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Union News

Stay up-to-date with WPEA

International Worker's Day May Day Celebration

3/22/2023

 
Be sure to mark your calendars for May Day this year!  Your Thurston Lewis Mason Central Labor Council is excited to invite you and your Local to connect with your brothers, sisters and siblings this spring, summer and beyond!
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“We Out Here!” JOIN US on Saturday, February 25, 2023 for a celebration of diverse leadership & more!

2/8/2023

 
View Flyer Here

The A. Philip Randolph Institute, Asian Pacific American Labor Alliance, Coalition of Black Trade Unionists, Labor Council for Latin American Advancement and Racial Justice & Diversity Committees of the Washington State Labor Council AFL-CIO are proud to announce “We Out Here!” A celebration of diverse leadership, in honor of and in solidarity with AFL-CIO Constituency Groups during Black History Month. We Out Here! will be held on Saturday, February 25, 2023 starting at 7pm at the Teamsters Hall in Tukwila. We will have food and drinks from around the world, music and a dance floor - an evening filled with joy and justice. RSVP: https://bit.ly/3Xz4cs0 
 
We know that anything that divides our solidarity is a threat to our movement, and to working people’s wellbeing. We’re seeing immense enthusiasm for organized labor, especially among younger workers from increasingly diverse generations. To support current and future union members, to be a welcoming home and an effective movement for building worker power, we must understand that people closest to the problem are also closest to the solution.
 
“We Out Here!” JOIN US on Saturday, February 25, 2023 for a celebration of diverse leadership, in honor of and in solidarity with AFL-CIO Constituency Groups during Black History Month.
 
Please join in solidarity to support the working class struggle of all workers in our communities, learn more in The Stand and RSVP to We Out Here! on 2/25: https://bit.ly/3Xz4cs0 

White House Continues Push for PRO Worker Agenda: LAPAD Update 1/26/2023

1/30/2023

 
National Legislative and Political News
  • Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced that noncitizen workers who are victims of, or witnesses to, the violation of labor rights, can now access a streamlined and expedited deferred action request process.
  • DOL published new resources for employers and workers to help prevent heat illness and injury.
  • The Centers for Medicare and Medicare Services (CMS) has released Medicare Part D price negotiation dates. The agency announced the first 10 Medicare Part D drugs selected for negotiations the list of drugs and their prices will be made public by September 1.
  • The Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) issued hazard alert letters to Amazon for failing to keep workers safe after inspections in facilities in New York, Illinois, and Florida.  
  • CMS announced two new measures for underperforming nursing homes. The measures will reduce inappropriate drug use and allow patients' families to more easily find out what nursing homes have been cited for deficiencies.
  • The Biden Administration extended the COVID-19 public health emergency for 90 days—until April 11, 2023—and said that it will give 60-days’ notice before ending the emergency.
  • UFCW applauds the FTC for proposing a rule to ban employee non-compete agreements. UFCW has long fought against these clauses in our members’ contracts, which negatively impact wages & working conditions. This would be a HUGE win for all hardworking Americans.
  • OSHA and Trulieve announced a voluntary settlement where the company will undertake a study to determine whether ground cannabis dust should be considered a "hazardous chemical" in an occupational environment. The settlement comes after the death of Truleive worker Lorna McMurrey, who died of occupational asthma which and OSHA investigation revealed was a result of working with ground cannabis dust.
  • UFCW joined 50 cattle, farm, rural and consumer groups to send a letter to U.S. Senate and House members who cosponsored the American Beef Labeling Act in the 117th Congress.
  • A new study shows that companies—especially in retail and food service—evade paying about $4 billion in overtime wages by inventing dubious titles for employees so they can claim they are salaried managers.
  • CMS has released a blueprint that will assist State Medicaid directors in helping enrollees who lose their coverage after the COVID public health emergency ends. Eligibility for these individuals will expire on April 1, and was part of Congress' year-end appropriations bill.  
  • White House sent a directive to all federal agencies to ensure labor advisors are in place at agencies to improve implementation and compliance with contract labor law requirements for Federal contractor.

News From Around the NationREGION 1
  • New York Gov. Kathy Hochul is still deciding whether to sue the state Senate after a key committee voted to reject her nominee for chief judge, Hector LaSalle. At last week’s Judiciary Committee hearing, state Senators claim one ruling in particular from LaSalle harmed the labor movement. But so far, they have passed no legislation to counter that ruling.
  • Job applicants in Massachusetts may gain better insights into their potential salary prospects under newly filed legislation on Beacon Hill. Employers with 15 or more workers would be required to share estimated salary ranges on job postings and advertisements, should a bill filed by state Reps. Josh Cutler and Brandy Fluker Oakley move forward in this new legislation session. Employers would also need to disclose pay ranges when offering promotions or transfers to new positions.

