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Tag: Union

  • ‘Moment of crisis’: Unions in somber mood this Labor Day

    Thousands of workers and union organizers from across California will gather for picnics and marches this weekend to honor the contributions of the nation’s working people.

    But the Labor Day celebrations will be tempered by a sobering reality: Unions face mounting pressure to protect their members from the Trump administration’s immigration raids, cuts in Medicaid services and a weakened National Labor Relations Board.

    “We know how important we are to preserving and protecting democracy,” said Lorena Gonzalez, head of the California Labor Federation. “We have a special role in that. We are not going to get silenced, and we’re not going to be paralyzed.”

    From farm fields to car washes, labor groups have scrambled to support families of the hundreds detained and deported in numerous chaotic and violent raids that have resulted in the deaths of two people —a day laborer and a farmworker — killed while fleeing federal agents.

    The raids reverberated across the state’s local labor community in June when David Huerta of SEIU California was injured and detained by law enforcement while documenting the first major immigration enforcement raids in Los Angeles.

    “Farmworkers are afraid….They don’t know what’s going to happen from one day to the next with these raids, but they understand the only way we’re going to have power is if we come together,” said Teresa Romero, president of United Farm Workers.

    Romero and other union leaders said their focus remains on organizing more workplaces, while also working to educate people on their rights and staging legal and nonviolent protests against government policies.

    “We are all under attack by the federal government right now,” said Jeremy Goldberg, executive director of the Central Coast Labor Council. “The need is tremendous.”

    In early August, the Trump administration moved forward with a plan to end collective bargaining with federal unions across a swath of government agencies. The government said the changes were necessary to protect national security, but unions viewed it as retaliation for their participation in lawsuits opposing the president’s policies.

    The Trump administration has also proposed sweeping cuts to the staff of the National Labor Relations Board — which is tasked with safeguarding the right of private employees to unionize or organize in other ways to improve their working conditions — and canceled leases for regional offices in many states.

    Union officials contend the changes could hobble the board and prevent it from investigating unfair labor practice charges filed by workers and carrying out its other responsibilities, such as overseeing elections.

    “Important rules and regulations that were put in place during the Biden administration that were helpful to workers — those are systematically being rolled back,” said Enrique Lopezlira, director of the Low-Wage Work Program at the UC Berkeley Labor Center.

    Unions are bracing for further challenges that could arise when Trump finally makes appointments to the federal labor board, which is currently nonoperational, because it doesn’t have enough board members to rule on cases.

    But even as many labor leaders have openly opposed the Trump administration, others have taken a more muted approach. Major national unions, such as United Auto Workers and the Teamsters, have supported aspects of the Trump agenda on tariffs abroad and a push for manufacturing jobs at home.

    The changes portend tough times ahead for California unions.

    John Logan, a professor of U.S. labor history at San Francisco State, said that Trump’s hostility toward California and withholding of federal funds from universities, healthcare facilities and other institutions will squeeze the state budget, with major effects on public sector workers in the form of layoffs and other cost-cutting. And the administration’s relentless immigrant raids are consuming the time, attention and resources of unions, he said.

    Although California has a larger share of its workforce represented by unions compared with many other states, that density is overly reliant on public sector workers, and membership of those unions is likely to shrink in the coming years, Logan said.

    Unions are “ill-equipped to deal with this moment of crisis,” Logan said. “The labor movement is fighting for its survival over the next four years.”

    Challenges are especially acute in the healthcare industry.

    Unions representing in-home care providers, nurses and other healthcare workers said their members are already feeling the squeeze wrought by the lead up to and approval of Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill,” which includes tax spending cuts that will affect millions of Medicaid recipients while growing the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency by thousands of workers.

    SEIU Local 2015 President Arnulfo De La Cruz said many in-home care providers who have cared for people for decades are now faced with the prospect that the people they care for are going to lose their healthcare, and that they themselves may lose their healthcare and their jobs.

    “To have our healthcare under attack, to have our families under attack — that’s a huge reversal in how we are recognizing essential workers,” De La Cruz said.

    Major medical facilities, including Sharp HealthCare, UC San Diego Health and UCSF Health, have in recent months announced plans to cut public health services and conduct hundreds of layoffs, citing significant financial headwinds and the uncertainty of federal funding.

    “It’s a nasty bill. There’s nothing beautiful about that bill,” said Cynthia Williams, an Orange County resident and member of AFSCME Local 3930. Williams is a full-time caregiver for both her daughter, who is blind and has cerebral palsy, and her sister, who is a veteran living with severe post-traumatic stress disorder.

    Williams said the In-Home Supportive Services program — funded primarily by Medicaid — has preemptively cut funding for transportation to her sister’s weekly appointments. The hours Williams is paid for to care for her daughter have been reduced.

    “The last few months have been very stressful and very unpredictable,” Williams said.

    Suhauna Hussain

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  • Train ride from Chicago to Mississippi marks 70 years since of Emmett Till’s death

    The commemoration of 70 years since Emmett Till’s death is being marked by family, friends and officials Wednesday as they repeated the fateful train ride he took from Chicago to Mississippi in 1955.

    The ride was organized by the Emmett Till Interpretive Center and National Parks Conservation Association. Among the passengers were the Rev. Wheeler Parker Jr., Till’s cousin and the last surviving eyewitness to his kidnapping, his wife Dr. Marvel Parker, and Juliet Louis, the widow of sharecropper Willie Reed who reported Till’s death and testified at the trial of his murderers.

    The Amtrak City of New Orleans left Chicago’s Union Station at 8:05 p.m. Wednesday night, following a communal prayer. It was set to arrive in Greenwood, Mississippi, on Thursday morning, which marks 70 years since Till’s death.

    Back in 1955, the Rev. Parker and his cousin Till were just teenagers. They jumped on a train together from Union Station to Mississippi to visit family — but only one of them returned alive.

    While in Mississippi, Till, 14 at the time, was kidnapped in the dead of night and then brutally lynched after reportedly whistling at a white woman.

    Parker was in the house when Till was taken by white men at gunpoint.

    “They came to me first in this room,” Parker recalled in 2021. “And I was shaking like a leaf on a tree.”

    When Till’s badly decomposed body was found three days later in the Tallahatchie River, his mother Mamie Till refused to allow a quick burial and instead brought his remains back to Chicago, where she insisted on an open casket funeral.

    That open casket funeral, and photos from it which were printed in newspapers nationwide, are credited with sparking the modern-day Civil Rights Movement.

    Seventy years later, Parker boarded a train with a purpose.

    “There’s a saying in the Bible, ‘Less thou forget,’” he said. ‘It helps us to remember.”

    As Parker took the solemn ride, he said it is essential never to forget.

    “For one thing, 70 years ago, we didn’t think about what was going to happen,” said Wheeler.

    What did happen was that Till’s lynchers, Roy Bryant and John Milam, were tried and acquitted by a jury. The woman at the center of the whistling allegations, Carolyn Bryant, confessed decades later to historian Timothy Tyson that her allegations against the teenager were false.

    “We’re not here to stir up animosity or hate, but to remind people of how far we’ve come and how much progress we’ve made,” said Wheeler.

    While 70 years have passed, Till’s family said America still has healing to do.

    “I’m always reminded of the suffering and price that he paid, but we’ve come a long way — and his mother’s statement was, ‘I hope he didn’t die in vain,’” said Wheeler. “He didn’t die in vain.”

    The family has much on which to reflect on the long train ride.

