Liz Shuler, newly elected Secretary-Treasurer of the AFL-CIO
Susan Phillips of the Berger-Marks Foundation reports on a speech by AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer Liz Shuler at a recent women’s organizing conference.
Young workers need a collective voice more than ever, AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer Liz Shuler told a group of women activists last week in New Orleans.
The youngest person ever elected to a top AFL-CIO office, Shuler keynoted a luncheon during a women-only summit sponsored by the Berger-Marks Foundation. The “Women Organizing Women: Social Networks, Social Justice, Social Change” summit is a ground-breaking gathering of women activists from across the United States and Canada to discuss inter-generational issues relating to their advocacy work. Participants ranged in age from 23 to 65. The organization will release a report later this year on the recommendations from this summit.
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
British Airways Strike Enters 3rd and Busiest Day
AP – Protestors on the picket line gesture as a British Airways plane comes in to land at Heathrow Airport
By JANE WARDELL, AP Business Writer – Mon Mar 22, 5:35 pm ET
LONDON – British Airways and the union representing its cabin crew were no closer to resolving a dispute over pay and conditions Monday as a strike that has grounded thousands of flights entered its third — and busiest — day.
Operations at the airline were put under more strain Monday than over the weekend as there are far more flights packed in to normal scheduling.
The airline said it operated 273, or 78 percent, of its long-haul flights and 442, or 50 percent, of its short-haul flights over the first two days of the strikes. It is yet to release details for Monday.
By JANE WARDELL, AP Business Writer – Mon Mar 22, 5:35 pm ET
LONDON – British Airways and the union representing its cabin crew were no closer to resolving a dispute over pay and conditions Monday as a strike that has grounded thousands of flights entered its third — and busiest — day.
Operations at the airline were put under more strain Monday than over the weekend as there are far more flights packed in to normal scheduling.
The airline said it operated 273, or 78 percent, of its long-haul flights and 442, or 50 percent, of its short-haul flights over the first two days of the strikes. It is yet to release details for Monday.
Southwest Airlines 4Q Lobbying Cost $180,000
On Monday March 22, 2010, 5:31 pm EDT
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Southwest Airlines Co. spent $180,000 to lobby in the fourth quarter on issues including legislation to prohibit pilots from using personal wireless devices and laptop computers during flights, according to a recent disclosure report.
The use of such devices in the cockpit drew national attention last year after a Northwest Airlines crew explained that they overshot Minneapolis by more than 100 miles because they were on their laptops and having a discussion about crew schedules.
Delta, US Airways Revise Offer for 'Slot' Swaps at D.C., N.Y. Airports
By Dan Reed, USA TODAY
Delta Air Lines and US Airways made the Federal Aviation Administration a counteroffer Monday in hopes of getting approval for their blockbuster swap of assets at New York's LaGuardia and Washington, D.C.'s Reagan National airports.
But the two carriers' offer falls short of the demands made last month by FAA officials. The FAA has jurisdiction over the assets swap because it involves transferring ownership of "slots," which are time-specific landing and take off rights, at two of the USA's most congested airports. Only a handful of U.S. airports are slot-limited.
United Airlines Spent $600K Lobbying Gov't in 4Q
Mon Mar 22, 6:57 pm ET
WASHINGTON – United Airlines spent $600,000 in the fourth quarter lobbying on proposed rules for dealing with stranded passengers and prohibiting using computers and other electronics in the cockpit.
Several hot-button issues showed up in proposed legislation last year, including long tarmac delays and pilots' use of laptops in the cockpit after two Northwest Airlines pilots became distracted and overflew their destination.
Remarks by the President on the House Vote on Health Insurance Reform
THE PRESIDENT: Good evening, everybody. Tonight, after nearly 100 years of talk and frustration, after decades of trying, and a year of sustained effort and debate, the United States Congress finally declared that America’s workers and America's families and America's small businesses deserve the security of knowing that here, in this country, neither illness nor accident should endanger the dreams they’ve worked a lifetime to achieve.
Immigrant Students Deserve a DREAM
Ilana Strauss
Marchers walk to the National Mall on Sunday, waving signs to demand immigration reform. Dozens from Martin County attended the march
by James Parks, Mar 22, 2010
Our nation cannot afford to lose the productivity of thousands of undocumented immigrant students, a coalition of union, student and civil rights leaders said today. A day after a massive march in Washington, D.C., for comprehensive immigration reform, the leaders called on Congress to fix the nation’s broken immigration system by passing real reform legislation, including the Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act.
Top-Hatted 'Bankers' Peddle for Taxpayer Cash in D.C., and More Good Jobs Action
by Mike Hall, Mar 22, 2010
In Cleveland this afternoon, AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer Liz Shuler told a crowd of union activists outside a Morgan Stanley office:
“We’re here at Morgan Stanley to make one thing clear. We need good jobs now. And we are going to make Wall Street pay.”
Meanwhile, in another of the AFL-CIO’s 200 “Good Jobs Now, Make Wall Street Pay” actions taking place through the end of this week, top-hatted “bankers” panhandled for even more bonus bonanzas on a sidewalk in front of a Washington, D.C., Bank of America branch.
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