wage, was only the beginning. Further hurting the union cause is GOP lawmakers’ support for broad bureaucratic relaxation in the Labor Department, a push rooted in the long-standing bad blood between unions and Republican think tanks.

September 6, 2005 - Union leader calls for hike in mileage reimbursement rate
As gasoline prices nationwide soared to levels measuring nearly twice those of a year ago, federal employees who drive personal vehicles on government business are seeking an increase in their mileage reimbursement. Federal law allows the General Services Administration to establish a mileage reimbursement rate for government employees who use their own cars for work, but the GSA-mandated rate cannot exceed the rate established annually for tax deduction purposes by the Internal Revenue Service. In a letter Tuesday to IRS Commissioner Mark Everson, National Treasury Employees Union President Colleen Kelley asked the IRS to raise the reimbursement rate

August 22, 2005 - Big Brother On and Off the Job - They'll be bowling alone at Guardsmark tonight. The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) doesn't want the employees chatting it up off the job. On June 7 the three Republican appointees on the five-member board that regulates employer-employee relations in the United States handed down a remarkable ruling that expands the rights of employers to muck around in their workers' lives when they're off the job. They upheld the legality of a regulation for uniformed employees at Guardsmark, a security guard company, that reads, "[Y]ou must NOT . . . fraternize on duty or off duty, date or become overly friendly with the client's employees or with co-employees."

The board majority held that the guards probably would interpret this to be a no-dating rule, pure and simple. In her dissent, member Wilma Liebman wrote that the rule plainly specifies both dating and fraternizing, a term that covers a range of activities that go well beyond (or fall well short of) dating. That certainly was the reason that a San Francisco security guard local of the Service Employees International Union brought the case to the NLRB in the first place: The rule as written could preclude any attempt by the guards to meet to form a union, or even to talk about work-related issues.


August 21, 2005- Unions Launch Campaign to Organize Wal-Mart workers worldwide - A global coalition of unions is launching an unprecedented campaign to organize workers around the world at US retail giant Wal-Mart, seeking to bring a new level of globalization to the labor movement. The Wal-Mart campaign was set to be officially launched at a meeting in Chicago Monday of Union Network International (UNI), a group that includes 900 unions in some 140 countries. The campaign aims to draw from labor organizations around the world to pressure Wal-Mart, the world's biggest retailer and largest private company in terms of revenues, and a frequent target of unions for driving down wages as well as prices. Union leaders said they hope to bring collective bargaining or other improvements to the estimated 1.6 million Wal-Mart employees around the world -- possibly even in countries such as China, where western-style unions are non-existent.The global effort on Wal-Mart escalates a longstanding feud with the retailer and the US-based United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW), which has accused the retailer of "union-busting" efforts to keep US stores from unionizing. Also see wakeupwalmart.com
August 21, 2005 - Labor takes hit as solidarity splits - In a region synonymous with American unionism, striking mechanics at Northwest Airlines face a solitary fight against the world's fourth-largest airline. Signaling changing times for an increasingly fragmented labor movement, a fiery group of sign-waving, slogan-shouting strikers found little support Saturday -- abandoned by fellow unions and largely ignored by travelers who passed by picket lines on their way to board Northwest flights. Union officials say Northwest's final offer to its striking mechanics and cleaners would: • Set the mechanics' hourly base rate pay at $22.95. Before the strike, Northwest says it was $30.89.
August 19, 2005 - AFL-CIO leader decries unions' break with group -During his speech at the Iowa Federation of Labor's convention in Waterloo, Richard Trumka, national secretary-treasurer for the AFL-CIO, said the decision of three national unions to pull out of his organization was coming at a terrible time.He said "workers are under the worst attack in 80 years" and now is not the time for labor divisions. "We need more solidarity, not less solidarity," Trumka said. Not only that, but he said the decision stripped the AFL-CIO of resources and will cost labor organizations at every level."I'm mad as hell at the unions who disaffiliated," Trumka said. "It was shortsighted. It was selfish."
August 17, 2005- Union candidates cry foul over unsent mail -Candidates looking to unseat the leadership of United Food and Commercial Workers Union Local 655 on Tuesday filed charges with the Department of Labor alleging their opponents interfered with the U.S. Postal Service. The group says campaign literature was supposed to be mailed to members on Aug. 12 but was never sent. It has yet to be located. The candidates are asking the Labor Department to provide oversight of the election
August 7, 2005- Federal Labor Union Fight for Employees Charges with Violating Hatch Act - A federal labor union is going to bat for two employees charged by the Office of Special Counsel with violating the Hatch Act by sending politically partisan e-mails from their government accounts. In a friend-of-the-court brief, the National Treasury Employees Union argues that the Merit Systems Protection Board should uphold the dismissal of a complaint against the employees, saying that preventing any political discussions conducted via e-mail would have "sweeping impact governmentwide."

