
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
No Protest Planned Over Boeing Tanker Win
Tue. March 08, 2011
The European Aeronautics and Defence group (EADS) announced it will not dispute the Pentagon’s choice of Boeing as winner of the competition to build a new fleet of air-to-air refueling tankers for the U.S. Air Force. The news concludes a nearly 10-year battle for the contract, which could support more than 40,000 U.S. jobs and is worth as much as $100 billion to Boeing and its suppliers.
In his announcement that EADS would not protest the award, EADS Chairman Ralph D. Crosby Jr., acknowledged that Boeing's $20.6 billion bid was significantly less than the $22.6 billion offer submitted by EADS, which had proposed building a tanker modeled around the Airbus A330. The Air Force evaluation, acknowledged Crosby, was “handled exactly by the rules.”
IAM leaders said the announcement confirmed their belief that the U.S. workforce was a major factor in the Pentagon’s decision.
Veterans Council Serves Those Who Served
Tue. March 08, 2011
The IAM is urging all union members who are military veterans to take advantage of the resources provided by the AFL-CIO Union Veterans Council (UVC), an organization founded in 2008 and dedicated to providing information about legislation, programs and benefits of value and interest to veterans and their families.
Veterans, family members and even non-veterans who believe our veterans deserve the best, are encouraged to click here to begin receiving email alerts about important issues and events and when their voice is needed to make a difference.
Among the issues that are part of the 2011 UVC Legislative Agenda are health care for veterans and the high unemployment rate for Afghanistan and Iraq veterans, which includes National Guard and Reserve troops who found their jobs gone when they returned from active duty.
“There are approximately 185,000 veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan who are currently unemployed and thousands more who are unemployed due to the ongoing recession and the loss of valuable manufacturing jobs,” said IAM General Secretary-Treasurer Warren Mart, who serves on the UVC Executive Council. “We owe them our best efforts and the Union Veterans Council is one way to make sure their concerns get the attention they need and deserve.”
IAM Poll Reveals Bi-Partisan Disapproval
Tue. March 08, 2011
In the second annual poll designed to give IAM members an opportunity to express their concerns about the state of the economy, the verdict was clear: President Obama isn’t doing enough to create jobs, with only 15.2 percent rating him excellent or good and 83.2 percent giving him a not-so-good or poor rating on having a strong, aggressive program to get people back to work.
As disappointed as IAM members were in the president’s performance, their disdain for Congress was clear. Over 51 percent said they would NOT support their member of Congress for re-election – a 4 percent decline from 2010, but still not an encouraging sign for incumbents.
The nearly 1,900 IAM members who took part in the poll were bi-partisan in their disapproval. They felt neither party was: controlling the growth of the federal deficit (64.6 %); standing up forcefully to the big banks (63.9 %); or pushing a strong jobs program to get people back to work (63.2 %). Democrats drew their best marks on standing up for the interests of working people (45.1 %); pushing programs to rebuild America’s infrastructure (44.6 %); and protecting Social Security and Medicare (43.1 %).
Wisconsin Solidarity in Black and White
Tue. March 08, 2011
In a show of support for union members fighting for their rights in Wisconsin, the IAM joined with the United Steelworkers in publishing full-page ads in the Wisconsin State Journal and Milwaukee Journal Sentinel newspapers.
“Collective Bargaining Works for Wisconsin” reads the ad as both unions salute their 44,000 proud members at Harley-Davidson, Bucyrus, Mercury Marine, Domtar, General Electric, Greenbay Packaging and dozens of other firms in Wisconsin.
“These members continue to find collective bargaining solutions in these tough economic times,” said IAM International President Tom Buffenbarger. “We want them, our fellow Brothers and Sisters in the public sector, and the entire country to know we see the concerted attack being forged against organized labor and the hard working men and women of this country - and we will not take it lying down. We will fight.”
Author Stephen King: Why Aren’t the Rich Like Me Paying More Taxes?
by James Parks, Mar 9, 2011
As 15,500 people rallied in 30 cities across Florida yesterday to protest Gov. Rick Scott’s budget, author Stephen King made a surprise appearance at the rally in Sarasota. A resident of Sarasota, King said maybe he should write his next horror novel about Rick Scott. He told the crowd the rich ought to pay more taxes (see video).
You might say, “Hey, what are you doing up there, aren’t you rich?” The answer is, “Thank God, yes.” And you know what, as a rich person, I pay 28 percent tax. What I want to ask you is why am I not paying 50 [percent]. Why is everybody in my bracket not paying 50?
Working people rallying in the “Awake The State” events said they would not stand for Scott giving tax breaks to the rich and corporations while he sticks it to teachers, public employees and other middle-class citizens.
Ohio Workers Determined to Stop Anti-Worker Bill
Several thousand people rallied yesterday outside the Ohio state Capitol.
by James Parks, Mar 9, 2011
Ohio’s working people served notice that they are more energized than ever to defeat S.B. 5, Gov. John Kasich’s anti-worker bill that takes away bargaining rights from public employees. The state Senate passed the bill by one vote in a last-minute, dirty-trick maneuver, and the state House began hearings yesterday.
