Posts Tagged ‘Mexico’

May Day photo gallery: Texas, Wisconsin, and around the world

Tuesday, May 3rd, 2011

Istanbul--200,000 rally at Taksim Square (photo Reuters-Stringer)

 May 1, 2011, Istanbul, Turkey–200,000 people march.  Milwaukee, Wisconsin–100,000.  These were among the largest events in the world on May Day, International Workers Day–or simply Labor Day for most of the world, El Dia del Trabajo. 

 Born in the U.S. in 1886 in the struggle for the 8-hour day, May Day was associated with anarchists, socialists, and communists, so the U.S. government undermined it with the establishment of a new and innocuous “Labor Day” holiday in September.  Kept barely alive by a few leftists, May Day was brought back to the U.S. in a big way by immigrants in 2006 and became a big day for the expression of immigrant issues and the demand for immigrant rights.  As U.S. workers tried to reclaim our holiday,

Milwaukee (photo Tom Lynn, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel)

 consciousness grew about the need for solidarity with workers all over the world, and more U.S. workers joined with immigrants in the celebration of this holiday.  The biggest expression of this unity in 2011 was in Wisconsin. 

Some of the issues around the world:  More jobs, union rights, better working conditions, higher wages to counter higher prices for food and fuel; migrant worker rights; an end to the growing income gap between rich and poor; democratic political rights and an end to autocratic governments; an end to the U.S. occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan.

Ciudad Monte, Tamaulipas, Mexico--workers remember the "martyrs of Chicago" along with their own fallen comrades (noticiaselmexicano.com) Dhaka, Bangladesh (photo Pavel Rahman-AP)

Beirut, Lebanon (photo Migrant Workers Task Force)

Ankara, Turkey (photo Umit Bektas-Reuters)

Manila, Philippines--workers demand immediate wage increase, burn President Benigno Aquino III in effigy (photo Aaron Favila-AP)Jakarta, Indonesia (photo Irwin Fedriansyah-AP)

Hyderabad--All India Trade Union Congress (photo Mahesh Kumar A.-AP)

Mumbai--Striking Air India pilots (photo Vivek Prakash-Reuters)

Katmandu--Supporters of CP (Maoist) and activists of Nepal Trade Union (photo Binod Joshi-AP)

Baghdad--Members of the Iraqi Communist Party (photo Khalid Mohammed-AP)

Basra (Federation of Workers' Councils and Unions in Iraq--uslaboragainstwar.org)

Cairo, Egypt--May Day in Tahrir Square (photo Khalil Hamra-AP)

Lahore, Pakistan--Union workers rally (photo K.M. Chaudary-AP)

Madrid, Spain (photo Arturo Rodriguez-AP)

Moscow, Russia--members of the Left Front (photo Ivan Sekretarev-AP)

Lisbon, Portugal--Against the IMF, for Leftist Unity (photo Armando Franca-AP)

Caracas, Venezuela (photo Ariana Cubillos-AP)

Havana, Cuba--Students in Revolution Square (photo Enrique de la Osa-Reuters)

Mexico City--Workers protesting labor law "reform" burn image of Labor Secretary Javier Lozano (photo Marco Ugarte-AP)

Houston (thefirecollective.org)

Houston (thefirecollective.org)

Dallas (labordallas.org)

San Antonio (blogs.sacurrent.com)

Atlanta, GA--Protesters urge Gov. Nathan Deal to veto anti-immigrant legislation (photo Rich Addicks-AP)

New York--rally for jobs and immigrant rights (photo Seth Wenig-AP)

Los Angeles, California (photo L.A. County Federation of Labor)

Milwaukee--Voces de la Frontera has been organizing big May Day marches since 2006 (photo Tom Lynn-Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel)

Milwaukee--This says it all (photo Tom Lynn-Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel)

El Paso: Border Activists Target Dollar Store Chain

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

Border Activists Target Dollar Store Chain

Ken Patterson, Frontera Norte-Sur, http://www.nmsu.edu/~frontera/

Texas Civil Rights Projectposted by Texas Civil Rights Project, http://www.facebook.com/pages/Texas-Civil-Rights-Project/160245817034#!/notes/texas-civil-rights-project/activists-accuse-family-dollar-stores-of-anti-labor-practices/455860058429

For more than an hour, business slowed to a trickle at the Family Dollar store in downtown El Paso. Chanting slogans and hoisting signs, a few dozen picketers marched in disciplined, circular formation on the sidewalk in front of the popular discount store on Stanton Street.