Region 2
  • With Maryland lawmakers facing a July 1 deadline to provide a framework for the legal use, possession and sale of cannabis after voters approved full legalization in November, it’s clear, just a week into the General Assembly session, that the task won’t be straightforward. While the public is generally enthusiastic about legalization, which passed with 67% support, legislators have a lot of work to do to build a legal market that fulfills their commitments on issues like equity, public safety, and taxation and revenue.
  • With the Pennsylvania state House of Representatives stuck in a partisan gridlock, House Speaker Mark Rozzi has decided to launch a statewide listening tour to gather input on how to address it and deliver justice for survivors of childhood sexual abuse. “As a rank-and-file member of the House for 10 years, I was never involved in the behind-the-scenes politics of the General Assembly,” said Mr. Rozzi, who was elected as a compromise candidate for speaker in the narrowly divided chamber. “Now, having been thrust into it over the last two weeks, I can tell you one thing: Harrisburg is broken.”

Region 4
  • On January 11th the Michigan Legislature was officially sworn in with Democrats at the helm of both chambers for the first time in 40 years. During their first week of official business, committee assignments were made with key labor allies, Jim Haadasm leading the House Labor Committee and former UFCW 951 member Senator John Cherry tapped to lead the Labor committee in the Senate. Democrats also introduced their first package of bills outlining their priorities that includes a repeal of the state’s Retirement Tax, expansion of the state’s Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), restore the state’s prevailing wage, and a repeal Michigan’s so called “Right to Work” law.
  • A small faction of Republican legislators in the Ohio House, led by Rep. Derrick Merrin, met in a closed door meeting to discuss their priorities. Included in their list of priorities is HJR6, the proposed reform that would make it harder for Ohioans to reform the state constitution through ballot initiatives that failed to pass the 2022 lame duck session.
  • Congressman Jim Banks, of Indiana’s 3rd congressional district, officially announced his campaign for the open Indiana Senate seat after Senator Braun announced that he would not be seeking re-election in December 2022. Congressman Banks was first elected to the U.S. House in 2012, and during his time in the House he has been a staunch ally to House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and was a key Trump ally who voted against certifying the election for President Biden after the January 6th insurrection.

Region 5
  • In Florida, Gov. DeSantis seeks to permanently ban mandateson COVID vaccines and masks.
    If this is approved by the Florida Legislature, the measures would restrict shot and mask rules in all schools and prevent public and private employers from hiring and firing based on shot status.
  • Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders announced Wednesday that it is unconstitutional for public entities to require people to wear masks as a COVID-19 prevention measure.

Region 6
  • In Iowa, legislators have introduced legislation to ask the USDA for a waiver to change what SNAP recipients can spend their benefits on which would include prohibiting the purchase of fresh meat, canned fruits, canned vegetables, white grains, cooking oils, spices including salt and pepper, baked or refried or chili beans, and sliced or cubed or crumbled cheese.  
  • In April, Wisconsin will have their spring elections, which includes the Wisconsin Supreme Court race, which will decide if the makeup of the court leans conservative or progressive. The court will take up Wisconsin’s redistricting case which progressives are fighting to have fair maps.  

Region 7
  • In Montana, the Senate Business, Labor and Economic Development Committee held a hearing on SB 140 on 1/20. The bill would prohibit payroll deduction for agency fees or other payments to unions for nonprofit employees unless the employee affirmatively consents to the fees/payments. The bill also prohibits healthcare facilities from collecting agency fees or additional payments from an employee’s wages without affirmative consent from the employee.
  • Newly elected Colorado state legislator is a former ride-share driver looking to win protections for workers.
  • DOL has filed a complaint in federal court against the operator of a Firestone franchise restaurant who allegedly fired two workers whom the employer believed complained to the Wage and Hour Division about the employer’s pay practice and participated in the investigation that followed.

Region 8
  • A California law intended to raise fast-food industry wages and working conditions won’t go in effect pending a voter referendum, according to a Sacramento Superior Court judge’s ruling..
    Something about MN cannabis, CT econ development.
  • Hawaii advocates are feeling confident about the prospects of advancing marijuana legalization in the new session, with an activist coalition holding a recent press conference alongside state lawmakers to lay out the path forward for reform.
  • The California Attorney General has filed a lawsuit against the country's largest insulin makers and pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs). The lawsuit accuses Eli Lilly, Novo Nordisk, Sanofi, CVS Caremark, Express Scripts, and Optum Rx of using their market power to overcharge patients for insulin.