July 24, 2005-Teamsters, SEIU Decide to Bolt AFL-CIO-Jolting organized labor, the Teamsters and a massive service employees' union decided Sunday to bolt the AFL-CIO, paving way for two other labor groups to sever ties in the movement's biggest schism since the 1930s. The four dissident unions, representing nearly one-third of the AFL-CIO's 13 million members, announced they were boycotting the federation's convention that begins Monday, a step that was widely considered to be a precursor to leaving the federation. They are part of the Change to Win Coalition, a group of seven unions vowing to accomplish what the AFL-CIO has failed to do: Reverse the decades-long decline in union membership. But many union presidents, labor experts and Democratic Party leaders fear the split will weaken the movement politically and hurt unionized workers who need a united and powerful ally against business interests and global competition

 

Organized labor faces schism as 4 unions plan to boycott convention- In a mark of organized labor's badly broken solidarity, four major unions Sunday said they would boycott the AFL-CIO's convention, and three appear poised to bolt the federation that has loosely bound the nation's unions together. Officials from the 1.3 million-member Teamsters and the 1.8 million-member Service Employees International Union, the AFL-CIO's largest union and the spark behind the rebellion, said they would meet Monday and announce their plans.  

 

Four Big Unions Boycott AFL-CIO Convention and May Split Away (Washington Post)


July 24, 2005-FedEx Ground's contract drivers want to be employees-Though FedEx Corp. was built on a cargo airline, its trucking business is now a big-time money-maker and a tough competitor for its chief rival, UPS Inc. But the shipping giant's trucking division, FedEx Ground, is now embroiled in a growing labor fight that could raise operating costs by millions and lead to an overhaul of its work force. The argument centers on the more than 14,000 drivers of those trucks with the purple and green "FedEx" on the side that make thousands of stops each day at homes and businesses across America. The drivers are independent contractors who own the trucks, pay all operating costs and get no company benefits. But drivers in Tennessee, California, Massachusetts, Minnesota, South Dakota and elsewhere are suing FedEx, arguing the company skirts worker protection laws by refusing to hire them as employees eligible for overtime pay, health insurance, workers' compensation and other benefits. They also want to be reimbursed for back operating expenses and lost benefits
July 22, 2005- AFL-CIO faces rebellion within ranks at convention -U.S. labor leaders fighting declining membership and influence are facing a rebellion from within the ranks that could weaken or even splinter the 50-year-old AFL-CIO, the largest U.S. union coalition.  The AFL-CIO, representing nearly 13 million workers, meets in Chicago on Monday in a convention dominated by demands for change from five member unions representing more than a third of the membership. The dissident group is seeking to emphasize recruiting new members and to make structural changes, and it has decried what it calls a misplaced emphasis on electoral politics. The talk has fueled speculation over a split in the AFL-CIO. Dissident leaders have stopped short of saying they would leave if the coalition rejects their proposals, but they have vowed to respond with what one leader called "appropriate action." The group already plans to hold its own "founding convention" in the autumn regardless of what happens at the Chicago meeting.
In the decade that AFL-CIO President John Sweeney has controlled the coalition, union membership fell from 15.5 percent of the work force to 12.5 percent. In 1983, before a nationwide decline in heavy manufacturing and the exporting of work to other countries, that figure was slightly over 20 percent. Sweeney, 71, faces re-election at the upcoming convention and is unopposed so far in his bid for a third term, despite the dissatisfaction of dissident members.
 