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  • Train ride from Chicago to Mississippi marks 70th anniversary of Emmett Till’s death




































    Train ride from Chicago to Mississippi marks 70th anniversary of Emmett Till’s death



    Train ride from Chicago to Mississippi marks 70th anniversary of Emmett Till’s death

    00:38

    The 70th anniversary of Emmett Till’s death is being marked by family, friends and officials repeating the fateful train ride he took from Chicago to Mississippi in 1955.

    The ride is organized by the Emmett Till Interpretive Center and National Parks Conservation Association. Among the passengers will be Rev. Wheeler Parker, Jr., Till’s cousin and the last surviving eyewitness to his kidnapping, his wife Dr. Marvel Parker, and Juliet Louis, the widow of sharecropper Willie Reed who reported Till’s death and testified at the trial of his murderers.

    The Amtrak City of New Orleans will leave Chicago’s Union Station at 8:05 p.m. Wednesday night, following a communal prayer. It will arrive in Greenwood, Mississippi, on Thursday morning, which is the 70th anniversary of Till’s death.

    Emmett Till was 14 years old when he was kidnapped in the dead of night and then brutally lynched after reportedly whitling at a white woman while he was visiting family in Mississippi. When his badly decomposed body was found three days later in the Tallahatchie River, his mother Mamie Till refused to allow a quick burial and instead brought his remains back to Chicago, where she insisted on an open casket funeral.

    That open casket funeral, and photos from it which were printed in newspapers nationwide, are credited with sparking the modern-day Civil Rights Movement.

    Till’s lynchers were tried and acquitted. The woman at the center of the whistling allegations, Carolyn Bryant, confessed decades later to historian Timothy Tyson that her allegations against the teenager were false.

    After arriving in Mississippi Thursday, there will be programming to commemorate the anniversary of Till’s death and his legacy. 

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  • Unite Here Demands $5B “New Deal” Ahead of 2028 LA Olympics

    The Olympics are still three years away, but Los Angeles is already bracing for its first major showdown over the 2028 Games

    A gathering of Unite Here Local 11 members yesterday.
    Photo: Courtesy of Unite Here Local 11

    Outside the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on Thursday morning, workers in red shirts waved signs reading “Fair Games.” Hotel housekeepers, bellmen and cooks stood in protest together, demanding their cut of the city’s Olympic payouts. It was a rally, but also a warning.

    Unite Here Local 11, the Los Angeles hotel workers union, launched its “New Deal for Our Future” campaign, demanding that Olympic organizers commit $5 billion to build affordable housing, impose a city-wide moratorium on Airbnb rentals and cut ties with the company altogether. If not, the union warns, it is prepared to strike when the Games arrive in 2028.

    “ If LA28 and their billionaire backers refuse to change course, we will take this fight to the streets and to the Games,” said Kurt Petersen, Unite Here’s co-president. “ When the world’s eyes are on Los Angeles in 2028, we will not hesitate to strike.”

    The union’s timing is not accidental. Dozens of Unite Here contracts with hotels, airports and stadiums are set to expire just ahead of the Olympics, giving workers rare leverage over an event projected to bring hundreds of thousands of visitors to the city. Tourism workers at the rally do not intend to let the moment pass them by.

    “ A lot of people are gonna stay in our hotels,” said Emmanuel Cabrera, a bellman at the Westin Bonaventure and organizer with Unite Here. “We’re just asking for our fair share.”

    In response, organizers with LA28 issued a statement, promising that the Games would create good-paying jobs and real opportunities for working people in Los Angeles. The International Olympic Committee has not yet weighed in.

    The “New Deal” campaign comes amid escalating political fights tied to the Games. Earlier this year, the City Council approved a $30 minimum wage for hotel and airport workers. Business groups, backed by Delta and United Airlines, are now pushing a referendum to overturn it. Unite Here countered with its own ballot initiatives, including raising the minimum wage for all workers and taxing companies with high CEO-to-worker pay gaps.

    Meanwhile, Airbnb has mounted a shadow campaign to loosen restrictions on short-term rentals before LA hosts a string of mega-events — the 2026 World Cup, the 2027 Super Bowl and the 2028 Olympics. The company argues that expanded rentals could help cover the city’s $1 billion deficit. But Unite Here insists that Airbnb worsens LA’s housing crisis by removing units from the long-term rental market.

    Olympic organizers insist that the Games will be privately funded. LA28 recently announced that for the first time, the IOC will allow naming rights for Olympic venues (Honda and Comcast have already signed on). But if the budget overruns and costs spiral, the city is ultimately responsible, and activists warn that Angelenos could end up footing the bill. Sponsorships are nothing new, but critics say the deals have taken on a new intensity.

    “ LA28, as we speak, is literally auctioning off our city,” Peterson said. “What’s next? Welcome to ‘Airbnb Los Angeles?’”

    With contracts expiring, ballot measures on the horizon, and billions of dollars at stake, labor organizers say their battle with Olympic leaders has already begun, years before the opening ceremonies.

    Scarlett London

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  • Union rule D Ian Glavinovich (knee) out for season

    (Photo credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images)

    The Philadelphia Union placed defender Ian Glavinovich on the season-ending injury list on Thursday.

    The 23-year-old Argentina international is recovering from surgery to repair a torn meniscus in his right knee.

    Glavinovich sustained the injury on April 5 and finished the season with one goal in four MLS matches (three starts).

    ‘This is a tough moment for Ian and for the team,’ Union sporting director Ernst Tanner said. ‘We know the impact he can make, and he’s approached this season, and injury, with the utmost determination and professionalism. We’ll continue to support Ian as he continues his recovery.’

    Glavinovich made his MLS debut in the Feb. 22 season opener against Orlando City SC and scored his first goal in a 1-0 victory over St. Louis City SC on March 22.

    The Union acquired Glavinovich on a one-year loan from Newell’s Old Boys on Dec. 20, 2024.

    –Field Level Media

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  • Union Falter as the Shield is Slipping Out of Their Hands – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    The Philadelphia Union were in control of their destiny. However, after a disappointing loss against the New York Red Bulls, the Union’s grasp on the Supporters’ Shield is slipping.

    What Went Wrong in New York

    Entering the match Saturday, the Union had just defeated the Red Bulls 3-2 in the US Open Cup on Wednesday. Despite that, the Union could not get anything going against their rival. Both teams featured different starting 11s from their meeting earlier in the week. Unfortunately, it seems it was another week where Bradley Carnell chose squad rotation over chasing trophies.

    The Union did not put their best team on the field, and it cost them. To make matters worse, the Union lost Andre Blake to a hamstring injury mid-game as well.

    The bigger issue is that if Tai Baribo isn’t scoring goals, the offense has been a snoozefest. New addition Milan Iloski is still getting his feet wet with the Union. But if Chris Donovan is the best guy you have off the bench when you need a goal, then your team will not sniff a trophy.

    The Union has dropped points on multiple weeks now since Bradley Carnell has chosen squad rotation. With just 7 matches left in the MLS season, the Union cannot afford any more slip-ups if they want to grab their second Supporters’ Shield in club history.

    Where the Standings Sit Now

    Unfortunately, the Union now sits 3rd in the Supporters Shield race. They sit 1 point behind Cincinnati and San Diego for the top spot. The Union’s Shield hopes ultimately lie in the next 3 MLS games. They face Chicago at home in a must-win game. Then, they got on the road back-to-back against Cincinnati and Vancouver.

    If the Union can manage at the very least 7 points from that stretch, then they may have a chance at the Shield. However, a loss to Cincinnati would all but close the door on the Union’s hopes.

