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By Huy Ong, on June 22nd, 2010
May 29th marked one moment in the ongoing fight to stop SB1070. Over 100,000 merged to Phoenix to denounce legalizing racial profiling, demand that President Obama intervene, and call on people of conscious everywhere to join the fight to address the human rights crisis in Arizona as the implementation date of July 29th approaches.
From a candlelight vigil organized by JwJ of East Tennessee and others, to Diamondbacks Boycott held in San Francisco, over 70 other solidarity actions occurred leading up to and on the day. And more followed. Organizers, activist, people of faith, teachers, students, and community members took the call for solidarity back into their communities, cities and states.
Following a visit to Arizona on Mother’s Day, A group of women from a broad array of social justice movements, organized an ad-hoc hearing in Congress where women and children from Phoenix shared their stories. Catherine Figueroa, Silvia Rodriguez, Sylvia Herrera
Communities and organizations are unveiling the truth about Police/ICE collaboration and the direct link it has for creating a pathway for SB1070 type legislation and moving campaigns to
Continue reading Summer is Heating Up! From Phoenix to Detroit and Beyond!
By Toma Lynn Smith, on June 11th, 2010
100 Activists from Kentucky to attend national gathering in Detroit, Michigan June 22 to 26
Kentucky Jobs with Justice will be joining more than 10 other social justice organizations on two charter buses to Detroit to take part in the US Social Forum. Here is a snippet from the USSF Web site:
The US Social Forum (USSF) is a movement building process. It is not a conference but it is a space to come up with the peoples’ solutions to the economic and ecological crisis. The USSF is the next most important step in our struggle to build a powerful multi-racial, multi-sector, inter-generational, diverse, inclusive, internationalist movement that transforms this country and changes history.
The USSF provides spaces to learn from each other’s experiences and struggles, share our analysis of the problems our communities face, build relationships, and align with our international brothers and sisters to strategize how to reclaim our world.
The first US Social Forum was held in Atlanta in 2007 with KY JwJ taking over 40 delegates. KY JwJ hosted the first Kentucky Social Forum in 2009 at Berea College, which drew over 400 participants. These Forums were and are inspired by the
Continue reading Kentucky Jobs with Justice is Taking 100 Activists to the USSF in Detroit!
By Maria Escobar, on March 4th, 2010
Today, March 4th, students and workers wake up to prepare for rallies, walkouts, call in days and many more activities during the National Day to Defend Education and the Jobs with Justice national week of action to save and create jobs .
Students and workers are tired of having the federal and state budgets balanced on their backs and are standing up to these atrocities. Today, we will stand up to demand full funding of higher education, a stop to the corporatization of education, proportionate representation on university decision -making bodies, and good union jobs in our schools. We will demonstrate that students and workers will not stand on the sidelines as education become a privilege available only to the few and while jobs are lost because of state budget cuts and the inaction in the federal government to pass student aid reform.
We are fighting these cuts now, but we also know that we need to look at the root problem and seek ways to fund the public sector through revenue reform and change
Continue reading Today: Take Action to Defend Education
By rand wilson, on March 4th, 2010
(Originally published on Working In These Times blog at http://www.inthesetimes.com/working/entry/5639/troublemakers_go_to_school_in_boston)
BOSTON—More than 90 union members, students and community activists jammed the SEIU Local 888 union hall here on Saturday for a “Troublemakers School” sponsored by Massachusetts Jobs with Justice.
IBEW Local 2222 Business Manager Myles Calvey gave a rousing welcome to kick things off. “We’re not going to get labor’s problems solved in Washington or on Beacon Hill unless we take a page from the civil rights and gay rights movements,” said Calvey, a former New England telecom strike leader. “We’ve got to be a lot more aggressive so that politicians are forced to deal with our issues. We’ve got make our problems, their problems!”
Calvey was followed by a panel of local organizers from the United Food and Commercial Workers’ Angelica Laundry strike, Service Employees’ Local 1199’s Caritas hospital campaign and American Federation of Government Employee’s Transportation Safety Officers organizing drive. Their presentations were followed by a wide-ranging discussion about organizing strategies and reports from other workplace struggles. (To learn more about these campaigns, go to www.ufcwlocal1445.org/Open1445Intro2.htm; http://fairunionelections.org and
Continue reading Troublemakers Go to School in Boston
By jwjnational, on February 24th, 2010
People across the country are angry – for good reason. Corporate greed and Wall Street recklessness drove our economy into a crisis. Sky high unemployment has created a state of emergency – but political leaders in Washington D.C. have not yet offered a real solution to this crisis, while Wall Street and corporate executives are trying to block a recovery for the rest of us and go back to business as usual.
In this environment, corporate flacks have been able to manipulate grassroots frustration, deflect it from the real causes of the crisis and shift the main stream discussion from the emergency of joblessness to a phony concern for the budget deficit (about which they said nothing while bailing out Wall Street or invading Iraq).