Washington Wednesday - Union News From Around Washington

11/30/2022

 
Tell Starbucks: Stop union-busting closures
From the Stand: https://www.thestand.org/2022/11/tell-starbucks-stop-union-busting-closures/

SEATTLE (Nov. 29, 2022) — On Monday, Nov. 21, Starbucks announced it would close another store in Seattle. Again, it just happens to be one of the unionized locations, Broadway & Denny, which was the first store in the city to form a union with Starbucks Workers United in a unanimous vote back on March 22.
Rather than negotiate a first contract in good faith with its unionized workers, Starbucks continues to bust the unions by retaliating against union supporters and closing unionized stores. This is illegal, but Starbucks continues to do it — despite complaints from federal authorities and members of Congress — because U.S. labor laws and the penalties for breaking them are so weak that the company has deliberately chosen to commit illegal acts to discourage further organizing.
In fact, in the city where the company was born, they are stepping up the union-busting. With the latest store closure in Seattle, that will make four unionized stores that have been shuttered. The Broadway and Denny store is slated to be closed on Dec. 9, the one-year anniversary of the first Starbucks Workers United union election win in Buffalo, N.Y.

​TAKE A STAND — Starbucks Workers United Seattle is urging all to show their support for Starbucks workers by taking one or more of the following actions:
— Send a direct message to Starbucks District Manager Taylor Pringle and his boss Regional Director Nica Tovey and tell them what you think of their actions in your own words.
— Sign the pledge: “No contract, no coffee!”
— Contribute to the hardship fund. A GoFundMe hardship fund has been set up to help Starbucks workers who have been retaliated against or had their store closed.

As Starbucks continues to close stores, company executive are citing “safety concerns” and their desire to protect employees as the reason. Many in the commercial media are buying it and simply parroting the company line.
But with the latest store closure announcement, The Stranger’s Conor Kelley decided to actually get up from his desk and go talk to some of the Starbucks workers. He found that the workers tell a much different story than management:
“They say the closures all followed a similar pattern, one designed to bust up union activity rather than to address safety. Now, workers worry about following the company’s safety directives for fear of having their own stores closed.”

In the face of Starbucks’ illegal retaliation, its employees have continued to join together in unions. The current wave of union organizing at Starbucks began in December 2021 with a store in Buffalo, N.Y. There are now 264 Starbucks stores in 36 states have won union elections, including 17 in Washington state. Just 59 stores have lost an election. Dozens more Starbucks stores have filed for a union and are awaiting NLRB-supervised elections, including three more in Washington.

__

Tacoma Art Museum opts for union busting

From the Stand: https://www.thestand.org/2022/11/tacoma-art-museum-opts-for-union-busting/

The following is from Tacoma Art Museum Workers United:
TACOMA (Nov. 23, 2022) — In a rushed vote, the Tacoma Art Museum Board refused to voluntarily recognize our union, TAM Workers United (TAMWU), which has more than 80 percent support among our coworkers.
A statement released by the museum illustrates a deliberate mischaracterization of what voluntary recognition of a union entails, despite our efforts to educate the board in person and in writing since going public with our union drive. The statement also bears the marks of the outside counsel the museum recently hired, Seyfarth Shaw LLP, one of the largest “union avoidance” firms in the country.
“Voluntary recognition is a legal pathway to unionization, categorizing it as anything else is simply misinformation and union busting,” said Eden Redmond, an institutional giving manager at TAM. “It’s disappointing, but we have great support from unions across Washington, the community in Tacoma, and workers at TAM, and we’re ready to keep going.”
“Again the board is making institutional decisions without the input from community or staff, showing they would rather rush to anti-union tactics than collaborate and hear from museum workers,” said Joe Liwag, a visitor services representative at TAM.
“This vote is just another example as to why the museum needs to be unionized,” said Carrie Morton, a visitor services representative. “Decisions are made at TAM with little transparency and with little regard for the stakeholders or our community. The problems at TAM are systemic and an overwhelming majority of workers agree that the solution is a strong union.”
TAKE A STAND — Show your solidarity by signing the community support letter. Also, be sure to follow TAM Workers United on Instagram and Twitter for the latest updates.
The museum’s willful ignorance about what, exactly, unions do has been a source of concern for us since the start of our union drive, and was again present in the museum’s statement. Our good-faith attempts to educate the Board or at least delay a vote until they could become informed were in vain.
“The Board described the union’s grievances as the result of bad behaviors and communication, and therefore outside the scope of what unions do,” Redmond said. “But that’s exactly what unions do- they make structural changes that secure workers rights no matter who is in power. We wanted to talk about a system, and they changed the subject to talk about individuals. This mischaracterizes our work and is a blatant union-busting tactic.”
Stephen Rue, lead preparator at TAM added, “Given that Thursday’s meeting was the first time the TAM Board has met since the unionization effort was made public one month ago, it is clear their denial was made in haste without fully understanding the legal process of voluntary recognition nor all the issues at stake.”
We understand that unions are not granted by employers, though they can be. They are voted into existence by workers themselves. If we need to create our union that way, without the good will of our employer, we are determined to do it.
“TAMWU will continue forward, united as workers spanning all departments of our museum, to bring to the community the message that denial of voluntary recognition is unacceptable and unionization is key to fixing the systematic wrongs that the TAM Board is now hiding behind as reason for their refusal.”