    However, as always, a GOAT is lurking in the shadows. Lionel Messi and Inter Miami still have their 3 games in hand. If Miami wins out, they run away with the shield, and there is nothing anyone can do about it. Taking a look at Miami’s schedule, while it is very crowded, it is far from the hardest we have ever seen.

    What Can the Union Do?

    The Union can still run the “American Treble”. Meaning they grab the Supporters Shield, MLS Cup, and US Open Cup, in one season. However, that reality gets bleaker by the day. Besides, the fact that we are nearing September and the Union is vying for all the trophies is a shock considering the state of the team heading into the season.

    The ball ultimately falls in Bradley Carnell’s lap. This is not Carnell’s first rodeo with an overperforming team. We all saw him take St Louis to the top of the Western Conference in their first-ever MLS season just a few years ago. Now, he finds himself in a similar situation.

    While grabbing all 3 trophies is unlikely, the most interesting aspect is which ones the Union chase the most. If the last few weeks tell us anything, the Supporters Shield is likely at the bottom of the list. Next, being the US Open Cup and the MLS Cup is the number one goal.

    When it comes to a team that has a fairly bare trophy case, beggars can’t be choosers. Any trophy that comes out of what was supposed to be a rebuild year will be a welcome sight and achievement. It is up to Bradley Carnell to ensure they stay on track and not leave 2025 empty-handed.

     

    Featured Image: Wes Shepherd/PHLSportsNation

    Tags: 2025 Supporters Shield Inter Miami Major League Soccer (MLS) Messi MLS MLS Cup New York Red Bulls Philadelphia Union Union

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    Ryan Hall

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  • Are the Subaru Park Upgrades a Slap in the Face to Fans? – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    Are the Subaru Park Upgrades a Slap in the Face to Fans? – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    The Philadelphia Union is officially in off-season mode. This week, the club announced plans to add premium seating to Subaru Park.
    However, is this sending the right message to the fanbase?

    The Union finds itself in a similar situation every off-season. The season ends, fans are eager to see how things change, and then everything stays the same. However, for the past few seasons, the Union has been able to hang its hat on improving year after year.

    In 2024, the club fell down the stairs. The Union missed the playoffs and has an aging roster. Fans have been vocal about ownership’s need to open the checkbook and sign big-money players. However, it appears the first check is going to the stadium.


    Right Idea, Wrong Execution

    Along with an aging roster, the Union has an aging stadium. While Subaru Park has some of the best sightlines in the league, it is aging rapidly. The cramped concourse and limited capacity have hindered the Union fan experience at home, which is why stadium renovations are needed.

    PHOTO: Wes Shepherd/PHLSportsNation

    However, the only announced upgrades are for premium VIP seating—simply something that won’t matter to the average fan. Instead of adding seats to the river end or making the gameday experience more special to all the fans, the Union is adding seating options that will cost upwards of $10,000. Coming from a team that’s record signing is just a few million dollars; it is another slap in the face to Union fans.

    Last off-season, all the money went into the new WSFS Sportsplex, which made parking even worse. This season, it looks like it is going to premium VIP seat additions. While the sportsplex and new seating options aren’t bad things, they completely contradict what the club has been saying for years.

    Ownership is not interested in satisfying the needs of the everyday fan who pays to get into the stadium and support the team. Despite all the talk that “the fans are the top priority,” the actions still do not back that up.

    Off-season is Still Young

    We are still just a few weeks into the off-season. The first round of the MLS Playoffs isn’t even over yet. The Union could have some upgrades to seating for every other fan in store. The club could also be planning big signings. However, the past would tell fans not to get their hopes up.

    If the big off-season plan is only upgrades for fans who can pay the most money, then the front office will reap what they sought. Philadelphia sports fans do not stand for mediocrity. Fans love the team’s crest. However, if ownership does not care about the fans who got them this far, then things will get worse.

    A large number of fans have already opted out of being season ticket holders. Many will follow, and soon, the Union will be playing in front of half-filled stadiums every day.

    Ownership needs to stop alienating the largest portion of the fanbase—the fans who just want to support their soccer club without having to spend thousands of dollars. Simultaneously, the front office should use the revenue generated to create a competitive team and improve the game day experience.


    If premium seating is the only plan until 2025, then it is a slap in the face to Union fans.

    PHOTO: Wes Shepherd/PHLSportsNation

    Ryan Hall

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  • Boeing Machinists Vote To Reject Contract, Strike Continues – KXL

    Boeing Machinists Vote To Reject Contract, Strike Continues – KXL

    SEATTLE (AP) — Boeing factory workers voted Wednesday to reject the company’s latest contract offer and to continue a six-week strike that has halted production of the aerospace giant’s bestselling jetliners.

    Local union leaders in Seattle said the proposal fell short of the majority of support needed from members of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers who cast ballots on Wednesday.

    The offer included pay raises of 35% over four years. The version that union members rejected when they voted to strike last month featured a 25% increase over four years.

    The union, which initially demanded 40% pay boosts over three years, said the annual raises in the revised offer would total 39.8%, when compounded.

    Boeing workers told Associated Press reporters that a sticking point was the company’s refusal to restore a traditional pension plan that was axed a decade ago.

    The labor standoff comes during an already challenging year for Boeing, which became the focus of multiple federal investigations after a door panel blew off a 737 Max plane during an Alaska Airlines flight in January.

    The strike has deprived the company of much-needed cash that it gets from delivering new planes to airlines. On Wednesday, the company reported a third-quarter loss of more than $6 billion.

    Union machinists assemble the 737 Max, Boeing’s best-selling airliner, along with the 777 or “triple-seven” jet and the 767 cargo plane at factories in Renton and Everett, Washington.

    Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg told staff in a memo this month that about 10% of the company’s worldwide workforce of 170,000 would be laid off in coming months if the strike did not end.

    He said the company also would further delay the rollout of a new plane, the 777X, to 2026 instead of 2025, and would stop building the cargo version of its 767 jet in 2027 after finishing current orders.

    Before the third-quarter results were announced Wednesday, Boeing had reporting losing more than $25 billion since the start of 2019.

    Boeing has said that average annual pay for machinists is currently $75,608.

    Early in the strike, Boeing made what it termed its “best and final” offer. The proposal included pay raises of 30% over four years, and angered union leaders because the company announced it to the striking workers through the media and set a short ratification deadline.

    Boeing backed down and gave the union more time. However, many workers maintained the offer still wasn’t good enough. The company withdrew the proposed contract on Oct. 9 after negotiations broke down, and the two sides announced the latest proposal on Saturday.

    The last Boeing strike, in 2008, lasted eight weeks and cost the company about $100 million daily in deferred revenue. A 1995 strike lasted 10 weeks.

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    Jordan Vawter

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  • Oct 23: CBS News 24/7, 10am ET

    Oct 23: CBS News 24/7, 10am ET

    Oct 23: CBS News 24/7, 10am ET – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Harris, Trump campaigns take final sprint; Union vote on latest Boeing contract offer could end the ongoing machinists strike.

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  • National Border Patrol Union Makes Endorsement for President

    National Border Patrol Union Makes Endorsement for President

    The national Border Patrol union made a major endorsement for President.

    Paul Perez, the president of the National Border Patrol Council, announced the union endorsed former Republican President Donald Trump over Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris in the presidential election.

    Border Patrol Union endorsementThe National Border Patrol Council (NBPC) represents Border Patrol agents and support personnel assigned to the U.S. Border Patrol. The union announced its full support of former President Trump during a rally in Prescott Valley, Arizona.

