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Dumping on public workers is so “common sense” these days that even a few fellow unionists are piling on. The head of the New York City building trades council joined a business-backed group formed to attack public unions.
During this holiday break it’s inspiring to remember that sometimes it’s those with least who are doing the most to fight for the ideals that many of us will celebrate in the coming days.
Last summer’s spontaneous auto worker strikes in China reverberated throughout the country and overseas. Will they rejuvenate Chinese unions?
A billionaire gang headed by Bill Gates and Eli Broad wants to convert America’s public schools, with its $600 billion in annual public expenditures according to the Department of Education, into a corporate-owned test-score factory. Their plan faces teacher resistance, and nowhere more so than...
With all the venom directed at public employees these days, it’s hard to separate the facts from the attacks. Here’s a guide to common claims made about government spending, taxes, and public employees.
Honda workers at a Mexican factory felt compelled to wear bags over their faces to ward off reprisals from management as they announced their new union. But today management fired the new union's leader. Help is requested.
In what advocates called “a stunning win” for workers across New York state, outgoing Governor David Paterson has signed a law that escalates penalties against thieving employers and protects workers who stand up against wage theft at their jobs.
Sandy Pope is running for president of the Teamsters against James Hoffa. She needed 34,000 members to sign petitions to make her an accredited candidate and get access to the membership list and the Teamster magazine.
In a move to save factory jobs that evokes shades of the ’30s, the United Electrical Workers planned mass picketing this month to blockade the doors of a shuttered factory to stop the auction of its machines.
Passenger rail projects in Wisconsin and Ohio are dead, and Florida’s is on the chopping block, as incoming Republican governors turn away hundreds of millions of dollars of federal money—and the jobs they would generate.
President Obama finalized the largest trade deal since NAFTA on December 3. It looks like he cut and pasted the same corporate-friendly script he inherited from previous administrations, Democrat and Republican alike.
They’re calling it Obama’s PATCO—his proposal for a two-year wage freeze for two million federal workers. When Ronald Reagan fired 13,000 striking PATCO members, the air traffic controllers, in August 1981, he sent a signal to other employers that it was open season on unions—and the era of...
The drugstore chain Rite Aid is in financial straits and has escalated its assaults on unionized employees, demanding dramatic health care cost increases. In response, workers from California to New York raised protests at 40 stores on December 15.
Stewards encounter a raft of tricky situations when defending workers against discipline. What counts as disparate treatment? Are anonymous complaints grounds for discipline? Do "zero tolerance" policies trump the contract? Here are some crystal-clear guidelines, excerpted from a forthcoming...
Teamster bus attendants in NY have a contract that pays new hires less than minimum wage. Through group grievances, leafleting, and legal action, they’re demanding their rights from the boss—and the union.