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Archive for the ‘From Utility Workers Union of America’ Category

Dying to Work

Stewart Acuff

By Stewart Acuff
Utility Workers Union of America, Chief of Staff and Assistant to the President

It is 9 pm on a very cold Philadelphia night as I sit down to write this. I’ve just returned from a closed casket viewing of my 19-year-old union brother Mark Keely who was blown up in a gas main explosion three nights ago. Three other union members of his work crew were burned from head to toe.

Brother Mark was 19 and had been on the job just five months.

Death and horrible injury is a daily possibility for members of the Utility Workers Union of America. Our members are the first of the first responders cutting off the electricity and gas so firefighters and police officers can so their jobs.

No one knows how many lives Brother Keely and his crew saved with their ultimate sacrifice. (more…)

The Chamber of Commerce is Illegally Using Foreign Corporations’ Money

Stewart Acuff

By Stewart Acuff
Special Assistant to the President, AFL-CIO

Its has now been reported by several sources that the Chamber of Commerce is using funds from foreign corporations to try to affect American politics and the November elections.

Wonder why foreign corporations would want to defeat Democrats in the US? Top 10 Reasons Foreign Corporations Support Republicans:

–to keep trade deals unfair to workers here and around the world

–to continue to get good paying US manufacturing jobs offshored

–to stop the development of green energy so that we continue to spend billions on Mideast oil

–to continue to allow corporations like British Petroleum to exploit US natural resources and pollute our environment

–to weaken US unions so they can treat parts of the US like the developing world

–to keep the US buying imports from around the world rather than re-develop US manufacturing

–to continue receiving secret technology such as that used in military arms manufacuting

–to dismantle Social Security and turn the fund over to Wall St to be gambled with all over the world

–to continue to allow US drug corporations to sell medicine developed here more cheaply in other countries than in the US

–to continue economic treason

The Chamber of Commerce has bragged that it is spending $75 million to defeat Democrats but they won’t say where the money comes from. Now we know.

***

Prior to working for the UWUA, Stewart Acuff served as director of organizing for the AFL-CIO beginning in October, 2002. He has been a community organizer and union organizer for 25 years, except for a brief stint as a truck driver. In 1982, he joined the union movement as the organizing coordinator for the Service Employees International Union in Texas. In 1985, he became executive director of the Georgia State Employees Union/SEIU Local 1985. Acuff was elected president of the Atlanta Labor Council in 1991, where he served for nine years. In 2000, he joined the AFL-CIO staff as deputy director of field mobilization for the Midwest region. He served as deputy director of organizing from 2001 until becoming director. He is a member of the Federal Reserve Bank Advisory Council and the National Steering Committee of Jobs with Justice.

Corporate America Offshoring More Jobs in Economic Crisis

Stewart Acuff

By Stewart Acuff
Chief of Staff and Assistant to the President,
Utility Workers Union of America

Just a week ago I had the honor of being in Mt. Vernon, Indiana for a major protest against the closing of a large Whirlpool factory that had employed 1,200 people so they could move the work to Mexico.

In Minnesota, Polaris snowmobiles announced they are closing their factory in Osceola to move that work to Mexico.

Both these decisions made by Corporate America and our Financial Elite during the worst economic crisis and highest unemployment since the Great Depression 70 years ago.

These totally unjustifiable decisions reinforce the fact that the free market isn’t free, that free trade isn’t free, that the invisible hand of the market is a myth and that unregulated, de-regulated capitalism ultimately only works for the Financial Elite. (more…)

BP’s Spewing Oil Best Argument for Climate Change Legislation

Stewart Acuff

Mike Langford

By Mike Langford
President,
Utility Workers Union of America

And

Stewart Acuff
Chief of Staff and Assistant to the President,
Utility Workers Union of America

With the oil continuing to spew out of BP’s hole in the floor of the Gulf of Mexico and with Israel’s assault on those who would provide aid to blockaded Gaza, the continuing rise of sea levels and melting of the Polar ice cap and climate patterns changing; it is beyond debate that we must move to green energy generation on a much larger and faster scale and pace and reduce the amount of carbon emitted in our air and the amount of fossil fuels that we consume.

This is no longer a debate about wildlife or nature or natural beauty or the environment. This is now a question of human sustainability, national security, and economic justice.

Just look at the Gulf. We are watching the economic devastation of a whole region of our country–the economic destruction of coastal regions from Louisiana to Florida and maybe all the way to North Carolina’s Outer Banks. We are watching the destruction of a way of life and human culture as old as the story of Evangeline.