June 15, 2005-Five Top Unions Join Forces, Raising Threat of Labor Rift-The likelihood of a schism in organized labor increased yesterday when five major unions formed a growth-oriented coalition and the presidents of four of the unions hinted strongly that they might quit the A.F.L.-C.I.O. The presidents of the Teamsters, the United Food and Commercial Workers, and Unite Here yesterday joined an earlier threat by the Service Employees International Union to end their affiliations because they are so unhappy with the labor federation. The four unions represent nearly one-third of the members of the A.F.L.-C.I.O., a federation of 57 unions and 13 million workers, and if they quit it would greatly weaken the federation, hurt its budget and cause fighting within labor

(New York Times)


May 31, 2005-AFL-CIO prez suffers labor pains -Is America's top labor leader, AFL-CIO President John Sweeney, slighting his own employees and violating their union contract? In a stunning letter to Sweeney last week, nearly 100 unionized workers at AFL-CIO headquarters in Washington claimed that federation officials have given them "the kind of treatment we have come to expect from corporate America, not the house of labor" - and they called that treatment "unacceptable." The workers are among 167 employees whose jobs Sweeney targeted for elimination last month in a massive cost-cutting and restructuring move at the federation that will ultimately reduce its workforce of 460 by nearly one-fourth. As part of Sweeney's unprecedented restructuring, 61 new jobs will be created, largely to expand the federation's union organizing campaigns and its support of political candidates. The laid off workers will be offered a chance to apply for the new positions. "Management has agreed that seniority is the first criteria, but they've also made it clear beforehand that we are going to have differences of opinion on applicants' qualifications," Parks said. In other words, the most senior laid-off workers will not automatically be offered one of the newly created jobs. The labor discord at AFL-CIO headquarters has many union leaders around the country nervous. "Seniority is one of the cornerstones of labor unions," said a New York labor leader. "How do I sit across the bargaining table from an employer and defend it in my contract when the AFL-CIO isn't doing so with its own workers?"

See also  A Summer of Discontent for Labor Focuses on Its Leader's Fitness for His Job (NYT)

Labor union rift opening; GOP sees opportunity


May 30, 2005-Unions expect hit if shipyard closes -Maine's labor unions stand to lose more than 4,000 members if the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard closes, dealing one of the largest single blows to the state's unionized workforce at a time when membership already is declining
May 3, 2005- AFL-CIO 'redirecting resources;' will cut 106 jobs-The AFL-CIO said Tuesday that it plans to lay off one-fourth of its 420 employees as part of a restructuring that will shift resources to organizing new members and political mobilization. About two-thirds of the 106 layoffs will occur at the downtown Washington headquarters two blocks from the White House where four departments are being merged with others. A 10 times a year glossy magazine, America at Work, will cease publication. “The changes today are not because we are in dire financial straits,” said AFL-CIO spokeswoman Lane Windham. “The changes are because we have limited resources and those resources are being redirected to meet our goals.” AFL-CIO President John Sweeney is under pressure from leaders of five dissident unions to overhaul the federation and develop a strategy to reverse declining membership.
May 1, 2005-Book: Lane Kirkland : Champion of American Labor -"This highly laudatory biography tells a -fascinating story not only of the man who was a major force in America's labor movement but also of the era (1979-1995) in which he served as head of the AFL-CIO. An uncompromising and tenacious leader of America's working people, Kirkland advocated freedom for the world's oppressed." Another review: "LANE Kirkland's life was dominated by his times. He was one of the most able, intelligent and inspired leaders in the history of American labor. But as president of the AFL-CIO from 1979 to 1995 he presided over the demise of the American union movement as it was known in the 20th century. No plausible successor institutions have yet emerged. He rallied labor to fight against what he considered free-trade extremism and came shockingly close to stopping the North American Free Trade Agreement. Yet in the end he was able to do far less for American union members than he achieved for workers in Eastern Europe and Latin America. At the end of a great career he was hounded out of office by the anger, resentment and ignorance of lesser men who blamed him personally for the historic forces that rendered 20th century unions obsolete. After he left office the decline of private sector unions only accelerated under the stewardship of the men who had dismissed him."

