Union power on the rise; now's the time to organize! #FightFreshii www.facebook.com/FreshiiUnion640
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Union power on the rise; now's the time to organize! #FightFreshii www.facebook.com/FreshiiUnion640
A squirrel gif I found to explain the difference between business unionism and class struggle unionism
"Fellow Workers, this is the Continental Congress of the Working Class. We are here to confederate the workers of this country into a working-class movement in possession of the economic powers, the means of life, in control of the machinery of production and distribution without regard to capitalist masters."
—William Dudley "Big Bill" Haywood
[x379547]
On this day in Chicago, Illinois in 1905, the Founding Convention of the Industrial Workers of the World began. Numerous labor heavyweights attended, including William "Big Bill" Haywood, Mary Harris "Mother" Jones, Lucy Eldine Gonzalez Parsons, Eugene Victor Debs, Daniel De Leon, and hundreds of rank and file members of what would become known as "The Wobblies." [x378436]
Call for Action: Sister's Camelot Campaign Phone Blast
Sister's Camelot workers have been on strike for over a year. The bosses at Sisters Camelot have never attempted to negotiate with the union as they continue to work with a right-wing union-busting law firm to justify firing one of the workers for union organizing. Sisters' Camelot Canvass Union members recently sustained a violent attack during a peaceful picket from supporters of Sister's Camelot. And we're asking for your help! Minneapolis bar & brewery Harriet Brewing has announced they will be hosting a fundraising event for Sisters' Camelot on Monday, June 23rd. Please call Harriet Brewing several times a day, every day this week with the following message: “Harriet Brewing is hosting a fundraising event for union-busting organization Sisters' Camelot on Monday, June 23rd. Sisters' Camelot's fundraisers are still on strike and there is currently a full boycott of Sisters' Camelot that has been endorsed by five prominent local unions. Please publicly cancel the event and notify the striking workers union at [email protected].” General phone: 612-315-4633 (ask to speak to a manager or whomever is in charge) Their hours are: Tuesday: 4:00-11:00 pm Wednesday: 4:00-11:00 pm Thursday: 4:00-12:00 am Friday: 4:00-12:00 am Saturday: 1:00-12:00 am
Facebook event. -[x378436]
By Shane Burley, Labor Notes
A crew of nine marijuana legalization canvassers walked off their jobs and into the Portland office of the Industrial Workers of the World June 5, looking to form a union.
The workers at the Oregon Campaign for the Restoration and Regulation of Hemp had been refused paychecks they were owed. This was on top of several past bounced paychecks. After their checks did not arrive on the late schedule and management would not even discuss it, they walked out.
With IWW support, the canvassers have formed the United Campaign Workers. In a joint statement they pointed to a “culture of secrecy and information repression that make incidents like this an ongoing problem.”
Before they will return to work, they want a written agreement from management offering them the $15-an-hour pay rate and correct overtime they were promised when they were hired.
After a first march on the boss, they started a call-in campaign, asking supporters and union partners to phone the campaign headquarters and express support. Meanwhile, the campaign has hired other canvassers to replace them.
A second demonstration June 13 brought dozens of supporters from the Portland IWW, Portland Solidarity Network, Jobs with Justice, and Rose City Resistance, who marched up the street and into the campaign office. A worker spokesperson tried to present the demands to canvass director Kyle Purdy—who screamed and swore at the protesters, claiming he represented a “real grassroots” campaign.
“Grassroots doesn’t mean you’re held to a different [lower] standard than everyone else,” said worker Misha Litvak. “It means you should hold yourself to a higher standard.”
Three Thousand Signatures a Day
The campaign has been gathering signatures for I-21, the Oregon Cannabis Amendment, which would end all legal penalties for marijuana products and extend growing permissions to adult Oregonians. It’s paired with the Oregon Cannabis Tax Act, I-22, which would override existing laws to create a new regulatory framework and funnel money from marijuana sales into state programs.
Workers say they support the campaign and would like to see it pass. The crew repeatedly asked to go back to work, and noted that this crew alone pulled in 600 signatures a day. That meant the campaign had so far lost an estimated 3,000 signatures due to the strike.
Though the initiative campaign has large nonprofit and union support, the local Jobs with Justice presented a community petition demanding that it negotiate with the newly formed union.
Precarious work is the norm in canvassing jobs, whether fundraising for nonprofits or promoting specific legislation or candidates. Many of these projects are underfunded, and bounced paychecks are a common complaint. So are other issues that come with unstable employment, like a lack of say in scheduling.
The Working Families Party has had similar issues with canvassers. During a 2012 campaign in support of Democrat Ted O’Brien’s run for New York State senate, many canvassers raised accusations of missed paychecks. With double and triple shifts coming up closer to election time, a group arranged a march on the boss demanding back pay and a bonus for election day.