National Stamp Out Hunger Day is May 14th

5/11/2022

 
Together we can make a difference for the more than 38M Americans who experience food insecurity every year.

Donate nonperishable food during the #StampOutHunger food drive on Sat. May 14th by placing them in a bag next to your mailbox!

Participating is simple and easy: Just leave a bag of nonperishable items such as canned goods in a bag next to your mailbox and your letter carrier will handle the rest.


More info: https://www.ufcw.org/stampouthunger/

Today is National Third Shift Workers Day!

5/11/2022

 
On National Third Shift Workers Day and every day, we thank all the workers that keep us going around the clock!
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Workers' Memorial Day

4/28/2022

 
On April 28, Workers’ Memorial Day is observed. The Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 was signed into law on April 28 that year to address the grievous working conditions that were harming far fewer American workers then than are harmed today. The anniversary of that signing is now Workers’ Memorial Day. “Workers’ Memorial Day is a solemn but important time to reflect on the lives lost at worksites throughout Washington state,” said Larry Brown, President of the Washington State Labor Council, AFL-CIO. “COVID-19 has awakened many to the harm that workers face on the job every day when they are not protected from known hazards. It’s never been more clear that workers need to join together in unions and demand safer working conditions if they want that to change.” Read more.

Courageous Conversations  on Race and the Labor Movement

4/26/2022

 
For the past few months, Olivia Muzzy and Lisa Longmire (KRL/WPEA) have been involved in planning this workshop opportunity with the Washington State Labor Council, the Kitsap Central Labor Council and the Olympic Labor Council - we now have a date/time for this workshop, and a poster to share with you! "Courageous Conversations on Race and the Labor Movement" is a (free) workshop intended to provide a practical toolkit to identify the impacts of racism in the workplace and how we can build union solidarity through recognizing and responding to instances of racism. This is a hybrid style workshop, with an option to attend via Zoom as well as two in-person locations (in Silverdale and in Port Angeles). The workshop is scheduled for Thursday, May 19 from 5:45-7:45pm. 

You can learn more about WSLC's Race and Labor initiatives here: https://www.wslc.org/race-and-labor/​​

Workshop information and registration here: https://tinyurl.com/wslcMay192022 and when registering, it will ask for the International Union affiliation - you will choose "United Food and Commercial Workers International Union (UFCW)", as that is WPEA's parent organization. 

A HUGE thank you to our outstanding members that have worked so hard to put this together! We thank you for all you do!

Disaster relief from flooding available for union members

12/1/2021

 
Union members: If you and your family are experiencing hardship as a result of recent flooding in northwest Washington or some other natural disaster in Washington state, the Washington State Labor Council, AFL-CIO urges you to apply for disaster relief from the Foundation for Working Families.
The FFWF is a nonprofit formed by the WSLC and its affiliated unions to assist union families in times of hardship or disaster. To apply for disaster relief, fill out and return this form.

Gary Merlino drivers’ ULP strike continues

12/1/2021

 
Teamsters Local 174: Despite the cold, wet, windy Seattle weather, 34 dump truck drivers are still on an Unfair Labor Practice strike at Gary Merlino Construction. The workers are part of a larger group of construction Teamsters all covered by the Associated General Contractors Agreement, which is jointly negotiated to cover nearly 500 Teamsters at six different Teamster Local Unions. The only Employer refusing to agree to the terms of the joint agreement is Gary Merlino Construction, with Merlino subordinate Charlie Oliver in charge of the contract negotiations. Said one striking employee:
“I’m just so disappointed with this whole situation, after almost 25 years working for Gary Merlino. We’ve helped build his house, for God’s sake, and he’s still letting his lackey shove us all out in the cold wind during Christmas because of what, pride? It makes me more sad than anything else.”
Orginally from The Stand (Nov. 29) — Gary Merlino drivers’ ULP strike continues
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