Over the last couple of months, we’ve seen an unprecedented attack on public sector unions across the nation. According to this article from the LA Times via the Sacramento Bee, nearly half of the states are in varying stages of attacking public and private sector unions.
Nearly half of the states are considering legislation to limit public employees’ collective bargaining rights. In New Hampshire, the House last week approved a measure that one union leader assailed as “Wisconsin on steroids.”But it’s not just budgetary concerns driving Republican officeholders to take on unions, traditionally a strong Democratic ally.
In Maine, the newly elected Republican governor ordered the removal of a mural depicting the state’s labor history from a state building because, his spokeswoman said, it portrayed a one-sided message supporting organized labor.
A number of states are considering bills that would limit unions’ ability to collect dues from public employees. The Florida House approved a bill to ban dues deductions from government paychecks and require unions to obtain members’ permission before using dues for political activity. Similar legislation is under consideration in Kansas. Other bills would eliminate a requirement that workers covered by union contracts pay union dues or fees.
There is some push back going on as well, including the law suit in Wisconsin to block implementation of the anti union law there and in Ohio, opponents of Ohio’s Senate Bill 5 are collecting signatures for a ballot referendum to repeal the law there. Yesterday (Monday, April 4), there were rallies all across the country in support of Unions and worker rights.
Today, MSNBC had a couple of articles on public sector workers. The first is on workers in general:
They take away your trash. They protect your homes, your property and your families. They put out your fires and they educate your children. And somehow, in the past year or so, the uniforms many of them wear have grown a bull’s-eye on the back. Or at least that’s how they feel.
After the worst recession since the Great Depression, as state and local governments struggle to meet budgets with dwindling revenues, public union workers have become targets of politicians, pundits and ordinary citizens who think their salaries are too high and their jobs too cushy.
The second article is based on an interview with a fire department dispatcher (and union officer) in Westport, CT. The following piece I found especially telling:
Gilbertie said the union recognizes that money is tight and made concessions, including agreeing to having its members pay a bigger share of health care costs.“I didn’t take this job to get rich,” said Gilbertie, who is vice president of his union local. “You take a job with AIG to get rich. That’s not why I took this job.”
While inflation is picking up across the country, the public sector unions are willing to negotiate and share the sacrifice, knowing that cities are hurting for revenues. They and their members don’t like it, just as the UAW workers and other unions have sacrificed over these past few years. But they do it because they recognize the need.
They are not the enemy, just as teachers are not the enemy. Firefighters, emergency services personnel, police, teachers, sanitation workers are not the people who crashed the economy. They are not the people who get the big tax cuts and make the large campaign contributions either.
And because I can:
Cross posted from Just A Small Town Country Boy



7 Comments

Thanks for the update and info DK, good job supporting the people and issues at stake here!
Rcc’d of course.
I’ve got a small Sacto update diary posted describing our 4/4/11 Labor Turnout, it’s over there on the MyFDL Recent Diaries List
*G*
I disagree. Unions are the enemy. They’re the enemy because they’ve generally sat on their asses and let private sector jobs get outsourced without much more than whimper. The private sector unions of today are a poodle of the Democratic party and an insult to the real union movement that made this country great. And notice that the big bruhaha only started after the public sector unions were attacked and pushed back on their own? Where were those public sector unions when folks in the private sector were getting fucked over? Not out front, that’s for sure.
Let’s just disagree on this one. You seem to blow hot and cold on who and how to blame folks for everything that has gone wrong. Unions at all levels have been blamed for everything that has gone wrong in the world for 30 years but they never have been the enemy. Many of them are just like so many folks in the Tea Party who voted against their self interest all those years
Ijust think that unions — both leadership and rank-and-file — have been very wishy-washy and often complicit in the three-decade march to the right on worker’s issues. Recent example: what was that union that embraced the proposed Korea free trade deal?
Don’t get me wrong; the corps and R’s are responsible for much of the bad shit, but the Dems and the weak union leaders helped it happened by not putting up much of a fight.
Part of this, is because the unions have no power any more. My husband is a union electrician, different bird than government workers, but frankly the unions felt burned by Clinton. Then during the Bush years, my husband sat the bench for almost 3 years. I think it’s taken time for the unions to find themselves again and recover. They thought they were dems, then they kinda liked bush…then they LOVED Obama…but nothing has happened. I think the unions are looking for some kind of support or base to support them if they take a strong stand.
It really is as if, the whole country has decided that no one deserves middle class and the only people who really deserve their money are the ones at the top.
It’s hard to put up a fight, when you have been demonized by the top leadership as Bush did, and the Republicans do. It’s especially hard to do if you are surrounded by people who think bush is wonderful and all anyone talks about is 9/11. That whole episode made it seem selfish and wrong for the unions to take any stand during the first four years of the war.
Finally the tide has turned and popular sentiment is that the little guy is getting tired of getting pooped on by the big rich corporations and people. We need to come together. They use these issues to fragment and fractionalize us.
My husband went to protest in our city, in honor of the folks in wisconsin. He came home fully alive. He said there were people from every union possible on those streets. Cops waved, firefighters stood with teachers, stood with steam fitters, stood with electricians. He said it was very cool to have all those folks from different walks of life, together standing as one, saying “we are not going to take this anymore”.
Let’s stop polking about the past. It’s kumbaya time!
Yeah, if anything, lack of unions is our problem.
We’re all Yin and no Yang… out of balance.