    “If we allow border czar Harris to win this election, every city, every community in this great country is going to go to hell,” Perez announced. “The untold millions of people unvetted, who she has allowed into this country that are committing murders, rapes, robberies, burglaries and every other crime will continue to put our country in peril.

    “Only one man can fix that. That is Donald J. Trump. He has always stood with the men and women who protect this border, who put their lives on the line for the country. A man who knows about putting his life on the line for what is right.”

    Former President Trump called the Border Patrol union endorsement a “great honor,” as he has made illegal immigration and the border crisis a major plank in his campaign. President Trump said he will secure the border and stop catch-and-release, as well as implement a mass deportation program.

    “On behalf of the 16,000 men and women represented by the National Border Patrol Council, we strongly support and endorse Donald J. Trump for President of the United States,” Perez concluded.

    Republicans are also trying to capitalize on former President Bill Clinton seemingly blaming Vice President Kamala Harris and President Joe Biden’s administration – all Democrats – for Laken Riley’s murder by an illegal immigrant.

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  • Three Dozen U.S. Ports In Peril of Longshoremen’s Strike

    Three Dozen U.S. Ports In Peril of Longshoremen’s Strike

    Credit: Danny Cornelissen, Attribution, via Wikimedia Commons

    By Shirleen Guerra (The Center Square)

    About 45,000 dockworkers are expected to strike for higher wages across three dozen East and Gulf coast ports at 12:01 a.m. Tuesday.

    There is potential for increased consumer costs on a wide range of goods just five weeks before Election Day, and 12 weeks before Christmas.

    Negotiations have been tense since June. The disagreement is between the International Longshore Association and Warehouse Union, which represents port workers across the country, and the U.S. Maritime Alliance, which represents terminal operators and ocean carriers.

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    Wages of East and Gulf coast workers are a base wage of $39 an hour after six years. The union is asking for a 77% pay raise increase over six years. It is also asking for more restrictions and bans on the automation of cranes, gates, and container movements used to load or unload cargo.

    North America’s largest union of maritime workers has 85,000 longshoremen from the Atlantic and Gulf coasts, according to its website. 

    The strike would impact 36 U.S. ports handling about one-half of U.S. ocean imports. Included are Boston, New York, New Jersey and Philadelphia.

    While negotiations have remained stagnant, both parties have continued to push out updates on the situations.

    “Despite additional attempts by USMX to engage with the ILA and resume bargaining, we have been unable to schedule a meeting to continue negotiations on a new Master Contract,” the Maritime Alliance said in a release. “We remain prepared to bargain at any time, but both sides must come to the table if we are going to reach a deal, and there is no indication that the ILA is interested in negotiating at this time.”

    The alliance filed an “unfair labor practice” charge against the union on Wednesday.

    The union said the employer is “continuing its weak publicity campaign designed to fool the American public that they care for the longshore workers who help earn them billions of dollars,” a press said after the filing.

    The union continued that this was “another publicity stunt by the employer group, and countered that foreign-owned companies, represented by USMX, that set up shop at American ports, earn billions of dollars in revenues and profits, take those profits out of country, and fail to adequately compensate the ILA longshore workforce for their labor are engaging in a real ‘unfair labor practice’ and have been getting away with for decades.”

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    The union also stated that the 85,000 members would honor its century-plus pledge and continue to handle all military cargo at all ports despite the strike.

    “If no agreement is reached, it could result in delays and dire impacts on supply chains, our economy, and the American consumer,” the union said.

    That was the sentiment behind the letter Republican lawmakers sent to President Joe Biden urging the administration “to utilize every authority at its disposal to ensure the continuing flow of goods.”

    Elizabeth H. Shuler, president of The American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations, or AFL-CIO, responded in a letter opposing injunction to prevent a possible strike.

    “Averting a strike is the responsibility of the employers who refuse to offer ILA members a contract that reflects the dignity and value of their labor,” the letter reads in part. “The fight for a fair contract for longshoremen is the entire labor movement’s fight. We stand united with the 45,000 ILA members who work hard every day to keep our nation’s economy moving. Please call on USMX to make a fair offer to settle this contract before October 1.”

    One way the strike could end is for the president to call on the Taft-Hartley Act. Biden cites collective bargaining as the reason he does not believe in the 1947 measure.

    Syndicated with permission from The Center Square.

    The Center Square

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  • Union workers at downtown Sacramento hotel vote to authorize strike

    Union workers at downtown Sacramento hotel vote to authorize strike

    WE’LL TALK MORE ABOUT THAT COOLDOWN WITH THE SEVEN DAY FORECAST IN A FEW MINUTES. SOUNDS GOOD. HEATHER. THANKS. SOME BREAKING NEWS. WE’RE FOLLOWING RIGHT NOW IN SACRAMENTO WHERE HOTEL WORKERS HAVE AUTHORIZED A STRIKE AT THE SHERATON GRAND HOTEL. WE CAN SHOW YOU LIVE PICTURES HERE AT DOWNTOWN SACRAMENTO, AND YOU CAN SEE THE SHERATON GRAND HOTEL THAT’S IN THE CENTER OF YOUR SCREEN. ACCORDING TO THE UNION, THE VOTE GIVES THE NEGOTIATING COMMITTEE THE ABILITY TO CALL FOR A STRIKE AT ANY TIME. THE UNION SAYS IT HAS BEEN NEGOTIATING FOR HIGHER PAY, BETTER WORK SCHEDULES AND MORE PROTECTIONS. WE REACHED OUT T

    Union workers at downtown Sacramento hotel vote to authorize strike

    Workers at the Sheraton Grand Hotel in downtown Sacramento overwhelmingly voted to authorize a strike on Wednesday.Representatives said 97% of the workers, under the UNITE HERE Local 49 union, voted to authorize the strike with the goal of raising hotel wages and protecting against cuts to services and staffing.The authorization gives the negotiating committee the ability to call for a strike at any time.The vote comes after the workers’ current contract expired on June 30.”Workers say that after months of unsuccessful negotiations, they’re tired of waiting for raises, better workloads, and protections for work associated with providing guest services and amenities,” a representative of the union said in a statement.The strike would cover 140 workers, including housekeepers, front desk agents, cooks, dishwashers, servers, bartenders, bellmen and more.KCRA 3 has reached out to Marriott, which owns the hotel, for comment.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter

    Workers at the Sheraton Grand Hotel in downtown Sacramento overwhelmingly voted to authorize a strike on Wednesday.

    Representatives said 97% of the workers, under the UNITE HERE Local 49 union, voted to authorize the strike with the goal of raising hotel wages and protecting against cuts to services and staffing.

    The authorization gives the negotiating committee the ability to call for a strike at any time.

    The vote comes after the workers’ current contract expired on June 30.

    “Workers say that after months of unsuccessful negotiations, they’re tired of waiting for raises, better workloads, and protections for work associated with providing guest services and amenities,” a representative of the union said in a statement.

    The strike would cover 140 workers, including housekeepers, front desk agents, cooks, dishwashers, servers, bartenders, bellmen and more.

    KCRA 3 has reached out to Marriott, which owns the hotel, for comment.

    See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter

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  • An Apple Store in Oklahoma City is close to approving an union agreement for its workers

    An Apple Store in Oklahoma City is close to approving an union agreement for its workers

    Talks between Apple and the union for the Apple Store in Oklahoma City have produced a tentative agreement that includes new benefits and protections for its staff. The Penn Square Mall Apple Store in Oklahoma City announced they’ve reached a “tentative labor agreement” with Apple and the Communication Workers of America (CWA), according to a released statement.

