Thursday, October 26, 2006

Walking the Line With Mesaba's Unions

Today I took a day off of work and spent it walking a picket line with the Mesaba Labor Coalition, which includes the Air Line Pilots Association, the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA and the Aircraft Mechanics Fraternal Association. There were about 150 people protesting Judge Kishel's ruling outside of the federal courthouse in Minneapolis. There were Teamsters like myself, as well as UAW workers from the Ford plant in St. Paul, people from the Restaurant Workers Union and pilots from Northwest and other airlines, and probably others I didn't recognize.

Why? I don't work for Mesaba. How does this affect me? It affects all working Americans! The right to strike is a fundamental of the labor movement. Judge Kishel voided the union's contracts with Mesaba. Then when Mesaba stated they wanted the unions to cut their wages by 17.5% the unions threatened to strike. Judge Kishel then decided they could not strike! What would happen to a union worker if they disobeyed this ruling? They could be jailed! Let me paint the picture crystal clear. The government voids your contract, your bosses say they're cutting your wages, and the government further strengthens management's hand by threatening to jail you if you don't go to work! This has to be stopped in it's tracks. The right to strike is not some privilege granted by the government. It's what working men and women do when they've had enough.

Working people understand tough times and having to tighten belts. However those cuts need to be negotiated. If the employees need to cut back, then so does management. The sacrifice needs to be equitable. Too many time we see employees taking pay cuts and management getting bonuses. The right to strike is a great equalizer. Judge Kishel wrongfully took that right away leaving management in total control.

In 1886 union members died in the Haymarket Riot in Chicago fighting for the eight hour day. Even the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution reads, Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction. If judge Kishel's ruling doesn't equate to involuntary servitude, I don't know what does.

Being a union member is about more then just our bargaining unit. It's about securing living wages and good benefits for all workers. We must stand together or be picked off alone. We've had two decades of the government and companies telling workers they didn't need unions. What did we get? Jobs being outsourced to other countries. Good paying union jobs being replaced by Walmarts paying substandard wages with no benefits. We've seen small raises being out paced by rising health insurance costs. All while the health insurance executives walk away with billion dollar umbrellas. Now today we have federal judges ruling workers can't strike even when their contract has been voided. It is time for America's workers to wake up, organize and fight back.

One final note. At todays rally I saw not one politician. Not one of these politicians asking for, or touting the Labor Endorsement. Listen up, the Labor Endorsement doesn't just mean free mailings. It means you stand with us. If you don't, we'll find people who do!

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