The Rice Park Ice Palace is a Massive Union Made Project
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Amid an unprecedented buildup for the Super Bowl, union workers construct the Winter Carnival Ice Palace at Rice Park in Downtown St. Paul.
Workday Magazine (https://workdaymagazine.org/category/uncategorized/page/29/)
Amid an unprecedented buildup for the Super Bowl, union workers construct the Winter Carnival Ice Palace at Rice Park in Downtown St. Paul.
PCA workers like Patsy Gibson have made substantial gains in the last several years. While she enjoys her first Dr. Martin Luther King Jr 1.5x holiday pay, hard-won benefits remain under attack by national anti-union groups.
Growing up in a working-class Mexican community in eastern Los Angeles Filiberto was observant of the grind his parents and community members went through to fulfill their daily needs and fight to live with dignity. These insights led to an extensive breadth of union experience having worked with UNITE HERE Local 11, UAW 2865 and SEIU 284.
The East Side Freedom Library will host a discussion and panel, What’s Happening to Labor at the University of Minnesota?, on Wednesday, January 10 at 7:00 PM. Panelists will include representatives from University of Minnesota AFSCME, faculty, Teamsters Local 320, Grads United, and Centro de Trabajadores Unidos en Lucha (CTUL). The event is free and open to the public.
The U.S. unemployment rate finished 2017 at 4.1 percent, unchanged for the third straight month and the lowest since the recession that began in 2007, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) has reported. That marks a continued improvement with 6.576 million people unemployed at the end of 2017 compared to 7.502 million jobless at the end of 2016. However the overall statistics don’t tell the whole story. At the end of 2017 construction workers were experiencing a much higher jobless rate of 5.9 percent. And some low wage workers lost ground, the BLS reported.
A group of 250 Physical Plant Operators (PPOs), Senior Custodians, and Custodians in the Minneapolis Public Schools filed for a union election to join SEIU Local 284 the week before Christmas. A majority signed cards expressing their desire to have the election. The workers clean and maintain all 67 of the Minneapolis public schools, ensuring safe buildings and facilities for the tens of thousands of students in the district. The effort to unionize follows a July 2017 reorganization by the school district that rolled back working conditions and wages in an effort to deal with a $28 million budget gap. A system of about 100 “engineers-in-charge” and “assistant engineers” was reduced to a contingent of 15 “physical plant operators.” According to the Southwest Journal, 30 of the district’s 54 most senior building engineers were placed into custodian positions with a pay decrease of up to $4 an hour.
– Bertolt Brecht, 1935
Happy New Year from Workday Minnesota. We hope the news and stories of workers you found in our pages this year contributed even a little to the fight for justice and democracy.
A new study published by the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) on December 13th finds that at least $2 billion in stolen wages was recovered for workers across the United States in 2015 and 2016. “Wage theft is a growing and pervasive problem that robs workers of billions of dollars every year. Yet little progress has been made to address this epidemic,” stated EPI Labor Counsel Celine McNicholas who wrote the report along with Research Assistant Zane Mokhiber, and intern Adam Chaikof. The findings come from a survey of state labor departments and attorneys general, data from the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL), and information from class action settlements. In addition the authors estimate that low-wage workers in the United States lost more than $50 billion to all forms of wage theft in 2016 though the exact amount stolen is impossible to determine due to incomplete national and state information.
Albert Lea hospital workers who were locked out by Mayo over Christmas are back to the bargaining table with Mayo executives today. The previously scheduled bargaining session follows a one-day Unfair Labor Practice (ULP) strike by SEIU Healthcare Minnesota members and a subsequent lockout of the workers by Mayo over Christmas. “Today we will see if Mayo actually wants to negotiate with us or if they just said that last week to make themselves look better when they locked us all out over Christmas,” Sheri Wichmann, who has worked in Sterile processing for 18 years. Mayo had indicated new interest in negotiating following the strike and lockout. ”Over the last year we’ve made countless offers and been willing to give and give, but it is never enough for Mayo,” she added.
Mayo Albert Lea hospital workers were blocked from going back to work by Mayo management and security this morning. Mayo’s retaliation follows a one-day Unfair Labor Practice strike by members of SEIU Healthcare Minnesota, called because workers say management has failed to negotiate in good faith for over a year and has insisted on provisions that would eliminate jobs and strip them of their bargaining rights. Mayo made good on a threat to lock out their employees for seven days if they struck, leaving them without work through Christmas. The 79 people denied access to their jobs work as certified nursing assistants (CNAs), housekeepers, sterile processors and in utilities and materials management. Mayo backed down on their lockout threats for the unit of six skilled maintenance workers.