Unemployed Workers Hold Jobless Summit

On December 3rd, unemployed workers and their supporters who are angered about the lack of public funding to address the continued economic assault of unemeployment and underemployment on communities of color, people with disabilities, and youth, held a “Jobless Summit” in Chicago to discuss innvovative strategies to put people back to work.   The summit was in direct response to the “Jobs Summit” called by President Obama.  While we applauded the President’s effort, we were concerned about the fact that the voices of the communities most affected by the crisis were ot invited to the table.

The “Jobless Summit” brought together a broad based sector that included unemployed workers, union representatives, economists, religious leaders, and people with disabilities who outlined specific recommendations to increase employment, including a National Jobs Program that puts the most vulnerable members of our communities back to work.

Aronzo Davis, an unemployed worker, said:

This Summit was the first step of a long-term organizing campaign to win a National Jobs Program.  The epidemic of joblessness in the African-American community has become a social catastrophe.  Unless something is done soon, I’m afraid our nation will head down a long road of endless violence.  But we want to create vibrant communities, not desolate ghettos.  We need

Continue reading Unemployed Workers Hold Jobless Summit

The Jobs Crisis is About More than Unemployment

On the eve of Obama’s “Jobs Summit”, the picture of employment in this country is bleak.  Unemployment is at crisis levels:  10.2% unemployment, six job-seekers for every opening, 27 million Americans that need full-time work.

This comes as no big surprise.  Jobs with Justice coalitions have been mobilizing for an economic recovery and working with partners to develop a national jobs plan. 

“It’s past time to get millions of people back to work with a national jobs program that puts people to work,” said Sarita Gupta, Executive Director of Jobs with Justice, “but to solve the economic crisis we must create not just jobs, but good jobs that allow workers and their families to lead healthy, stable lives.”

For decades, the economic policies of the United States government have led to a hemorrhaging of the good-paying jobs that built our middle-class.  More and more people are working at lower-paying jobs with fewer benefits.  Today, we find ourselves living in a country where one in 10 homes is in foreclosure.  One in eight people - 40% of whom are in working families - must rely on food stamps.  One in six have no health insurance. 

Unchecked corporate greed has put workers in a bind, forcing

Continue reading The Jobs Crisis is About More than Unemployment