 

April 17, 2005-Labor can't win in a house divided -Like no other time in the last 50 years, a united labor movement is critical to defending the working class and the American people. It is decisive to any hope for a progressive agenda for the whole nation, not just for union members. Bush and company know only too well that labor, along with the African American and Latino communities and the women’s movement, are the core power behind the massive coalition that came so close to defeating them in 2004. Now Bush and his ultra-right-wing Republican cronies in Congress are daily ratcheting up their efforts to dismantle progressive social legislation. Unions and the AFL-CIO are under particular assault for their role in the 2004 elections. Labor is critical in the fight to hold off the Bush administration’s attacks on the people.
April 17, 2005- Labor unions can expect more audits-White House says it's after corruption; groups cite payback for opposing Bush. The Bush administration is rapidly expanding audits of the nation's labor unions, citing a need to ferret out and deter corruption. But union leaders assert that those increased efforts are nothing more than crude political retaliation. Pointing to embezzlement of hundreds of thousands of dollars by the presidents of the ironworkers union and Washington's teachers union, Labor Department officials say the number of audits fell too far in the 1990s and needs to be restored to previous levels.
April 9, 2005-Union Seeks Wal-Mart Files About Payments-The United Food and Commercial Workers Union called on Wal-Mart Stores yesterday to release all documents connected with accusations that its former vice chairman, Tom Coughlin, had obtained improper expense account reimbursements to finance secret anti-union activities. The union's call for release of the materials comes two weeks after Mr. Coughlin resigned, accused by Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, of taking $100,000 to $500,000 through expense account abuses. (New York Times)
April 5, 2005-Unions Protest at Schwarzenegger Event - About 2,000 union demonstrators protested against Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's package of proposed reforms Tuesday night outside a hotel where the governor was raising money for a slate of ballot measures. Nurses, teachers, firefighters, police and members of several public employee unions have been staging noisy protests against the Republican governor for months. On Tuesday, they aired their complaints outside the Ritz-Carlton hotel in San Francisco. "He picked the wrong group," said Deborah Burger, president of the 60,000-member California Nurses Association. "We don't have a lot of money, but we have connections with the community."
March 20, 2005-GOP Requests Investigation of Organized Labor Over Social Security Debate-House Education & the Workforce Committee Chairman John Boehner (R-OH) and Employer-Employee Relations Subcommittee Chairman Sam Johnson (R-TX)  sent a letter to U.S. Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao, calling on the Labor Department to investigate whether the concerted efforts of organized labor (AFL-CIO) to pressure financial firms and brokerage institutions to withdraw their support of the President’s proposal to reform Social Security have in fact violated federal labor and pension law. Labor Unions Enter Social Security Debate (NYT)
March 20, 2005- Retirement, the federal way-The experiences of Brenda Barnett and Jason O'Dell, who are among two million civilian employees of the federal government enrolled in the [Thrift Savings] Plan, show how giving investors control over their retirement savings can have widely varying results. President Bush holds up the federal savings program as a model for the retirement accounts he wants to add to Social Security. The federal thrift plan, however, differs in an essential way from the retirement accounts that the president wants to carve out of Social Security. The thrift accounts are on top of a generous fixed pension for federal employees, while President Bush's proposal envisions the accounts replacing a substantial part of Social Security's fixed pension. (NYT)
November 24,  2004-OSHA to Issue Final Rule on Federal Agency Record-Keeping and Reporting Requirements
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration will publish a final rule in tomorrow's Federal Register that will require federal government agencies to adopt worker safety and health record-keeping and reporting requirements that are essentially identical to the private sector. The new requirements will go into effect beginning Jan. 1, 2005. "These new requirements will improve record-keeping which will enhance the ability of federal agencies and employees to prevent occupational injuries and illnesses," said OSHA Administrator John Henshaw. "Producing more useful data will better enable the agencies to identify patterns of injuries and illnesses and focus on the most effective intervention." While the regulation will become effective Jan. 1, notices of violations will not be issued during the first year as long as agencies are making a reasonable effort to comply with the requirements. OSHA will launch a comprehensive outreach and compliance assistance effort early in the implementation period to educate and train federal agencies on the new recording requirements. The new requirements will enhance the capacity of agency safety and health managers to focus the attention of their illness and injury prevention programs on the most significant hazards; identify types or patterns of injuries and illnesses whose investigation will lead to prevention efforts such as improved work practices or technology development; and provide useful priority-setting information for establishment inspections within an agency.