Organized by El Paso’s new Retail Workers Rights Committee (RWRC), the protesters demanded that Family Dollar respect workers rights, stop mistreating managers in order to avoid paying overtime and limit managers’ schedules to 52 hours per week. Staging its demonstration during peak Saturday business hours, the RWRC passed out leaflets that read: “Family Dollar Is Not Family Friendly.”

“What makes me do this protest is people don’t know their rights,” said Abel Lopez, former El Paso Family Dollar manager and RWRC member. “(Managers) don’t know the law. They’re inside the stores for 80 hours a week. They don’t have the time to investigate.”

Lopez, who was fired from Family Dollar earlier this year after more than seven years on the job, charged that budget-strapped store managers actually spend much of their time laboring as janitors, cashiers and other hourly workers who are subject to overtime provisions under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA).

According to Lopez, store managers typically put in 60-80 hour work weeks but don’t get overtime because they are classified and paid as salaried professionals exempt from the FLSA’s overtime requirements.

“They’re supposed to be taking care more of the store, of the customers, and to avoid running registers,” Lopez said. Prior to the October 16 protest, Lopez said he delivered letters to the managers of all 54 El Paso Family Dollar stores that spelled out their legal rights.

Watching from inside the store as demonstrators circled around outside, a Family Dollar employee who identified himself as the manger said he was not allowed to comment to the news media. At press time, Family Dollar’s corporate spokesman had not responded to a request for comment.

Last weekend’s picket built on a RWRC campaign initiated this year to support Family Dollar managers and ex-employees like Lopez .

The complaints raised by Lopez’s group have previously surfaced against Family Dollar in other parts of the United States. For instance, in 2006 more than 1,400 former and current Family Dollar managers won $35.6 million in an Alabama lawsuit alleging FLSA overtime violations. Two years later, a federal appeals court upheld the verdict.

 In El Paso, the Family Dollar struggle has become one front in an emerging border labor/community movement that targets unpaid overtime in particular and wage theft in general.

The October 16 action drew the participation of students from the University of Texas at El Paso and El Paso Community College, as well as members of the Labor Justice Committee, Border Workers Association and Paso del Norte Civil Rights Project.

RWRC organizer Eric Murillo said he was “very pleased” to see a hefty contingent of young faces marching alongside “old school Chicano activists” in support of labor rights.

Said Murillo: “Essentially (youth) are the people who are going to go out into the job market , and essentially those are the people who really have a vested interest in learning about the struggle now and hopefully learning how it affects them- regardless of where they end up.”

Shalini Thomas, a young member of another new El Paso-based organization, the Labor Justice Committee, termed the issue of sub-minimum and unpaid wages in El Paso “a really big problem.”

In its first year of activities, the Labor Justice Committee has heard complaints from restaurant, construction, painting, home remodeling and especially domestic workers, Thomas said, with some committee members complaining of being offered as little as $120-$150 for 60-hour work weeks. All the cases have involved immigrant workers from Mexico, Thomas said, adding that some employers take advantage of their employees’ lack of legal knowledge and fears of their immigration status.

“(The) biggest problem here is that employers think they don’t have to pay the minimum wage,” Thomas asserted. The Labor Justice Committee has helped recover about $8,000 in back wages, she said.

On the same day as the El Paso Family Dollar protest, a group of about 10 activists staged a “short, lightening hit” in San Antonio, said Ruben Solis, founder of the Southwest Workers Union. The group picketed and passed out leaflets at a soon-to-be opened Family Dollar store in the African-American and Latino community of San Antonio’s East Side, Solis told Frontera NorteSur.

“It wasn’t open for business but we wanted to hit it because of its locale,” Solis said.

According to the veteran labor and community organizer, the Family Dollar fight is part of a broader struggle in a country where labor rights are extremely weak, working conditions increasingly precarious and wage theft a generalized violation.

Recalling how his own brother, a professional welder with decades of experience was cheated out of $1,000 by an employer, Solis said wage theft was everywhere these days.

“It’s endemic. It happens in many places,” Solis said. “Basically, owners spend the money and don’t have it to cover the pay. It’s not happening to one particular sector of workers. It’s happening across the board.”

To aid the Family Dollar struggle, Solis said a San Antonio committee consisting of members of the Southwest Workers Union, Fuerza Unida and other groups has been formed to stay on top of the issue.

The Family Dollar protest happened during the same week when local news media reported on how the Milken Institute had named El Paso as among the top ten US cities in job and wage growth.

In the past few years, the border city has experienced a capital infusion from businesses fleeing neighboring Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, and an economic stimulus from the billions allocated for the ongoing expansion of the US Army’s Fort Bliss. Most recently, maquiladora assembly plant exports from Ciudad Juarez are again reported on the rise.