    Terms are still being negotiated between both parties but the benefits for the store’s employees would be significant. The three-year agreement reached between the CWA and Apple would give employees a wage increase of up to 11.5 percent. An Apple spokesperson said by email that if the contract is ratified, employees would receive a 4 percent raise in the first year of employment and 3 percent in the second and third year each “based on employee performance.”

    The agreement would also offer employees guaranteed paid time off and health and other benefits, allow employees to have a say in scheduling and the establishment of a “safer and more democratic workplace” through a grievance submission process with committees overseeing safety, health and working relations. An Apple spokesperson also noted the scheduling options “were provided to all other US stores in 2022.”

    The Oklahoma City Apple Store had been working to form a union becoming the second Apple Store in the US to unionize. Employees passed a strike authorization vote in August that passed with unanimous support and started a picket in front of the store ahead of bargaining sessions in early September. Workers will vote to ratify the tentative agreement on September 22.

    CWA District 6 Vice President Derrick Osobase called the agreement achievement “a historic day for our members who have now secured a contract at the world’s most profitable company.”

    The Apple Store in the Towson Town Center in became the first location to unionize. Members approved the union in 2022 with the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM). A store in the Cumberland Mall in tried to form a union in 2022 with the CWA but workers called it off accusing Apple of committing “repeated violations of the National Labor Relations Act.”

    Danny Gallagher

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  • Strikes start at top hotel chains across the country as housekeepers seek higher wages

    Strikes start at top hotel chains across the country as housekeepers seek higher wages

    Hundreds of Boston hotel workers go on strike


    Hundreds of Boston hotel workers go on strike

    02:29

    With up to 17 rooms to clean each shift, Fatima Amahmoud’s job at the Moxy hotel in downtown Boston sometimes feels impossible.

    There was the time she found three days worth of blond dog fur clinging to the curtains, the bedspread and the carpet. She knew she wouldn’t finish in the 30 minutes she is supposed to spend on each room. The dog owner had declined daily room cleaning, an option that many hotels have encouraged as environmentally friendly but is a way for them to cut labor costs and cope with worker shortages since the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Unionized housekeepers, however, have waged a fierce fight to restore automatic daily room cleaning at major hotel chains, saying they have been saddled with unmanageable workloads, or in many cases, fewer hours and a decline in income.

    The dispute has become emblematic of the frustration over working conditions among hotel workers, who were put out of their jobs for months during pandemic shutdowns and returned to an industry grappling with chronic staffing shortages and evolving travel trends.

    Hotel Workers Contracts
    Union members from Local 26, representing workers in the hospitality industries of Massachusetts, picket outside the Hyatt Regency Boston, Wednesday, July 17, 2024, in Boston.

    Charles Krupa / AP


    More than 40,000 workers, represented by the UNITE HERE union, have been locked in difficult contract negotiations with major hotel chains that include Hilton, Hyatt, Marriott and Omni. They are seeking higher wages and a reversal of service and staffing cuts.

    At least 15,000 workers have voted to authorize strikes if no agreements are reached after contracts expire at hotels in 12 cities, from Honolulu to Boston.

    The first of the strikes began Sunday, when more than 4,000 workers walked off the job at hotels in Boston, San Francisco, San Jose, Seattle, and Greenwich, Connecticut, UNITE HERE said.

    “We said many times to the manager that it is too much for us,” said Amahmoud, whose hotel was among those where workers have authorized a strike but have not yet walked out.

    Michael D’Angelo, Hyatt’s head of labor relations for the Americas, said the company’s hotels have contingency plans to minimize the impact of the strikes.”We are disappointed that UNITE HERE has chosen to strike while Hyatt remains willing to negotiate,” he said.

    In a statement before the strikes began, Hilton said it was “committed to negotiating in good faith to reach fair and reasonable agreements.” Marriott and Omni did not return requests for comments.

    Seeking family-sustaining compensation

    The labor unrest serves as a reminder of the pandemic’s lingering toll on low-wage women, especially Black and Hispanic women who are overrepresented in front-facing service jobs. Although women have largely returned to the workforce since bearing the brunt of pandemic-era furloughs — or dropping out to take on caregiving responsibilities — that recovery has masked a gap in employment rates between women with college degrees and those without.

    The U.S. hotel industry employs about 1.9 million people, some 196,000 fewer workers than in February 2019, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics. Nearly 90% of building housekeepers are women, according to federal statistics.

    It’s a workforce that relies overwhelmingly on women of color, many of them immigrants, and which skews older, according to UNITE HERE.

    Union President Gwen Mills characterizes the contract negotiations as part of long-standing battle to secure family-sustaining compensation for service workers on par with more traditionally male-dominated industries.

    “Hospitality work overall is undervalued, and it’s not a coincidence that it’s disproportionately women and people of color doing the work,” Mills said.

    Hotel Workers Contracts
    Union members from Local 26, representing workers in the hospitality industries of Massachusetts, picket outside the Hyatt Regency Boston, Wednesday, July 17, 2024, in Boston.

    Charles Krupa / AP


    The union hopes to build on its recent success in southern California, where after repeated strikes it won significant wage hikes, increased employer contributions to pensions, and fair workload guarantees in a new contract with 34 hotels. Under the contract, housekeepers at most hotels will earn $35 an hour by July 2027.

    The American Hotel And Lodging Association says 80% of its member hotels report staffing shortages, and 50% cite housekeeping as their most critical hiring need.

    Kevin Carey, the association’s interim president and CEO, says hotels are doing all they can to attract workers. According to the association’s surveys, 86% of hoteliers have increased wages over the past six months, and many have offered more flexibility with hours or expanded benefits. The association says wages for hotel workers have risen 26% since the pandemic.

    “Now is a fantastic time to be a hotel employee,” Carey said in an emailed statement to The Associated Press.

    Hotel workers say the reality on the ground is more complicated.

    Maria Mata, 61, a housekeeper at the W Hotel in San Francisco, said she earns $2,190 every two weeks if she gets to work full-time. But some weeks, she only gets called in one or two days, causing her to max out her credit card to pay for food and other expenses for her household, which includes her granddaughter and elderly mother.

    “It’s hard to look for a new job at my age. I just have to keep the faith that we will work this out,” Mata said.

    Guests at the Hilton Hawaiian Village often tell Nely Reinante they don’t need their rooms cleaned because they don’t want her to work too hard. She said she seizes every opportunity to explain that refusing her services creates more work for housekeepers.

    Hospitality industry rebounds but not for workers 

    Since the pandemic, UNITE HERE has won back automatic daily room cleans at some hotels in Honolulu and other cities, either through contract negotiations, grievance filings or local government ordinances.

    But the issue is back on the table at many hotels where contracts are expiring. Mills said UNITE HERE is striving for language to make it difficult for hotels to quietly encourage guests to opt out of daily housekeeping.

    The U.S. hotel industry has rebounded from the pandemic despite average occupancy rates that remain shy of 2019 levels, largely due to higher room rates and record guest spending per room. Average revenue per available room, a key metric, is expected to reach a record high of $101.84 in 2024, according the hotel association.

    David Sherwyn, the director of the Cornell University Center for Innovative Hospitality Labor & Employment Relations, said UNITE HERE is a strong union but faces a tough fight over daily room cleaning because hotels consider reducing services part of a long-term budget and staffing strategy.

    “The hotels are saying the guests don’t want it, I can’t find the people and it’s a huge expense,” Sherwyn said. “That’s the battle.”