November 17,  2004-Unions insulted by Bush minimum wage-Despite Democratic losses across the board in the elections, organized labor is refusing to embrace President Bush’s offer to raise the minimum wage by $1.10 an hour. “It’s insufficient, and it’s too little, too late,” said Bill Samuel, director of legislation for the AFL-CIO. “This is an insult to workers whose wages have fallen so far behind that they can’t even afford the bare necessities.”
November 15,  2004-Teamsters Find Pensions at Risk-n the 1960's and 1970's, the Teamsters' huge Central States pension fund was a wellspring of union corruption. Tens of millions of dollars were loaned to racketeers who used the money to gain control of Las Vegas casinos. Administrative jobs were awarded to favored insiders who paid themselves big fees. A former Teamster president and pension trustee was convicted of trying to bribe a United States senator. Yet for nearly half a million union members who are expecting the fund to pay for their retirement, those may have been the good old days
November 12,  2004-Election reveals gap between federal union members, leaders -As the leaders of federal employee unions lamented George Bush's reelection, many members celebrated, illuminating a disconnect between leadership and those they represent. All major federal employee unions, including the American Federation of Government Employees and the National Treasury Employees Union, endorsed Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., for president. But according to exit polls, almost four out of 10 union members voted for Bush. In the wake of last week's election, union leaders are asking themselves how they can bridge the electoral gap, and how to respond to members who say they voted for Bush because they support him not only on cultural issues, but also on workforce issues
November 12,  2004-House leader seeks to boost White House authority to reorganize agencies -As President Bush prepares for a second term, his Republican allies on the House Government Reform Committee are considering legislation bolstering executive powers. Government Reform Chairman Tom Davis, R-Va., wants to expedite the process for confirming presidential appointees and reinstate executive reorganization authority, which was granted intermittently to presidents between 1932 and 1984. That would allow the president to propose changes in the structure of government agencies, then submit them to Congress for approval on an up-or-down vote. The authority would minimize the turf wars that inevitably crop up when new agencies such as the Homeland Security Department are created, a Davis spokesman said.
November 12,  2004-No backup, no sick days, Canada Postal Employees say -Canada Post employees in rural and suburban offices say they are unable to get time off because there is a shortage of replacement employees, and are planning job action to make their point. Marie Harke, who delivers mail in Westlock, says Canada Post promised to find backup workers to fill in for sick or vacation days by June, but hasn't delivered.
November 10,  2004- None dare call it voter suppression and fraud-Evidence is mounting that the 2004 presidential election was stolen in Ohio. Emerging revelations of voting irregularities coupled with well-documented Republican efforts at voter suppression prior to the election suggests that in a fair election Kerry would have won Ohio. Democratic hopeful Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts conceded on November 3, based on preliminary postings by the highly partisan Republican Ohio Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell. These unofficial results showed Bush with 136,483 more votes than Kerry, although 155,428 provisional ballots, 92,672 “spoiled” ballots, additional overseas ballots, and some remaining absentee ballots remained uncounted. The day after his concession, Kerry drew 3,893 votes closer to Bush when a computerized voting machine “glitch” was discovered in an Ohio precinct. A machine in ward 1B in the predominantly Republican Gahanna, Ohio, recorded 4,258 votes for George W. Bush when only 638 people cast votes at the New Life Church polling site. Buried on page A6 of the Columbus Dispatch, the story also reported that the voting machine recorded 0 votes in a race between Franklin County Commissioners Arlene Shoemaker and Paula Brooks. Franklin County Board of Elections Director Matt Damschroder told the Dispatch that the voting machine glitches were “why the results on election night are unofficial.”
November 10,  2004-Bush election leaves labor unions in turmoil-As the nation's union leaders gather on Wednesday in Washington the labor movement is in turmoil, with the president of the AFL-CIO's largest union hinting it might pull out of the labor federation and some labor leaders saying that John J. Sweeney may face a challenge for the federation's presidency.
November 10,  2004-Group Seeks Union Election Spending Probe -An anti-union group is urging the Federal Election Commission to investigate one of the largest unions in the country, claiming the Service Employees International Union unlawfully spent workers' dues to elect Democrats in last week's election.
November 10,  2004-Calif. Governor Names Labor Leader to Run Employment Department-After upsetting labor unions by favoring corporate interests this year, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger on Tuesday appointed a Democrat and longtime labor leader to manage the sprawling bureaucracy of the Employment Development Department. Patrick W. Henning — son of legendary labor activist Jack Henning, a one-time appointee of President John F. Kennedy — becomes director of the department as it faces criticism that it is a recalcitrant, inept bureaucracy. Henning's appointment nevertheless has given hope to labor unions that believe that Schwarzenegger has courted business interests. The governor vetoed nearly 90% of the so-called "job-killer" legislation that had been sent to him by the Democratic-controlled Legislature and worked to kill Proposition 72, a labor-backed initiative to increase healthcare coverage
November 10,  2004-Calif. settles electronic voting suit against Diebold for $2.6M-California Attorney General Bill Lockyer announced Wednesday a $2.6 million settlement with Diebold Inc., resolving a lawsuit alleging that the company sold the state and several counties shoddy voting equipment. Although critics characterized the settlement as a slap on the wrist, Diebold also agreed to pay an undisclosed sum to partially reimburse Alameda, San Diego and other counties for the cost of paper backup ballots, ink and other supplies in last week's election. California's secretary of state banned the use of one type of Diebold machine in May, after problems with the machines disenfranchised an unknown number of voters in the March primary. The original lawsuit was filed a year ago by Seattle-based electronic voting critic Bev Harris and Sacramento-based activist Jim March, who characterized the $2.6 million settlement as ``peanuts.''

