Posts Tagged ‘rally’

Austin: Spirit of Wisconsin Alive in Texas (with PHOTOS)

Saturday, April 9th, 2011

“THEY SAY ‘CUT BACK’!  WE SAY ‘FIGHT BACK’!”

We reprint Will Rogers’ report from Left Labor Reporter about the terrific, union-led Save Our State march and rally on April 6.  http://leftlaborreporter.wordpress.com/2011/04/07/spirit-of-wisconsin-alive-in-texas/

Judy Lugo speaks (photo Rene Renteria)

“Texas has won the race to the bottom,” said Texas State Employees Union president Judy Lugo. “But Gov. Rick Perry and Republican lawmakers in the state House of Representatives want to keep racing.” Lugo was speaking to a crowd of 7,000 Texans chanting, “no cuts” at a rally on the steps of the state capitol to protest the $23 billion cuts to the state’s budget that passed out of the state House of Representative last week.

“Right now, Texas ranks last among states in the number of children with health insurance, 44th in high school graduation rates, 49th in per capita spending on Medicaid, and 50th in per capita tax expenditures,” Lugo said. “These vital services that working people rely on will get much worse if the proposed budget cuts go through.”

photo Alberto Martinez, Austin American Statesman

Last week, the state house voted to adopt HB 1, which seeks to close the state’s $23 billion budget deficits solely by cutting state services. If these cuts become law, they could do irreparable harm to working class Texans.  A recent study by the state’s Legislative Budget Board found that the proposed cuts will eliminate 335,000 jobs and reduce personal income by more than $17 billion. State Senator Kirk Watson speaking at the rally said that the proposed budget cuts are “an evolving catastrophe.”

Scott Chase, president of the South Oak Cliff Chamber of Commerce, which represents small businesses in this South Dallas community, told the crowd that the proposed budget cuts are “bad for business,” which is why his group was the first Chamber of Commerce in the state call on legislators to take a balanced approach to closing the budget gap rather than relying solely on cuts. Chase urged lawmakers to use all of the state’s $9 billion Rainy Day fund to help close the budget gap.

HB 1 would reduce funding for public education by $4.7 billion, resulting in mass layoffs for teachers and other education workers and increased class sizes. “We don’t want our children packed into overcrowded classrooms and we don’t want our state’s economy undermined by pink slips for our teachers and public employees,” Watson said.        

photo Rene Renteria

HB 1 would also reduce funding for the states health and human service agencies by $10.8 billion. Medicaid will bear the brunt of these cuts. HB 1 cuts $4.7 billion from the Medicaid budget and is $13.7 billion shy of the amount requested by the state Health and Human Services Commission to fund projected growth in the Medicaid caseload.

“We’re already getting calls from hospitals telling us that nursing homes won’t take back patients that they sent to the hospitals because the nursing homes don’t think that there will be enough Medicaid to take care of their patients because of the budget cuts,” said Dalia Martinez, a TSEU member in the audience who works at the Department of Family Protective Services’ Statewide Intake Center, a hotline for reports of abuse to the elderly and children.

photo Rene Renteria

The rally against the budget cuts was organized by TSEU and Texas Forward, a coalition of 50 organizations that advocate for better public services. The rally drew a wide range of working-class people. Community organizations like the Texas Organizing Project, a grassroots community group of low- and moderate-income people with 10,000 members in cities all over the state, and Rio Grande Valley Interfaith, COPS of San Antonio, TMO of Houston, and Austin Interfaith, all of which are Industrial Area Foundation groups, sent large contingents.

CWA telephone workers (photo Rene Renteria)

Union members  from all over the state and from a wide variety of industries were the backbone of the rally.  About a dozen telephone locals of the Communication Workers of America sent members to support their sister public sector union, TSEU. Speaking for the CWA, Richard Kneupper, assistant to the vice-president for District 6 told the state workers and teachers in the audience that “the work you do is important; without public workers, Texas doesn’t work.”

Teamster Local 749 in Dallas filled six bus loads of people to come to rally. Unions representing steelworkers, autoworkers, machinists, sheet metal workers, bus drivers, railroad workers, and many other private sector

photo Rene Renteria

unions sent large contingents of members to support Texas’ public workers. There were also members from AFSCME and the teachers’ unions on hand to offer their support.