    Workers bristle at what they see as moves to squeeze more out of them as they cope with erratic schedules and low pay. While unionized housekeepers tend to make higher wages, pay varies widely between cities.

    Chandra Anderson, 53, makes $16.20 an hour as a housekeeper at the Hyatt Regency Baltimore Inner Harbor, where workers have not yet voted to strike. She is hoping for a contract that will raise her hourly pay to $20 but says the company came back with a counteroffer that “felt like a slap in the face.”

    Anderson, who has been her household’s sole breadwinner since her husband went on dialysis, said they had to move to a smaller house a year ago in part because she wasn’t able to get enough hours at her job. Things have improved since the hotel reinstated daily room cleaning earlier this year, but she still struggles to afford basics like groceries.

    Tracy Lingo, president of UNITE HERE Local 7, said the Baltimore members are seeking pensions for the first time but the biggest priority is bringing hourly wages closer to those in other cities.

    “That’s how far behind we are,” Lingo said.

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  • UAW President Shawn Fain on members of his union voting Republican, support for Kamala Harris

    UAW President Shawn Fain on members of his union voting Republican, support for Kamala Harris

    UAW President Shawn Fain on members of his union voting Republican, support for Kamala Harris – CBS News


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    Shawn Fain, president of the United Auto Workers union, joined CBS News to discuss members of his union voting for GOP candidates, the lack of a presidential endorsement so far from the Teamsters and his support for the Harris-Walz campaign.

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  • Apple has reached a contract agreement with unionized US retail employees for the first time

    Apple has reached a contract agreement with unionized US retail employees for the first time

    Apple and the unionized employees at its Towson, Maryland retail store have reached a tentative agreement that could secure them better pay, job protections, scheduling improvements to support a work-life balance and a more transparent disciplinary process. The Towson location in 2022 became the first Apple Store in the country to unionize, and back in May, it voted to authorize a strike against the company after “unsatisfactory” negotiation outcomes.

    The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers’ Coalition of Organized Retail Employees (IAM CORE) said it’s been negotiating with Apple since January 2023. Under the tentative three-year agreement they’ve now reached, workers would be given average raises of 10 percent over the life of the contract, and starting pay rates for most positions would go up. The agreement would also establish a severance clause. The union represents about 85 employees, who will get to vote on the agreement on August 6.

    Cheyenne MacDonald

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  • Apple reaches its first-ever union deal with workers at a Maryland store

    Apple reaches its first-ever union deal with workers at a Maryland store

    Harris meeting Houston teachers union


    Harris meeting with teachers union in Houston

    03:17

    Apple has reached a tentative collective bargaining contract with the first unionized company store in the country.

    The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers’ Coalition of Organized Retail Employees, which represents the employees at a retail location in Maryland, announced Friday evening that it struck a three-year deal with the company that will increase pay by an average of 10% and offer other benefits to workers.

    The agreement must be approved by roughly 85 employees at the store, which is located in the Baltimore suburb of Towson. A vote is scheduled for Aug. 6.

    “By reaching a tentative agreement with Apple, we are giving our members a voice in their futures and a strong first step toward further gains,” the union’s negotiating committee said in a statement. “Together, we can build on this success in store after store.”

    Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    The deal came after workers at the store authorized a strike in May, saying talks with management for more than a year hadn’t yielded “satisfactory outcomes.”

    The Maryland store is one of only two unionized Apple sites in the country. Employees there voted in favor of the union in June 2022, a few months before workers at a second Apple location in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, unionized with the Communications Workers of America. The second store has not secured a contract with the tech company.

    Unions have scored headline-grabbing election wins in recent years, including at an Amazon warehouse in New York City, a Chipotle store in Michigan and hundreds of Starbucks stores across the country. But many of them have not secured contracts.

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  • Denver’s janitors could go on strike for better wages and workloads 

    Denver’s janitors could go on strike for better wages and workloads 

    Eva Martinez has worked as a janitor in Denver for the past 30 years, much of that spent cleaning Republic Plaza, the tallest building in Colorado. 

    Before the pandemic, a group of 26 janitors cleaned the building’s 56 floors. Now, that staff is made up of just a dozen people.

    “We’ve just seen our workloads go up tremendously and we feel like we’re just not being respected or treated right,” Martinez said in Spanish through a translator. “We are essential workers. We don’t feel like we’re being treated that way.”

    That’s why Martinez is prepared to go on strike if necessary, alongside fellow members of Service Employees International Union Local 105. The union represents more than 2,400 janitorial workers in Denver. 

    The workers’ current contract expires on Sunday, which means union representatives are spending their days at the negotiating table with a number of companies that employ Denver’s janitors. 

    Maria Hernandez shouts, “Si se puede!” as she casts a vote with other local janitors to unionize, during a Service Employees International Union rally downtown. July 23, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    On Tuesday, union members voted unanimously that they would be willing to strike if the two parties do not reach a deal in time. Approval to strike does not necessarily mean workers will go on strike, but it gives the negotiating team leverage at the bargaining table if the two sides do not reach a deal.

    Tuesday morning, a few dozen janitors with SEIU gathered in downtown Denver to vote and drum up support for workers.

    The mood at 17th Street and California Street was joyous. Workers played music and shouted chants including, “Sí, se puede,” or “Yes you can,” a Spanish labor motto dating back to labor organizing on behalf of farm workers in the 1970s. 

    Surrounding the workers were some of Denver’s tallest buildings, many of which they personally have cleaned for years. Cars driving by honked in support of the janitors as people cast ballots. 

    According to union members, the two of the most important issues are wages and workload, plus concerns of retaliation or job loss if workers do not finish unrealistic workloads. 

    “I personally don’t think with what the companies are talking to us, what they’re offering us, any janitor will be able to live and work in Denver,” Martinez said in Spanish. “What they’re offering us truly is miserable, and that’s why I’m here and I’m standing strong with all my coworkers.”

    At the other side of the bargaining table is a group of employers that provide janitorial services to commercial buildings in Denver.

    John Nesse is a lawyer working on behalf of the employers organized in a group called Denver Maintenance Contractors Association. 

    “Our current agreement includes industry-leading wages and benefits, including health insurance and paid time off,” Nesse said in a statement to Denverite. 

    A group of people in purple shirts stand in front of purple tents on a city sidewalk.
    Service Employees International Union members rally with local janitors as they vote to unionize, at a picket line on California Street downtown. July 23, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    The union’s requests for pay, health care and paid time off increases would “add significant cost” for the employers in a turbulent economy for the commercial real estate industry, Nesse said in the statement.

    Commercial properties have struggled since the pandemic, with office vacancy rates continuing to rise downtown.

    “As we negotiate this contract, the employers are mindful of the economic challenges currently facing the Denver commercial office market,” Nesse wrote. “We are committed to negotiating an agreement in the mutual interest of all parties — including our employees, our customers, and our cleaning companies. We are disappointed that the union is threatening to strike, but we will continue to negotiate in good faith until a new agreement is reached.”

    Cost of living is a big concern for Denver’s janitors, many of whom make minimum wage. 

    Ruben Rivera has faced these challenges working as a janitor in Denver for nearly 20 years.

    “My family is constantly struggling to figure out just the basics,” Rivera said in Spanish through a translator. “We’re constantly having to decide, what can we do? Can we pay the rent? Can we be able to put food on the table?”

    Stephanie Felix-Sowy, president of SEIU Local 105, said that workers feel conditions and affordability have worsened in recent years. 