Despite the brisk business climate, unemployment in the border city is still above the national average at more than 10 percent.

Ironically, several pay-related calls and complaints handled by the non-profit Paso del Norte Civil Rights Project have come from workers employed in construction projects connected to the Fort Bliss expansion or from businesses relocating from Ciudad Juarez, according to staff attorney Chris Benoit.

“Where there’s boom, there’s also cutting of corners,” Benoit said. “And oftentimes the workers are the ones who lose out on that.”

For Lopez and other RWRC members, Family Dollar’s boom has come at the expense of its own workforce. Indeed, the Great Recession has been nothing but a boon for Family Dollar and its low-priced retail stores.

For the fiscal year ending August 28, 2010, Family Dollar reported steady growth and money-making. The North Carolina-based company’s nearly $7.8 billion in revenues was 6.3 percent higher than in FY 2009, while gross profit, as a percentage of sales, was calculated at 35.7 percent compared with 34.8 percent the previous year.

In FY 2010, Family Dollar paid out $78.9 million in dividends to its stockholders, an amount up from $72.7 million in FY 2009. Although the publicly-traded retailer closed 70 stores, it reported opening 200 new ones, thus resulting in a net gain of 130 outlets.

In a statement, Family Dollar credited its good fortunes on higher customer traffic and lower overhead.

“I am very proud of this performance, and I appreciate the hard work and education of all our 50,000 Family Dollar team members,” said Chairman and CEO Howard R. Levine, who earned a $5.38 million compensation package in 2010, according to Forbes.

Offering low prices on goods ranging from food (Family Dollar accepts food stamps) to Halloween toys, the publicly-traded company locates many of its stores in low income and immigrant communities. Home to numerous immigrant farmworker families, even little Hatch, New Mexico has a Family Dollar outlet. The store is built next to a pecan orchard and strategically sited on a road leading to many farmworkers’ homes.

Family Dollar’s Stanton Street store in El Paso relies on customers from Ciudad Juarez who drive or walk across the border to shop in the sister city’s downtown business district. “The economy here in El Paso depends a lot on the people of Juarez,” Lopez said.

Leading up to the October 16 protest, the RWRC took its appeal not to shop at Family Dollar directly to the residents of Ciudad Juarez. A large banner draped from the heavily-traveled Bridge of the Americas connecting Ciudad Juarez to El Paso was misinterpreted by some residents of Ciudad Juarez as a call for an economic boycott of the Mexican city, but a local television station ran a report that clarified the message was directed against Family Dollar, Lopez said.

Family Dollar’s El Paso managers, he added, are usually Mexican-Americans or Mexican immigrants, some of whom commute back and forth from Ciudad Juarez to El Paso.

The border activist said he was heartened by the outpouring of support for his cause in El Paso and places like San Antonio. “I’m glad, I’m glad,” he said. “It’s a lot.”

According to the RWRC’s Eric Murillo, the El Paso group is now reaching out to potential allies in other cities as it expands the campaign against Family Dollar’s labor policies.

Austin: Report Back from the U.S. Social Forum

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010
August 19, 2010
7:30 pmto9:00 pm
Texas State Employees Union sponsors a report back from the USSF with a labor perspective.
 
In June, thousands of social justice activists met in Detroit at the USSF to discuss, plan, and organize the struggle for a more just, equitable, and sustainable world. It was the second of these vibrant, cross-issue social change gatherings. Those of us from TSEU were inspired by seeing so many labor union groups all through the event–UAW, Teamsters, Steelworkers, AFSCME, United Electrical Workers, AFT, etc., etc.
 
In what we hope will be one of many USSF programs, members of the Texas State Employees Union, CWA Local 6186, will host a gathering to hear reports from Austinites who attended this important and inspiring event.  Our presenters will focus on labor in various ways.  There will also be a slide show and video clips.
 
TSEU is at 1700 S. 1st St., Austin (across from Freddie’s & Jovita’s)
 
 

 Those making reports include:

Anne Lewis, a TSEU activist, who will show clips from a presentation she made to the US Social Forum about Anne Braden, a most dedicated fighter against racism and political repression.

Josefina Castillo and Judith Rosenberg of Austin Tan Cerca de la Frontera, which organizes solidarity and support for workers in Mexico organizing inside and outside of unions

Leslie Cunningham, a TSEU activist, who will report on the role of labor unions in the social justice movement

Maribel Falcon of Workers Defense Project/Proyecto Defensa Laboral, which is having great success on wage theft and construction safety issues in Austin as part of the labor movement which is larger than unions alone.