Speaking for the labor movement, Becky Moeller, president of the state AFL-CIO  said, “When I have a hole in my roof, I don’t  burn off the roof to fix the hole; that’s what HB 1 does. HB 1 will throw people out of nursing homes; it will make it harder for people to get health care; it will cause people to get sick and die. It will also cause hundreds of thousands of hard-working Texans to lose their jobs, and to keep running, the machinery of Texas depends on jobs. We in the labor movement will do everything we can for as long as it take to defeat HB 1.We’re united like never before. WE ARE ONE.”

AFSCME and more (photo Bob Daemrich, Texas Tribune)

TSEU leads the march (photo Rene Renteria)

photo Rene Renteria

Solution to the money problem! (photo Rene Renteria)

TSEU Legislative Director Derrick Osobase (photo Rene Renteria)

Austin: Bring the War $$ Home–photo from Save Our State, April 6

Thursday, April 7th, 2011

Here’s one of Rene Renteria’s many great photos from the union-led Save Our State march and rally Wednesday, April 6, 2011.  We’ll be posting more about this great event attended by 7,000 folks from all around Texas.

See more from Rene at https://picasaweb.google.com/renerenteria/SaveOurStateMarchRallyHIRES?authkey=Gv1sRgCO3DwcT1y8nyuAE&feat=directlink#

 

 

Austin: End the Wars! Fund the People!

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011
April 9, 2011
12:00 pmto2:30 pm

Saturday, April 9

March and Rally:
END THE WARS ! FUND THE PEOPLE !

Gather for march at Noon at the Federal Building plaza (300 E. 8th St.)
Rally at the Capitol at 1:00 PM

While the US is engaging in wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Libya, and giving billions of dollars in aid to Israel, which continues to threaten the Palestinians, we are left with Governors like Wisconsin’s Scott Walker Texas’ Rick Perry, who want to strip us of our labor rights, lay off teachers, close our schools, and deny us health care.  Meanwhile, big corporations pollute our environment, make record profits, and pay low or no taxes.  These priorities are upside down!  Come to a rally to demand an end to the wars abroad and a re-direction of funding to basic services for the people: education, healthcare, infrastructure, jobs, clean air and water.

Sponsored by: Iraq Veterans Against the War-Austin, Veterans for Peace-Austin, Sustainable Options for Youth, Under the Hood Cafe, Palestine Solidarity Committee, CodePink-Austin, International Socialist Organization, Nuke Free Texas, and more.  For more information or to co-sponsor: [email protected]

see also United National Antiwar Committee, http://www.nationalpeaceconference.org/

Dallas: Rally to stop Wasting America’s Resources (WAR)

Tuesday, March 15th, 2011
March 19, 2011
11:00 amto1:30 pm

Rally to stop Wasting America’s Resources marks 8 years of war in Iraq

 

March 19th will mark the 8th anniversary of the invasion and occupation of Iraq, and in 2011 the U.S. military will have spent $1 trillion dollars for war and occupations. Meanwhile, 30 million people in the United States remain unemployed or severely underemployed, and cuts in education, housing and health care are imposing huge burdens on people who can least afford them.

On March 19, concerned north Texans will gather to call on the U.S. government to:

  • End the wars and occupations and bring the troops home now
  • Stand for civil rights and human dignity at home and abroad
  • Fund jobs, health care, education and human needs, not the war

Participants will meet at Mockingbird Station, east of I-75, and will proceed to the rallying spot at Potomac Park, at Airline Rd. and E. Potomac Ave. where speakers will discuss the misappropriation of America’s resources and what we can do about it.

When:   Saturday, March 19

11:00 a.m. – Meet at Mockingbird Station to march to Potomac Park

Noon-1:30 p.m. – Rally at Potomac Park

Where:  Potomac Park, Airline Rd. @ E. Potomac Ave. (behind La Madeleine)

Sponsored by Dallas Peace Center, Code Pink

http://dallaspeacecenter.org/modules/content/index.php?id=1

 

Austin: Save Our Schools! Money for Education, Not for War!

Wednesday, March 9th, 2011
March 12, 2011
11:00 amto2:00 pm

 March & Rally to Save Texas Schools:
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Texas State Capitol Complex in Austin, TX.