JwJ and our partners will not allow our anger to be deflected from the real causes of this crisis: corporate greed that has been putting the squeeze on workers for decades, through globalization, privatization and the free-for-all deregulation of Wall Street.

   
It’s become clear that we cannot wait on Congress to come up with a solution. It is up to us to create the mobilization on the ground that helps them “get it”: We are in a state of emergency, and need a bold, emergency response to save and create jobs. Washington needs a wake-up call from the grassroots.
Several local JwJ coalitions have been leading the charge for jobs, building local campaigns and developing unemployed councils. In coordination with the “Jobs for America Now” Coalition, the AFL-CIO and other partners, we aim to make March into “jobs month” — coordinated actions around the country that send a wake-up call to Congress and urge them to recognize unemployment as the emergency it is.
– March 1-7: Week of Action to save public services and stop layoffs
Endorsers include: United Steelworkers of America, AFSCME, Communications Workers of America, Amalgamated Transit Union, United States Student Association, United Food and Commercial Workers Union, Jobs for America Now. Local actions will range from student walk-outs to protest education cuts to town hall meetings to rallies against social service and transit cuts to marches against plant closings proposed by Whirlpool, Hugo Boss, Toyota and others.
– March 15-19: Protest Wall Street Greed; demand fair taxes & money for jobs Led by the AFL-CIO
– March 27-April 4: National Student Labor Week of Action: Students and Workers Unite for Education and Jobs
You can get involved!
1) Find your local JwJ coalition and ask how you can join the action
2) Organize your own event during the weeks of action
3) Circulate the “I’ll Be There” in the fight for jobs with justice pledge to your lists
By Margaret Butler, on February 24th, 2010
Faced with yet more blood-letting of public services, Oregon voters chose a different treatment: Tax those most able to pay. It’s given union activists hope that relentless organizing can settle bulging state deficits by targeting recipients of the bubble economy’s billions, not public services and public workers.
By 54 percent, they passed new taxes on the wealthiest 3 percent of the state’s residents and on corporations in a special election in late January.
The vote preserved funding levels for schools, critical human services, and public safety statewide. It’s also given union activists nationwide hope that relentless organizing can turn the media fascination with the anti-tax Tea Party on its head and settle bulging state deficits by taking money from recipients of the bubble economy’s billions instead of public services and public workers.
The tax boosts should cover a $727 million hole in the state budget-although the latest revenue estimates forecast deeper shortfalls.
Oregon’s budget situation has been critical for many years. One of five states without a sales tax, Oregon has relied on an essentially flat personal income tax and limited property taxes. Lacking the ability to create a “rainy day” fund, Oregon has been hit by the recession especially hard.
Unemployment hovers above 12 percent.
After cutting $2 billion from services last year, Democrats, who had enough of a majority to pass revenue measures, enacted two measures to plug the remaining budget gap.
But most business groups opposed the tax increases, so business sent out paid signature gatherers, who collected enough to refer both measures to the voters.
The Yes for Oregon campaign was based in many organizations that have worked together over the years, most recently in the 2008 election to fight off anti-union, anti-tax, and anti-immigrant ballot measures. Key funders and strategists included the Service Employees (SEIU), the Oregon Education Association, AFSCME, AARP, Our Oregon, Stand for Children, and the Oregon Health Care Association. The state AFL-CIO was an important source of volunteers and funds. Staff from many coalition partners were loaned to the campaign and provided its leadership. The campaign built a coalition of 250 groups statewide, including all five Jobs with Justice chapters.
“There was an amazing willingness from the average citizen to say, ‘I’ve got skin in this game and I’ve got to get involved,’” said Timothy Welp, a 15-year member of SEIU Local 503 now organizing for the local.
Beginning in the summer, all the coalition partners signed their members up on a “vote yes” pledge and started to focus their persuasion on undecided voters. Polling showed that we began the campaign with a solid majority of the voters. The challenge was to keep them in the face of what the Yes campaigners knew would be a well-funded, slick, and dishonest “vote no” drive.
The state’s minimum corporate tax had been $10 since 1931, making the need to increase corporate taxes an easy sell that appealed to voter anger at corporate greed and corruption and the federal bailout. Business groups reported raising $4.6 million for their group, Oregonians Against Job-Killing Taxes, but the Yes campaign, largely bankrolled by public employee unions, raised $6.9 million.
Most newspapers editorialized against the measures. Portland’s influential Oregonian sold the No campaign wrapper advertising, so in the days before the election the front of the paper advertised its “vote no” position. TV ads from the no side were misleading but effective, implying that the taxes would affect middle-class Oregonians.
Oregon votes only by mail, stretching the get-out-the-vote push for weeks. We thought as we went into the last two weeks that it was very close and knew that turnout would determine the outcome. Thousands of people phone-banked and canvassed during the final push. Volunteers at SEIU Local 503 made so many calls that phone service crashed throughout the neighborhood.
In total, Yes campaigners made more than a million phone calls at locations around the state. We knocked on 300,000 doors-nearly one-fifth of registered voters in the state.
