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Tag: union rally

  • On Labor Day, Colorado unions look at their accomplishments, challenges

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    DENVER — Labor Day is a chance to celebrate American workers and the contributions they make to society. For labor unions in Colorado, it’s also a chance to take stock of what they have been able to accomplish for workers and the challenges that still lie ahead.

    “Colorado has a deep labor history,” said Nicole Speer, a Boulder City Council member and supporter of labor unions. “Unions have been under attack for many decades now, so we’re in a rebuilding phase.”

    Denver7 caught up with Speer at a union rally following the Louisville Labor Day parade on Monday. She appeared there alongside union leaders and various political candidates for office.

    KMGH-TV

    Boulder Area Labor Council hosted a picnic rally at Community Park in Louisville on Labor Day. The event featured local and state candidates for office, union leaders, and union members.

    Speer said unions are needed now more than ever.

    “So many of us are being laid off,” said Speer. “When our health care is being taken away, when our rights are being taken away, that’s exactly what we need to keep going and keep fighting.”

    Speer was among those who lost their job earlier this year.

    “I worked at the University of Colorado Boulder, running a research facility for over 13 years,” she told Denver7. “But because of all the funding cuts and delays at the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, there wasn’t enough money to keep supporting all of us who work there.”

    According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, an agency within the U.S. Department of Labor, union members accounted for 7.7% of wage and salary workers in Colorado last year, a slight increase from 6.9 % in 2023. However, membership is down from 11% in 2018.

    Colorado union membership stats

    Denver7

    When it comes to the percentage of wage and salary workers who belong to a union, Colorado ranks far below many Democratic-controlled states and alongside many Republican-controlled states.

    “Colorado has one of the most stringent standards for forming a union, so unions basically have to vote twice,” said Speer.

    Unions and their supporters pushed for a bill to get rid of the two-vote requirement during this year’s legislative session, but Governor Jared Polis vetoed the bill, saying mandatory dues should require a high threshold of worker participation and approval.

    Politics

    Polis vetoes contentious labor bill that would have reshaped unionization laws

    “I was very disheartened at the situation with the Worker Protection Act,” said Sharron Pettiford, the president of the Colorado Coalition of Black Trade Unionists (CBTU).

    Pettiford said she’s also watching things at the federal level very closely.

    Thousands of federal workers have been laid off this year, and hundreds of thousands more have lost union protections due to executive orders by President Donald Trump. Black Americans, who make up 18% of the federal workforce compared to 12% of the country’s population, have been disproportionately impacted.

    “We’re under attack,” said Pettiford. “I think the targeting, especially in terms of Black workers, are at an all-time high.”

    On Labor Day, Colorado unions look at their accomplishments, challenges

    Denver7

    Despite their setbacks, unions and their supporters say there have been successes this year. Speer said one accomplishment was fighting against a state bill they described as “terrible” because it would have made changes to tipped workers’ wages.

    The bill, House Bill 25-1208, still passed and was signed into law, but unions and their supporters say thanks to their efforts, it was a watered-down version.

    “There was a corporate-backed force at the State Capitol that was working to lower tipped workers’ wages because they felt like it was getting too high,” said Speer. “We were able to fight back.”

    They plan to continue fighting in the years ahead.

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    Denver7

    Denver7 | Your Voice: Get in touch with Brandon Richard

    Denver7 politics reporter Brandon Richard closely follows developments at the State Capitol and in Washington, and digs deeper to find how legislation affects Coloradans in every community. If you’d like to get in touch with Brandon, fill out the form below to send him an email.

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    Brandon Richard

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  • Large DC rally held in support of union workers, blasts Donald Trump’s policies – WTOP News

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    Nearly 400 pro-union activists and supporters gathered at Dupont Circle park on Thursday to march and kick off what they called a season of solidarity.

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    Massive rally in DC in support of union workers and against Trump’s policies

    Nearly 400 pro-union activists and supporters gathered at Dupont Circle park on Thursday to march and kick off what they called a season of solidarity.

    The solidarity season” is a week full of pro-union events, and those gathered at the park on Thursday set the tone — starting with their complaints over what they called destructive policies of President Donald Trump’s administration.

    The event was organized by the Metropolitan Washington Council of the AFL-CIO, which represents about 150 union organizations in the D.C. area. President Sam Epps said union workers must stick together through what he called a crisis in government.

    “Labor will continue to fight for freedom, fairness and security,” Epps told the crowd.

    “Our solidarity extends to our members who live in the District of Columbia, who deserve to live free from this administration’s harmful and unlawful occupation,” Epps said. “We say ‘Free D.C.!’”

    Also speaking at the event was Keya Chatterjee, executive director of the Free D.C. organization.

    She told the crowd, “Here in D.C., we need to fight back right now, the same way that labor unions do all the time.”

    “We demand the escalated federal forces leave immediately!” Chatterjee said to cheers. “We demand that [U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents] get out of our communities. We demand that federal workers get their jobs back. We demand power over our own budget, laws and justice system here in D.C. And we demand that D.C. is admitted as the 51st state.”

    The D.C. chapter of the AFL-CIO sponsored a huge rally and march in support of unions, while blasting what they call the “destructive policies” of President Donald Trump, including the deployment of the National Guard and federal police onto the streets.
    (WTOP/Alan Etter)

    WTOP/Alan Etter

    The group ended their march in front of a restaurant on 14th Street called Le Diplomate, which is owned by Starr Restaurants.
    The group ended their march in front of a restaurant on 14th Street called Le Diplomate, which is owned by Starr Restaurants.
    (WTOP/Alan Etter)

    WTOP/Alan Etter

    The group ended their march in front of a restaurant on 14th Street called Le Diplomate, which is owned by Starr Restaurants.
    The group ended their march in front of a restaurant on 14th Street called Le Diplomate, which is owned by Starr Restaurants.
    (WTOP/Alan Etter)

    WTOP/Alan Etter

    Nearly 400 pro-union activists and supporters gathered at Dupont Circle park on Thursday to march and kick off what they called a season of solidarity.
    Nearly 400 pro-union activists and supporters gathered at Dupont Circle park on Thursday to march and kick off what they called a season of solidarity.
    (WTOP/Alan Etter)

    WTOP/Alan Etter

    Nearly 400 pro-union activists and supporters gathered at Dupont Circle park on Thursday to march and kick off what they called a season of solidarity.
    Nearly 400 pro-union activists and supporters gathered at Dupont Circle park on Thursday to march and kick off what they called a season of solidarity.
    (WTOP/Alan Etter)

    WTOP/Alan Etter

    After the rally at the park, the group marched east along P Street behind a large red banner that read “Solidarity” with a white shape of the District of Columbia.

    The group ended their march on 14th Street in front of a restaurant called Le Diplomate, which is owned by Starr Restaurants.

    Employees of Le Diplomate have been trying to form a union of their own, but have been met with resistance from Starr. The demonstrators marched in front of the restaurant, located at 14th & Q Streets NW, shouting, “Le Diplomate is unfair to its workers,” and carrying signs that read in part, “Le Diplomate has no union contract.”

    In a February statement, Starr Restaurants said the vote to unionize within its St. Anselm restaurant was “unlawfully tainted” by “coercive tactics” from the union and its supporters.

    UNITE HERE Local 25, a union representing hotel and restaurant workers in the D.C. area, has called on customers and restaurant workers to boycott the Logan Circle eatery over the labor disputes.

    A person who said he was a manager of the restaurant told WTOP that most of their employees don’t want to join a union.

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    Alan Etter

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