November 3,  2004- Survey: Union Members Overwhelmingly Backed Kerry-Union members overwhelmingly supported presidential candidate Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.), who conceded on Nov. 3, and union households accounted for one of four voters, totaling 27 million union household voters in 2004, according to an independent election night survey and the exit polls. Union households provided a 5.8 million vote advantage for the Democratic candidate for president, a new exit poll finds. Sixty-five percent of union members voted for Kerry, with an even bigger margin—68 percent—voting for Kerry in battleground states. In sharply divided Ohio, 67 percent of union members voted for Kerry, according to the election night survey conducted by Peter D. Hart Research Associates for the AFL-CIO. Overall, 62 percent of union members surveyed say they disapprove of President George W. Bush’s job performance, with 67 percent saying they have only some or very little confidence Bush will look out for working families.
 

October 22,  2004-Bush's War on Labor: NLRB changing the rules - It has nothing to do with Iraq, terrorism, or taxes, but here's another issue right at the heart of what's at stake in next month's election: As president, George W. Bush gets to fill three of the five seats on the National Labor Relations Board, the panel that serves as a kind of Supreme Court for labor issues. Bush didn't get his three-member majority until last December, when he placed a conservative Washington, D.C., attorney named Ronald Meisburg on the panel. Meisburg's nomination had been blocked in the Senate, so Bush made what's called a recess appointment, meaning Meisburg gets to serve only until the Senate recesses next month
 
October 22,  2004-Democrats Aim to Organize the Union Vote-Labor Leaders Predict Record Turnout as They Rally Members for Kerry in Battleground States -When union members give him grief about Democrats being soft on the Second Amendment, Bill Dorward, an organizer for the United Steelworkers of America, fires back: "If you lose your job, you can't eat your gun." Dorward has not had to give that response much this election season. Three years of job losses and other economic setbacks have stoked political passions among union-represented workers, and leaders of the nation's largest labor organizations are forecasting a record turnout among members and their families.

 
October 21,  2004-Judge orders UPS not to discriminate against deaf drivers-UPS Inc. violates anti-discrimination laws by barring the deaf and hearing-impaired from driving parcel delivery trucks, a federal judge ruled Thursday. U.S. District Judge Thelton Henderson said the Atlanta-based company's practices breach the Americans with Disabilities Act, and ordered revisions in UPS' policies within 30 days. The U.S. Postal Service and FedEx Corp. allow some deaf drivers to operate delivery vehicles under 10,000 pounds.

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