June 11, 2009
- You Can Meet Vice President Biden
- CWAers Meet in Washington, D.C., at Exactly the Right Time
- CWA Members Keep the Heat on AT&T
- First Contract Brings Big Gains to St. Mary's Hospital Workers
- NY Times Column: Stop Scaring Americans about Canada's Health
Care System
You Can Meet Vice President Biden
Vice President Joe Biden will address CWAers at the joint
convention/legislative-political conference on June 24, and one
lucky CWA member will be chosen to join the escort committee to make
him feel right at home.
Click here for your chance to meet Joe Biden.
The only requirements are that you are a CWA member and that you
are an active contributor to CWA-COPE. If you are not currently
contributing to CWA-COPE,
you can sign up right here to become eligible.
CWAers Meet in Washington, D.C., at Exactly the Right Time
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Spreading the Employee Free Choice message:
CWA Local 9421 members hang a banner for Employee Free Choice
over a freeway overpass in Sacramento, above, and Local 9400
members hang a sign over a Los Angeles freeway. |
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Political newspapers and blogs are reporting that Senator Tom
Harkin (D-Iowa) has indicated that he will be ready to bring up the
Employee Free Choice Act in the Senate next month.
When 2,500 CWA members meet for Lobby Day on June 24, as part of
the joint convention/legislative political conference, it will be at
exactly the right time to make a difference on this important
legislation.
We'll be a critical counterpoint to the Chamber of Commerce and
its "Fly-In Lobby Days" that the Chamber has been using to try and
defeat Employee Free Choice. The Chamber has been flying in groups
of 100 chief executive officers by state, setting up meetings with
senators and staff. For California, the Chamber brought in 300 CEOs
to lobby Senator Dianne Feinstein.
That makes CWA's Lobby Day more important than ever.
CWA Members Keep the Heat on AT&T
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CWA members Local 3218 in Kennesaw, Ga., call
for fair contracts at AT&T. |
While negotiations for all AT&T contracts continue – and some
progress is being reported – CWA locals have been turning up the
heat on AT&T, pushing back against the company's greed.
CWAers are turning up at golf tournaments, baseball games and
other AT&T-sponsored events with a message that AT&T doesn't really
want the public to hear: AT&T must stop corporate greed now.
CWA Local 4321 members turned up at the AT&T sponsored hot air
balloon show in Coshocton, Ohio. They distributed flyers to get our
message to the public about our fight for a fair contract with AT&T.
Local 6360 members wore CWA red shirts to AT&T night at the
Kansas City Royals baseball game and handbilled the crowd before the
game.
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CWA 4320 members are truckin' around Columbus
spreading the word about AT&T's attack on the middle class. They
were in Dublin, Ohio, last week, during the AT&T-sponsored
Memorial Golf Tournament, with Tiger Woods participating. |
And the traveling billboard of Local 4320 was out in front at the
AT&T-sponsored Memorial Golf Tournament in Dublin, Ohio, where Tiger
Woods' presence made it certain that the public got the CWA message
too.
In other actions:
- CWA Locals 6360, 6327 and 6450 held a big rally outside an
AT&T location in Kansas City and got some picket line support from
UAW members.
- Members of CWA Locals 4100, 4310, 4320 and 4900 had some time
on their hands so they checked out the latest at Apple Stores.
- Members of Local 9421, along with retirees and other union
supporters, held this week's weekly picket in Sacramento, with
members spending their lunch hour making sure the public knows
about AT&T's corporate greed.
- Members of CWA Locals 4309 and 4340, joined by lots of
retirees, spent their breaks and lunch hours "Practice Picketing"
outside an AT&T location in downtown Cleveland.
For the latest, go to
www.cwa-union.org/att.
First Contract Brings Big Gains to St. Mary's Hospital Workers
CWA reached a tentative first contract covering 540 workers at
St. Mary's Regional Medical Center in Reno, Nevada. Workers, members
of Local 9413, voted for CWA representation by a 60 percent margin
last December.
The four-year agreement includes many improvements, including a
first-ever wage scale and wage progression that provides for yearly
pay increases and moves workers to top of scale in 12 years. It also
provides for job upgrades and wage increases; over the four-year
agreement, the average wage increase will be 18.1 percent.
One of members' biggest bargaining goals that this agreement
achieved was sick leave. In the past, workers were required to use
their vacation time for any illness or medical condition. Other
gains included job security provisions, a grievance process,
seniority and retiree health care.
The agreement covers certified nursing assistants, emergency
medical technicians, transport workers, kitchen and laundry workers,
phlebotomists, and others. The ratification vote will take place
next week.
NY Times Column: Stop Scaring Americans about Canada's Health
Care System
Comparing the experiences an American woman had being treated in
the U.S. and Canada, a New York Times column today calls out
opponents of health care reform for their phony claims and scare
tactics.
Columnist Nicholas Kristof writes about Diane Tucker, a lawyer
working in Canada, who pays the equivalent of $49 a month for health
care there. When she felt numbness in her hand that turned out to be
a stroke, she was met at the emergency room door by a doctor and
treatment began immediately. She never received a bill.
Back in the United States, she fainted and was rushed to the
hospital, where the first person she saw was an administrator who
asked her how she was going to pay. The 5-hour emergency room visit
cost more than $8,700.
"The bottom line is that America's health care system spends
nearly twice as much per person as Canada's," Kristof wrote. "Yet
our infant mortality rate is 40 percent higher than Canada's, and
American mothers are 57 percent more likely to die in childbirth
than Canadian ones."
Read the full column at
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/11/opinion/11kristof.html?ref=opinion. |