Working families’ determination was evident yesterday as thousands of protesters converged on the steps of the state Capitol to protest Kasich’s State of the State address.
Over the weekend, union members hit the streets to educate other Ohio residents about the bill. AFSCME Ohio Council 8, OCSEA/AFSCME Local 11 and OAPSE/AFSCME organized door-to-door canvasses in Canton, Dayton, Toledo and Westerville. The Ohio Education Association also held postcard writing events across the state on Saturday and Monday, and nearly 200 workers and community members turned out for a rally against S.B. 5 in Portsmouth organized by the Shawnee Labor Council.
by James Parks, Mar 9, 2011
Ohio’s working people served notice that they are more energized than ever to defeat S.B. 5, Gov. John Kasich’s anti-worker bill that takes away bargaining rights from public employees. The state Senate passed the bill by one vote in a last-minute, dirty-trick maneuver, and the state House began hearings yesterday.
Working families’ determination was evident yesterday as thousands of protesters converged on the steps of the state Capitol to protest Kasich’s State of the State address.
Over the weekend, union members hit the streets to educate other Ohio residents about the bill. AFSCME Ohio Council 8, OCSEA/AFSCME Local 11 and OAPSE/AFSCME organized door-to-door canvasses in Canton, Dayton, Toledo and Westerville. The Ohio Education Association also held postcard writing events across the state on Saturday and Monday, and nearly 200 workers and community members turned out for a rally against S.B. 5 in Portsmouth organized by the Shawnee Labor Council.
Poll: Americans Support Public Employees
by Tula Connell, Mar 9, 2011
A Bloomberg National Poll just out finds that 64 percent of Americans, including a plurality of Republicans, oppose Republican-led efforts to take away the right of workers to bargain for good middle-class jobs. The poll also finds public employees are viewed favorably by a large majority: 72 percent, compared with 17 percent who have an unfavorable view.
Sixty-three percent of respondents, including 55 percent of Republicans, say states without enough money to pay for all the pension benefits they have promised to current retirees shouldn’t be able to break those obligations.
In addition, 63 percent of those surveyed, including a majority of Democrats and Independents, say corporations wield more political clout than unions—an imbalance in the checks and balances process that the public undoubtedly understands will only worsen if anti-worker bills backed by governors like Scott Walker in Wisconsin and John Kasich in Ohio become law.
NFL Players Back Indiana Workers
by James Parks, Mar 9, 2011
The NFL Players Association (NFLPA) today issued a statement of support for the working families in Indiana who are under assault by Gov. Mitch Daniels and a conservative majority in the legislature. In the statement, the players said:
The NFLPA stands together with the working families of Indiana and organized labor in their fight against this attempt to hurt them by targeting unions.
The hard-working people of Indiana, who work in both the public and private sectors, deserve the right to choose union representation and have collective protection for themselves and their families. The attacks on public employees in Indianapolis are particularly troubling. The teachers, nurses and people who keep us safe deserve our respect and strong representation from their unions. We stand in solidarity with our union brothers and sisters in their fight against the special interests that are trying to undermine the rights of American workers.
Michigan Republicans Use Budget Crisis to Make Outrageous Assault on Democracy
by James Parks, Mar 9, 2011
In an outrageous power grab, Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder and the Republican-dominated state Senate passed, and sent back to the House, legislation today that allows Snyder to declare a local city to be in a financial emergency and appoint an emergency manager. That manager can, without anyone else’s approval, cancel contracts, including collective bargaining agreements, force consolidation of schools, townships, cities and counties and, unbelievably, unilaterally remove local elected officials.
Mark Gaffney, president of the Michigan State AFL-CIO, said the bill allows the financial manager to abrogate collective bargaining contracts for five years. “It takes every decision in a city or school district and puts it in the hands of the manager, from when the streets get plowed to who plows them and how much they are paid. In schools, the manager would decide academics or if you have athletics,” Gaffney said.
This is a takeover by the right wing and it’s an assault on democracy like I’ve never seen.
Poll: Public Wants Jobs First, No Social Security Cuts
by James Parks, Mar 9, 2011
Americans are sending a message to Congress: Focus on creating jobs and don’t cut spending on Medicare or Social Security and don’t shut down the federal government.
Nearly eight in 10 people say Republicans and Democrats should reach a compromise on a plan to reduce the federal budget deficit to keep the government running, according to a Bloomberg National Poll. Respondents, by huge margins, also oppose cuts to Medicare, education, environmental protection, medical research and community-renewal programs.
Fewer than half of respondents say cutting Medicare benefits or raising the age at which Americans receive Social Security retirement benefits would have a large impact on the deficit, and only two in 10 favor cutting Medicare benefits.
When given five choices for the most important issue facing the nation, unemployment and jobs ranked first with 43 percent, deficit and spending was cited by 29 percent and 12 percent said health care.
Asked to choose between jobs and the deficit, 56 percent called creating jobs the government’s more important priority now, while 42 percent put the top priority at cutting spending.
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