Carmen Llanes with PODER in East Austin, who will report on environmental justice organizing.

For more information, contact Will Rogers at 280-7549 or [email protected]

On Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/?sk=events#!/event.php?eid=104604479596477

Domestic workers union marches at USSF (photo by Jim West, Labor Notes)

Hamilton, Ontario, Canada: International labor conference builds solidarity

Saturday, July 17th, 2010

(TxLAW note:  U.S. Labor Against the War played an active role in this conference, partnering with Iraqi union reps in a workshop on what’s going on in the Iraqi labor movement and its struggles with the Iraqi government.  Check out labourstart.org.)

Online Activists Gather from Around Globe to Jumpstart Labor Movement

By Stuart Elliott, from In These Times, July 13, 2010

Benedicto Martinez Orozco marches in support of McMaster University workers during the LabourStart conference, held from July 9 to 11 in Ontario, Canada.   (Photo by Stuart Elliott)

More than 200 people from 28 countries attend LabourStart’s first public conference

HAMILTON, ONTARIO—Sometimes it’s hard to understand the importance of an event or an organization when you’re involved in it. As a volunteer correspondent for LabourStart.org and a participant in its “Act Now”  campaigns, I obviously think LabourStart an important project. But I really didn’t really comprehend its potential until I attended the first public LabourStart conference at McMaster University’s School of Labour Studies in Hamilton, Ontario.

“As unions confront a 21st century global capitalism, which is imposing a race to the bottom to union-free environments, unions must use new technologies to create a new labor internationalism,” said Eric Lee, founding editor of Labour Start. “The mission of LabourStart is to promote those technologies and to practice a consistent internationalism.”

LabourStart is an international labor news and campaigning site, run on a shoestring and powered by nearly 800 volunteer correspondents. Every day  the site publishes links to labor news in 23 different languages, and its news feeds appear on more than 800 union websites. It conducts e-mail campaigns in eight different languages.

There was some trepidation among LabourStart leaders about whether an Internet-based, low budget union news and campaigning site could attract an audience of union activists oustide its most committed corespondents. Particularly since, unlike the recently concluded ICTU conference, this was not a delegated meeting.

But the conference was able to attract over 200 participants from more than 28 countries. Attendees ranged from presidents of national unions, to representatives of Global Union Federations, to local union officers, to staffers, to grassroots activists.

Adam Lee of United Steelworkers International thanked LabourStart for its “tremendously effective” campaign on behalf of Vale nickel miners strikers, who settled a year-long strike just days before the conference began. On the first morning of the strike, which began in July 2009, more than 1,000 emails were sent to the Brazil-based multinational company. Two-thirds were from outside Canada, in eight languages from 80 countries, Lee said, It provided a “real boost” to the workers. And Brazilian workers for Vale were able to win a better than expected contract because the company didn’t want to take on two international campaigns at the same time.

Robin Alexander, director of international affairs for the United Electrical workers union, said that when she got an appeal from workers at PEMEX, Mexico’s state-owned petroleum company, the first place she turned for help was LabourStart.

As Lennon Ying-Dah Wong, a union leader from Taiwan, spoke on a panel about China, I loooked to my left and saw Benedicto Martinez Orozco, co-president of the Frente Auténtico del Trabajo. Michael Eisenscher of US Labor Against the War, Amjad Ali of the General Union of Oil Employees in Basra (Iraq), and Erin Radford of the AFL-CIO’s Solidarity Center spoke on a panel about unions in Iraq. Other panels were devoted to Mexico, Eastern Europe, and Iran.

Unfortunately, some people were unable to attend the conference—but the reasons why are enlightening. A leader of Bangladeshi textile workers union canceled his visit because of a monumental campaign in his home country—more than 50,000 workers there are on strike, protesting the lowest wages in the textile industry.

Representatives of independent unions in Egypt and Algeria were, at the last moment, denied visas by Canada. (AFL-CIO Solidarity Center representatives  ably filled in at a workshop on the revival of unions in those countries.) The ham-handness of Canadian authorities may backire. Derek Blackadder, national representative for the Canadian Union of Public Employees, said that there was so much outrage at the exclusion of the Egyptian and Algerian unionists and so much excitement about their pioneering work that Canadian unionists will be exploring ongoing solidarity work on their behalf.

Of course, connecting disparate unionists, spread across different levels of different unions, to unite in international solidarity is no easy task. But LabourStart’s global network of 800 correspondents and 70,000 Act Now e-mail activists will continue to be a part of that effort, which must be a central component of the future of the labor movement.