March: 11:00 am – 12:00 pm
starting from 12th & Trinity (1 block from Capitol)

Rally: 12:00 – 2:00 pm on the South Steps

Click here for more information!

Save Texas Schools – Fund Public Education Now!

Our Schools, Our Kids, Our Future

 Texas students are tough, but they’ve never faced a crisis like this. In every school district across the Lone Star State, the same grim headlines repeat: campus closures, teacher layoffs, drastic cuts to core academic programs.

The culprit is a $27 billion state budget hole, which some say could have been avoided. But casting blame now doesn’t help. The challenge is to keep our schools open for all students.

There is help for Texas students if our leaders have the courage to use it.

Tell your elected officials to:

  • Keep Texas smart – make education a top priority!
  • Use the $9.3 Billion Texas “Rainy Day” Fund to support schools
  • Sign the paperwork for $830 Million in federal aid for teachers
  • Fix school funding laws to be fair to all districts and to our growing student population.

These tools can save our schools. Call, write or email today!

Find your elected representatives here: http://www.fyi.legis.state.tx.us/

Contact Governor Rick Perry here: http://www.governor.state.tx.us/contact/

In hard times, we must invest in Texas students…our future depends on it!

website:  http://savetxschools.org/

facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=181240711911593&ref=ts

Austin: State employees march for jobs, public services, and education | The Daily Texan

Friday, October 8th, 2010
By Shivam Purohit, Daily Texan Staff
Published: Monday, October 4, 2010
DT Image
Caleb Bryant Miller | Daily Texan Staff

Matthew Aucoin chants into a megaphone during a rally of the Texas State Employees Union held on the steps of the Capitol on Friday.

Three hundred state employees carrying umbrellas marched to the north steps of the Capitol on Friday to rally for the use of the state’s Rainy Day Fund for increasing state employee benefits.

“It’s raining, it’s pouring,” members of the Texas State Employees Union chanted Friday as they walked from Lavaca Street, where the union’s office is located, to the Capitol. TSEU outreach coordinator Mimi Garcia said this rally was the beginning of the union’s General Assembly convention this weekend, which is the largest statewide labor conference of public workers in Texas.

The Rainy Day Fund is a pool of money from the state’s excess oil and gas revenues that Texas can access during budget shortfalls. To use the money, two-thirds of the state Legislature must vote in favor of it.

“We want the governor to open that up … [and] fund real jobs and economic justice,” Garcia said.

Garcia said Texas is experiencing a projected $18- to $21-billion budget shortfall, and without the support from the fund, the state could end up cutting about 10,000 jobs.

“This is serious, important stuff,” Garcia said, “We need to work with state Legislature and come up with responsible options.”

Derrick Osobase, the political organizer of TSEU, said that the rally was calling for prudent investment in public workers, public higher education and better services for needy Texans.

“This demonstration is to show the Legislature that we will fight for our services,” Osobase said.

Senior radio-television-film lecturer Anne Lewis, who represented University employees in TSEU, addressed UT’s budget issues at the event.

“We at TSEU care about public education and we don’t see a difference between the needs of students and those of state employees,” Lewis said. “We oppose tuition hikes and believe that the money that is raised should go to the students, towards more classes, smaller classes and better facilities.”

Lewis said that TSEU would continue to work with the UT Stop the Cuts Coalition, a group of students and faculty working to alleviate UT budget cuts.

“There is a sense of regrouping here as we work to create the national push for jobs and decency,” Lewis said.

TSEU lead organizer Jim Branson said that unions and such rallies are critical to the progress of the country.

“Our society is one that is all about accumulation,” Branson said. “We are all about fairness.”

Delegates will spend the weekend building priorities for the legislative session, where they hope to promote these solutions.

Union President Judy Lugo said that TSEU will not stop until society offers equal opportunity, compassion and real assistance to those who are ill, elderly or have disabilities.

“We are here today as a part of a national mobilization that will mark the rebirth of a great coalition that will stand and fight for the basic American dream,” Lugo said.

http://www.dailytexanonline.com/content/state-employees-march-benefit-increases

http://www.cwa-tseu.org/

http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#!/group.php?gid=159804796266

Houston: Protest Midwest FBI raids

Friday, October 1st, 2010

YOU CAN’T INTIMIDATE US:  FBI protest in Houston Monday, Sept. 27

–photo Gloria Rubac from Facebook

Monday, Sept. 27, a rally at the Mickey Leland Federal Building protested recent raids by the Federal Bureau of Investigation which targeted political activists in the Midwest.  The FBI raided homes of anti-war activists in Illinois, Minnesota and Michigan, alleging terrorist ties, and subpoenad 11 to testify before a federal grand jury.