    A woman in a purple SEIU shirt smiles as she raises one fist and holds a protest over her head with her other hand. She's surrounded by people doing the same.
    Maria Hernandez (center) chants with Service Employees International Union members, as they rally and as local janitors like her vote to unionize. July 23, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    “I always ask my members this in every one of our contracts. ‘Would you refer this position to any of your family or friends?’” Felix-Sowy said. “That has changed over the last four or five years to where now they’re saying ‘No, I tell them to go look for work somewhere else. I used to, but that’s no longer the case.’”

    The advocacy is particularly important to Denver’s Latino community, Felix-Sowy said.

    “Ninety percent of our members are Latina immigrant women, predominantly, majority Spanish speaking,” she said. “Our members feel like they’re part of the fabric of the city. They’re part of the immigrant fabric, but just general fabric of the city, and they take a ton of pride in the fact that they have for decades now held up this industry.”

    As politicians talk about revitalizing downtown, janitors say they’re a crucial part of that goal and that their contract should reflect that.

    Multiple union members and supporters mentioned Mayor Mike Johnston’s State of the City from the day before. The mayor had talked about making downtown vibrant after a pandemic that left many office buildings and streets empty.

    Denver Clerk and Recorder Paul López stopped by Tuesday’s rally. He worked as a janitor in Denver and organized with the union before his election to City Council and later to the Clerk and Recorder’s Office. 

    A woman in a purple SEIU shirt smiles widely as she yells into a megaphone.
    Teresa Noriega yells into a megaphone, rallying with Service Employees International Union members as local janitors vote to unionize at a picket line on California Street downtown. July 23, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    “Yesterday I was sitting on the stage at the State of the City and I heard a lot of talk about downtown,” he said. “I heard a lot of talk about making downtown livable and safe and making it a downtown for all. It starts right here with making sure that janitors that are maintaining downtown and other workers from our community that are building downtown, that they could also afford to live here too.”

    López recalled cleaning concourses at Mile High Stadium in his teens, working 12 hour days without overtime and helping his father finish shifts without pay because the workload was too high. 

    “There’s always a fight not just to maintain the contract that you fought for years, since the eighties actually, but that you move that forward, that those conditions continue to improve” he said.

    Editor’s note: This article was updated with the results of Tuesday’s strike vote.

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  • Judge grants Wonderful’s request to halt UFW effort to unionize company’s workers

    Judge grants Wonderful’s request to halt UFW effort to unionize company’s workers

    After more than a month of deliberation, a Kern County Superior Court judge has sided with Wonderful Co. and issued a preliminary injunction that will temporarily halt a contentious bargaining process between the agricultural giant and the state’s largest farmworker union.

    In a ruling issued Thursday, Judge Bernard C. Barmann said Wonderful “was likely to prevail” in its legal challenge to the state’s relatively new system for organizing farmworkers and faced irreparable harm if the United Farm Workers is allowed to unionize the company’s nursery workers before the case is decided.

    “The court finds that the public interest weighs in favor of preliminary injunctive relief given the constitutional rights at stake in this matter,” Barmann wrote in the 21-page decision. Wonderful “has met its burden that a preliminary injunction should issue until the matter may be heard fully on the merits.”

    Wonderful, the $6-billion agricultural powerhouse owned by Stewart and Lynda Resnick, sued the state Agricultural Labor Relations Board in May, challenging the constitutionality of the state’s so-called card-check system, which Gov. Gavin Newsom signed into law in 2022. Under its provisions, a union can organize farmworkers by inviting them to sign authorization cards at off-site meetings, without notifying an employer, rather than voting by secret ballot at a designated polling place.

    Union organizers had pressed for the revised card-check law, contending the secret ballot process left workers fearful of retaliation from their employer.

    But Wonderful, whose portfolio includes such well-known brands as FIJI Water and POM Wonderful, alleges in its lawsuit that the law deprives employers of due process on multiple fronts. Among them: forcing a company to enter a collective bargaining agreement even if it has formally appealed the ALRB’s certification of a union vote and presented what it believes is evidence that the voting process was fraudulent.

    The temporary injunction marks the latest twist in a tumultuous dispute over the UFW’s unionization campaign at Wonderful Nurseries in Wasco, the nation’s largest grapevine nursery.

    In late February, the UFW filed a petition with the labor relations board, asserting that a majority of the 600-plus farmworkers at the nursery had signed authorization cards and asking that the UFW be certified as their union representative.

    Within days, Wonderful accused the UFW of having baited farmworkers into signing the authorization cards under the guise of helping them apply for $600 in federal relief for farmworkers who labored during the pandemic. And the company submitted nearly 150 signed declarations from nursery workers saying they had not understood that by signing the cards they were voting to unionize.

    The UFW countered that Wonderful had intimidated workers into making false statements and had brought in a labor consultant with a reputation as a union buster to manipulate their emotions in the weeks that followed.

    The ALRB acknowledged receiving the worker declarations from Wonderful; nonetheless, the regional director of the labor board moved forward three days later to certify the union’s petition. She has said in subsequent hearings that she felt she had to move quickly under the timeline laid out in the card-check law, and that at the time she did not think the statute authorized her to investigate allegations of misconduct.

    Wonderful appealed the ALRB’s certification.

    Under the provisions of the card-check law, the UFW’s efforts to bargain with the company on behalf of its nursery workers moved forward, even as Wonderful’s appeal of the certification works its way through the ALRB’s administrative hearing process. The ALRB issued a ruling last week ordering Wonderful to enter into a mandatory mediation process to establish a collective bargaining agreement.

    In its lawsuit, filed in May, Wonderful challenges the constitutionality of the card-check system on multiple fronts. Among them: that the company’s due process rights were violated when the labor board moved to certify the UFW’s petition before investigating the company’s allegations that the vote was fraudulent; and more broadly that the card-check system does not have adequate safeguards in place to ensure the veracity of the voting process.

    The company asked the judge to halt the unionization effort at its nursery, as well as the ALRB’s administrative hearing process, while the lawsuit moved forward in Kern County court.

    In a statement released Thursday evening, Rob Yraceburu, president of Wonderful Nurseries, said the company was “gratified” by the court’s decision to pause the certification process until the constitutionality of the card check law can be “fully and properly considered.”

    “In addition,” Yraceburu said, “farmworkers had been wrongly barred from objecting to a union being forced on them, and this ruling states that Wonderful indeed has the standing to fight to ensure those constitutional rights of farmworkers, including their due process and First Amendment rights, are not violated.”

    UFW spokesperson Elizabeth Strater countered that the ruling “ignores 89 years of labor law precedent” and indicated the decision to grant the injunction would be appealed.

    “There is already a process to address wrongdoing in elections and Wonderful was in the middle of that process. Why does Wonderful want to halt that process and silence workers so their voices are not heard?” Strater said. “It’s very clear Wonderful is determined to use its considerable resources to deny farmworkers their rights.”

    In a May 30 filing, the state had urged the court to deny Wonderful’s request for an injunction. California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta, arguing on behalf of the ALRB, said Wonderful had failed to demonstrate that the card-check law was causing “irreparable harm or any likelihood of deprivation of its rights.” Bonta also argued that the Superior Court lacked jurisdiction in the case.

    Santiago Avila-Gomez, executive secretary with the ALRB, said Thursday evening the agency is “reviewing the ruling carefully and won’t have further comment at this time.”