Jobs with Justice had a small piece: recruiting volunteers, getting faith leaders on board, creating our own JwJ voters pamphlet statement, and helping pull together a rally in the campaign’s closing days. The backbone of the volunteer base was the public employee unions.
ANGER AT BUSINESS
It was very clear as we went door to door that the business message was not resonating with working people this time. People are angry about corporations and the $10 minimum tax struck most people as ludicrous.
“Oregon has had decades of anti-tax rhetoric, but at some point people are pushed to the wall,” Welp said. “Working folk have been squeezed so hard here. They’re tired of getting squeezed.”
The “vote no” message combined the two ballot measures and hit several themes, many of them false: a bad recession was the wrong time to raise taxes; 70,000 Oregon jobs would be lost; businesses would close or raise prices; public employees got a big raise.
Oregonians Against Job Killing Taxes argued that many of the households making over $250,000 were really single proprietorships who filed taxes as individuals. Their message was complicated: for some corporations, the tax would be on sales, not profits.
We said that both taxes were modest and affordable and that enacting them would save critical services we all depend upon. No polling has surfaced, but it seems clear that majorities of people voted their class interest. The keys to victory were the smart strategy, the broad coalition, the incredible number of volunteers, and the breadth of the field campaign.
There is much more to do to stabilize the state’s finances, even with the new taxes. Their passage, the first tax increase in Oregon since the 1930s, was a historic step toward fairness-although many Oregonians agree that our tax structure needs more change to make it stable and fair.
———
Margaret Butler is the director of Portland Jobs with Justice.
By rand wilson, on February 18th, 2010
A diverse group of trade unionists, environmentalists, academics and social justice activists gathered at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City for the third annual “Climate of Change” conference.
Conference organizers – The Healthy Planet Mobilization Committee* – kicked it off with a well attended press conference on Friday night featuring dozens of scientists, climate experts and the former Mayor of Salt Lake City. All the speakers took a strong public stand against a resolution adopted by the Utah House of Representatives earlier this month that rejected scientific evidence of global warming, criticized federal efforts to deal with it, and called for the state to abstain from regional collaboration to reduce carbon emissions. The press event was well covered by the local media.
On Saturday morning, former CWA Rep. and well-known author Steve Early and I opened up the conference with a workshop on reviving the labor movement and building labor – community coalitions. The roughly sixty participants were drawn from a great mix of local union leaders and staffers, rank-and-file activists, students, faculty members, and longtime Salt Lake City progressives. There was a lively exchange on topics like labor-environmental coalitions, based on the emerging Blue Green
Continue reading Salt Lake’s “Climate of Change” conference infused with spirit of Joe Hill
By Huy Ong, on November 30th, 2009
Families across the state of Oregon will be gathering over this holiday season to share updates, latest news, gossip and whose side are you on in the upcoming greatest civil war football game between the Oregon Ducks and the Oregon State Beavers. (For full disclosure, Go DUCKS!)
On many people’s minds, but less talked about, are our worries. Jobs security, health care cost, and our family’s future. In January, in a special election, Oregonians will decide on two very important ballot initiatives, measures 66 and 67 which would fund vital services, preserve jobs, and safeguard working families from this recession. Measures 66 and 67 would increase the corporate minimum tax from $10 – which has not been changed since 1931 – to $150. Two out of three corporations pay just $10 a year in income tax. Just $10!
Oregon’s five Jobs with Justice Coalitions recognized the importance of the upcoming election for working families and the communities and collectively worked on a statement for the upcoming voter guide. JwJ encourage Oregonians to talk to family, friends, neighbors, and co-workers about the need for to pass measures 66 and 67 in January. So, get a second or third helping and
Continue reading Oregonians Need Measures 66 and 67 – Vote in January
By Smiley, on November 5th, 2009
Tennesseans, like others around the country, have watched in horror as the effective enforcement of labor standards dramatically declined. Many employers in the state have been quick to take advantage of a climate that has privileged business interests over workers and their unions. Meanwhile, many agencies charged with upholding workplace standards have lacked the resources, or in some cases the political will, to firmly and consistently enforce the law. And it’s workers and their families that have paid the price!
This fall, Jobs with Justice of East Tennessee (based in Knoxville), Middle Tennessee Jobs with Justice (based in Nashville), and the Worker Interfaith Network of Memphis joined forces in a statewide effort to bring to light some of the worst cases of abuse, such as wage theft and violations of workplace health and safety.
Targeting primarily the Tennessee Department of Labor and the Tennessee Occupational Safety and Health Administration (TOSHA), the 3 groups are gearing up for a statewide series of workers’ rights board hearings to receive testimony from immigrant workers who have had their pay withheld for no reason, sheet-metal workers who have had to work in unsafe conditions, and a number of other worker stories.
“We had a torrent
Continue reading Tennessee Hosts Traveling Workers’ Rights Board Tour on Wage Theft and Safety Violations
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