But in recent labor disputes at the Twin Cities food justice nonprofit Sisters’ Camelot, board members have used connections in the local progressive scene to diminish support for striking workers.
Replacements Too Were Promised $15
At the Oregon campaign, newly hired workers were completely confounded by the June 13 action: they didn’t know they’d been brought in to replace strikers. They’re being offered the same wage that the striking workers were originally offered, but never actually granted.
After managers threatened to call in the police, workers and community supporters took the demonstration outside.
In an effort to get management to the table, workers have already backed off some of their earlier demands, including health care, and a bonus for workers with dependent children who were not able to purchase groceries after paychecks bounced.
Workers say a manager made the argument that it was “heteronormative” to provide the bonus for people caring for small children.
“As a member of the LGBT community, I find that highly offensive,” said worker Ken Kautz. “It is not ‘heteronormative’ to have dependents, to have children.”
A larger contingent plans to return to the campaign headquarters this morning.
Shane Burley works with the IWW, the VOZ Workers Center, and the Portland Solidarity Network on wage-theft campaigns. He recently completed a documentary about housing justice movements, Expect Resistance.
To find out more about the campaign or how to help, contact the United Campaign Workers at [email protected].
- See more at: http://labornotes.org/blogs/2014/06/pro-marijuana-canvassers-strike-over-unpaid-wages#sthash.uMxjreX9.dpuf
Solidarity with our fellow workers in Portland!
-[x378436]
San Pedro, California was a hotbed of IWW activity during the 1910s and early 1920s. IWW efforts to organize workers were often met with violence by individuals and organizations that saw them as a threat.
In June 1924, the Ku Klux Klan attacked the members of the San Pedro IWW at their meeting hall during a benefit for two workers killed in a railroad accident. The KKK beat many of the 300 members; kidnapped, tarred, and feathered others; destroyed the meeting hall, and scalded two children by burning them with a pot of coffee.
The two children--May Sundsted and Andrew Kruglis--were hospitalized for their burns. The Industrial Workers of the World Photograph Collection at the Labor Archives of Washington includes photographs of them (pictured here) with handwritten notes on the back from photographer E. F. Moffett.
These are some of the captions handwritten on the back of photographs:
"May Sundsted age 9, a beautiful refined high school [danceruse] and a favorite among the workers of San Pedro where she was born. Her mother, a sturdy woman of Finish birth was also beaten and clubbed by the savage mob, who attacked I.W.W. Hall on June 14th. Scores of others were also clubbed, burned, tarred and feathered. It was the children who suffered the worst. And the fiends came bent….."
"Andrew Kruglis, age 9 is in a serious condition he was the first one out of the Hall. As the fiends came rushing in, Andrew ran as fast as he could for a block when overcome by a man in blue who threw a pot of boiling grease on his bare legs. Note the blotches on his knee and righ foot where the new skin has formed. The bandaged portions are where the wounds are deep. He is baring his misfortunes, but has several weeks more to suffer"
(You can check out the Labor Archives collection here.)
There will be more Today In Wobbly History posts to come - but if you're eager to learn more, you can check out the Chronology of IWW History here: http://www.iww.org/history/chronology
[X379547]
The Wobblies (1979 Documentary)
This 1979 documentary established a new, primary-research modus for historical nonfiction—no narrator, no authorial perspective, just original documents and witnesses—but its subject matter was, and still is, its most radical characteristic.
By the ’70s American culture had been made to forget that the Industrial Workers of the World had ever existed, just as in the century’s first decades the segregated union utopia was condemned, brutalized, legislated against, campaigned against, and demonized.
Today, things haven’t changed much—Deborah Shaffer and Stewart Bird’s film stands among a scant handful of books detailing the labor movement’s astonishing power and growth, its newspapers and songs and sheer membership, as well as the sickening history of suppression, murder, and criminal injustice that was brought to bear upon it. (libcom)
Hello, and welcome to the official IWW Chicago GMB Tumblr page!
The Social Media Committee is excited to announce that this page is live as of today, Friday the 13th, 2014.
We hope you’ll check our page regularly for exciting news regarding the Chicago IWW, actions, and events, as well as union-wide news, updates about specific campaigns, and workplace organizing tips.
If you are unfamiliar with the IWW, please check our “About the IWW” section to learn more.
Feel free to ask us any questions you may have we look forward to chatting with you in the future!
(And a special Friday the 13th welcome from Sabo-Tabby - you can learn all about our loveable black cat mascot right here: http://www.iww.org/history/icons/black_cat)