    The UFW, meanwhile, is pursuing its own legal action against Wonderful. The union has filed a formal complaint of unfair labor practices with the ALRB, accusing Wonderful of coercing workers into attending “captive audience” meetings to urge employees to reject UFW representation. ALRB General Counsel Julia Montgomery issued a complaint in April, similar to an indictment, alleging Wonderful committed unfair labor practices by unlawfully assisting them in drafting declarations to revoke their authorization cards.

    The company has largely denied the allegations.

    This article is part of The Times’ equity reporting initiative, funded by the James Irvine Foundation, exploring the challenges facing low-income workers and the efforts being made to address California’s economic divide.

    Melissa Gomez, Rebecca Plevin

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  • She raised three children working as a Denver janitor. Months before retiring, she’s ready to strike

    She raised three children working as a Denver janitor. Months before retiring, she’s ready to strike

    Shortly after Maria Hernandez came from Mexico to the United States in 1985, she got her first and only job in this country: working the night shift as a janitor.

    For nearly four decades, she cleaned 12 floors of a downtown Denver office building where the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment does business. 

    Now she plans to retire in a few months. 

    But first, she’s helping negotiate a contract for better wages, health care and retirement benefits for the more than 2,300 unionized janitors who work downtown. More than 90 percent of them are also Latina immigrants. 

    Janitors need more money and benefits to live in Denver, the union argues. But the city’s downtown office economy has taken a beating, and raising pay and benefits could be challenging in this market, their employers argue.

    For Hernandez, these fights are nothing new. 

    An early member of the Denver Justice for Janitors campaign, she has spent decades fighting for better working conditions and struggled for a higher minimum wage citywide.

    She’s marched in the streets, picketed and gone on strike. She was even arrested during a protest for “making too much noise,” she said in Spanish, and she’s proud of it.  

    Now, as her career comes to an end, Hernandez is willing to fight again if it means better working conditions for women like her, struggling to make enough money to raise families in this city, to pay rent and maybe even retire.  

    Working away from family, for unknown bosses

    Hernandez worked hard for her family, getting by on near-minimum wage earnings.

    She scrubbed toilets in dozens of bathrooms a day, threw out the trash, vacuumed the floors. She’s one of the longest-employed people in the building where she works, yet among those who get the least recognition and compensation. 

    She doesn’t know the people she works for. Not the bosses, not even most of the employees of the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment whose messes she tidies. 

    A view of the building that houses the Colorado Department of Labor downtown. June 14, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Her schedule makes her an invisible part of their lives. After all, the workers in the building are long gone, back home with their friends and families, when she’s getting started, making sure they have a nice place to conduct business.

    Over her 38-year career, she raised three children who all still live in Denver: one daughter who now works with people with disabilities, another who remodels pools and a son who works in a law firm. 

    While they were growing up, she’d leave her home in the Lincoln Park neighborhood for work before they’d get back from school. She would return from work while they were still asleep. 

    She lost precious time with her kids. 

    “It is difficult, but one needs to work to survive,” she told Denverite, standing outside the highrise she cleans before a Friday night shift in June. 

    These days, her kids tell her they’re grateful for the life she provided, even if it was hard for them to be apart from their mother so often.

    Now that retirement is approaching, can she afford it?

    Her family has lived in the same house for decades, though her kids have moved on. Her husband passed away recently, and she’s shouldering the bills on a paycheck that doesn’t match Denver’s cost of living. 

    And rent has gone up mightily. Her family paid roughly $500 in rent decades ago. Now, without her husband, she pays more than $2,000 a month. 

    After 35 years, Hernandez’s pay is just a little over a dollar higher than Denver’s minimum wage of $18.29.

    Maria Hernandez stands outside of the downtown building where she works as a janitor. June 14, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    On the eve of retirement, Hernandez is not certain she can afford to stay here. Denver’s too expensive, and she hasn’t been able to save enough to make it without working.  

    “It’s sad,” she said. 

    She’s considering moving to another state or even back to Mexico, where the cost of living is lower. But she’d hate to leave her kids. 

    “There you can own your own house,” she said. “Here you have to rent.”

    Her hours haven’t changed after all these years, but the workload has. 

    Since the pandemic, the downtown offices have emptied out. Many janitors lost their jobs. Hernandez was among those who stayed, shouldering extra work. 

    Even with lots of chatter about downtown coming back to life, the office buildings have not been restaffed to pre-pandemic levels. The janitors still employed have been doing extra labor without significant raises. 

    The work itself is tiring and, for some, dangerous. 

    “Many times the chemicals are very strong,” she said. “They give people allergic reactions. There are people who have been unable to work because of what the chemicals do.”

    What do the bosses do to help? 

    “It’s not important to the owners that the chemicals they give you make you sick or hurt you,” she said.

    Marching for better pay and benefits

    Hernandez was voted by more than 2,400 janitors in Service Employees International Union Local 105 to represent them in contract negotiations with multiple companies charged with keeping downtown offices clean, including CCS Facility Services, ABM and Master Klean. 

    The workers are demanding better pay, health insurance and retirement benefits. 

    The negotiations launched on June 17. Janitors marched alongside other SEIU members, labor activists and State Rep. Tim Hernandez.  

    “We know that when workers who are directly impacted have improved conditions that everything around them becomes improved,” Rep. Hernandez said to a cheering crowd.

    Tim Hernandez speaks into a microphone at a rally for janitors outside Union Station.
    Tim Hernandez speaks at an SEIU Local 105 rally for janitors, outside Union Station, on June 17, 2024.
    Kyle Harris / Denverite

    Stephanie Felix-Sowy, President of SEIU Local 105, said the group was fighting for higher wages, better health care benefits, and retirement packages.

    Discussions began Monday morning and were slated to continue until later in the day. 

    “With the growth in Denver, and with the kind of revitalization efforts in the downtown, our members feel like they’ve been left behind at this point,” Felix-Sowy said. “And so this is our opportunity to really concentrate on what are fair wages, competitive wages, where we can attract and retain folks in this industry.”

    Downtown office building owners have been struggling after the pandemic. 

    John Nesse, the attorney who represents the six companies united in negotiations under the name Denver Janitorial Contractors, says the city center’s commercial real estate market is hurting. 

    While he declined to comment on specific points in the negotiation, he suggested that the market isn’t favorable to expensive changes in the contracts. 

    “The Denver office market has a record high vacancy rate right now, and like a lot of office markets, it’s struggling,” Nesse said. “So we expect that that will have an impact on these negotiations.”

    A view of the building that houses the Colorado Department of Labor downtown. June 14, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    There are already eight meetings on the calendar between the union and Nesse. 

    “We’re very early in the process, and you know, our goal is to negotiate a contract that reflects the realities of the Denver market, and to do that in a way that ends with a handshake with the union and an agreement before the expiration of the contract,” he said.

    What’s next for contract negotiations

    While both parties hope to reach an amenable agreement by the contract’s expiration on July 28, that isn’t guaranteed. 

    Is Hernandez optimistic the contract will favor the janitors? 

    “Hopefully,” she said.

    If the contract expires and a deal hasn’t been struck, workers could walk off the job in protest — an outcome neither party wants. 

    But the union is ready to fight for the long haul for better wages and benefits. 

    “If the owners of the companies do not want to accept what the people are asking of them,” she said, “we are ready to go on strike.”

    Maria Hernandez, a Denver janitor, participates in an SEIU Local 105 rally outside Union Station, on June 17, 2024.
    Maria Hernandez, a Denver janitor, participates in an SEIU Local 105 rally outside Union Station, on June 17, 2024.
    Kyle Harris / Denverite

    Kyle Harris

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