The Midwest raids escalate an alarming trend by the U.S. government of arbitrarily labeling all kinds of groups as “terrorist” and then accusing other groups and individuals of giving “material support” to terrorism simply for having contact with groups labeled “terrorist.”

The Houston action was one of many all over the country.  It was organized by the FIRE Collective and supported by the International Action Center, Justice for Palestinians, Harris County Green Party and Texas Green Party Candidates, International Socialist Organization, Houston Indy Media, and various Houston activists.

Radio interviews:  http://thefirecollective.org/Opinion/two-interviews-on-fbi-raids-and-houston-protests.html and http://ernestoaguilar.org/houston-solidarity-today-against-friday-fbi-raids-activists/

Austin: TSEU rallies in solidarity with One Nation

Sunday, September 26th, 2010
October 1, 2010
4:45 pmto6:00 pm

In solidarity with the ONE NATION March for Jobs, Peace, Justice, and Education for All ! to be held in Washington, D.C., Oct. 2, 2010, the Texas State Employees Union will rally at the AFL-CIO (11th & LaVaca) in Austin Friday, Oct. 1, at 4:45 pm.

TSEU calls for:
JOBS
EDUCATION
REBUILD PUBLIC SERVICES
DEFEND PUBLIC EMPLOYEES

In conjunction with our biennial General Assembly, TSEU always has an action the first afternoon of the GA highlighting issues of importance to state/university workers and the provision of state services.  This year our GA is Oct. 1 – Oct. 3, and we want to show our solidarity with all our sisters and brothers gathering in Washington, D.C. on Oct. 2.

We expect there will be a couple of hundred TSEU members from all over Texas here in Austin for the event.  Join us!

For more information call the TSEU office at 512-448-4225

http://www.cwa-tseu.org/

Burleson/Fort Worth: Ride the Bus to D.C. for One Nation Rally!

Sunday, September 26th, 2010
October 1, 2010 10:00 amtoOctober 4, 2010 6:00 am

BURLESON / FORT WORTH TX
Bus will leave Burleson area at 10AM on Friday Oct 1, arriving D.C. on
Sat morning, Oct 2. Bus will take you from rally to Dulles Worldgate
Marriot. The evening will be yours. We will leave at 9 AM Sunday
morning Oct 3, and arrive back in Burleson around 6 AM Monday morning
Oct 4. The price for this will be $275 double occupancy and $321
single. Coolers are allowed on the bus but NO GLASS. Lets have some
fun and show America that the Tea Party isn’t anything but a Pee
Party!! Sorry I just coudn’t hold it!! LOL gordie6221@gmail or
817-832-5931
Contact Gordie for payment info.

Host Gordie Twerberg
Contact Phone 817-832-5931

http://www.burntorangereport.com/diary/10802/100220-one-nation-working-togetherbus-from-burleson-tx

Houston: Rally Against Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan

Friday, March 12th, 2010
March 20, 2010
2:00 pmto4:00 pm
On Saturday, March 20, a rally against the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan will be held in Houston. The protest will begin at 2 pm in Mason Park, 75th Street and Tipps Street. We will demand that all the troops be brought home from Iraq and Afghanistan now, and that money be spent on jobs, housing, and health care instead of war. The rally will include speakers and entertainers.

The protest is being organized by the Progressive Workers Organizing Committee, Harris County Green Party, Proyecto Latinoamericana, International Socialist Organization, Latin American Organization for Immigrant Rights, International Action Center, and CPUSA Houston (list in formation). We urge the broadest possible participation in the March 20 protest, and we invite additional endorsements and assistance in mobilizing for this event. If you would like more information or if your organization would like to help, please call us at (832) 692-2306 or (281) 935-9248.
Contact info:  (832) 692-2306 or (281) 935-9248; [email protected]
http://www.hpjc.org/index.php?option=com_jcalpro&view=calendar&Itemid=18
(from the Houston Peace and Justice Center website)