We know that a serious commitment to climate change legislation will result in the creation of as many as 2 million good-paying, family-sustaining jobs.

All this is why we at the Utility Workers Union of America are so pleased that the American Power Act has been introduced in the US Senate by Senators John Kerry and Joe Lieberman.

THIS IS THE ONLY VIABLE, REAL JOBS CREATING BILL CURRENTLY IN THE US CONGRESS.

It is not perfect. But there is time and opportunity to improve it.

The legislation will spur investment in solar energy creation and wind energy generation. Maybe most importantly the legislation will reduce carbon emissions 4% by 2013, 17% by 2020, 42% by 2030, and 83% by 2050. Capping carbon emissions will create the incentives for America to cultivate its clean energy economy. Without the certainty of true emissions reduction we cannot achieve our environmental goals nor maximum job creation.

We need to both mandate and invest in green energy generation and energy efficiency improvements.

We must update our electricity grid and transmission lines–commonly called power lines–to accommodate wind and solar and to stop line loss.

Manufacturing investments are needed to make sure we have the products and components necessary in the clean energy economy, especially including the transmission sector as we move to update the grid.

The American Power Act provides funds directly for manufacturing projects that include advanced transmission technologies that support renewable technologies, and advancements in industrial efficiency, which will require, among other things, the improvement of industrial facilities’ ability to interact with the grid and inproving transmission. In addition, the APA provides funds for clean vehicle technology, greatly increasing the number of electric vehicles and furthering the need to significantly update our nation’s grid.

It is imperative that Congress move immediately to improve and pass comprehensive climate change legislation for our environment, our economy, our national security, and our future.

***

Michael Williams helped with research for this blog.

Rebuilding America’s Industrial Jobs and Manufacturing Capacity

Stewart Acuff

Stewart Acuff

By Stewart Acuff
Chief of Staff and Assistant to the President,
Utility Workers Union of America

Any student in any beginning economics class soon learns that the way a nation or a society creates wealth is by making things or building things other people want to buy and are willing to pay for.

The Financial Elite figure out one way for them to maximize their wealth and power is to use poor people with no power in places like China and Indonesia to build things and sell them back to America.

To re-create Middle Class jobs, to get back to creating wealth by making things, to stop the Financial Elite from forcing American workers to compete with slave labor in China and child labor in parts of Latin America and Asia we have to restore common sense rules governing imports and exports. Our government must provide incentives for investments in domestic manufacturing and disincentives for oppressing workers in America and across the developing world.

We have to get back to creating wealth again not by manipulating money in ways that only benefit the Financial Elite.

American workers are some of the most skilled and productive workers in the world. We can build what we need here, what we use here. We can build and make here what other people need. We don’t have to import cheap goods and export good jobs.

But it will take government and action by all of us. It will take a government willing to negotiate trade deals that protect workers rights and freedoms, that honor unions, that outlaw exploitation of workers here and abroad. If our government can negotiate trade deals that protect the investments of the Financial Elite, it can negotiate trade deals that protect the economic security of the United States and its people.

Our government also needs to provide incentives to re-develop manufacturing in the United States. Countries with a strong Middle Class and higher wages than we have and lower unemployment have government policies to encourage domestic or home-grown manufacturing and production and discourage worker exploitation. Countries like Canada and Germany and Sweden and Denmark and Brazil and South Africa are growing or maintaining a Middle Class by investing in and providing incentives for domestic manufacturing. These governments work with businesses and unions to protect Middle Class jobs and to protect investment internally.

When Europe came together to create a unified economic system, the European Union, they did it in a way to raise the standard of living in Portugal and Spain, not lower the standard of living in Germany and Sweden. We have been doing just the opposite.

When the United States entered World War II we took the manufacturing capacity that had been created in Chicago and Detroit and Flint and Toledo and Akron and Pittsburgh and turned it to manufacturing the munitions and tanks and rifles and planes that the allies used to defeat Nazism, Fascism, and Japanese Imperialism.

Not just our economic security but our national security demands we re-build our ability to create wealth and to protect the economic and national security of the United States.

What’s Good for the Environment is Good for the Economy

Stewart Acuff

Stewart Acuff

By Stewart Acuff
Chief of Staff and Assistant to the President,
Utility Workers Union of America

Our economy is mired in the worst crisis we’ve had since the Great Depression. The one seemingly insurmountable barrier to reviving the economy is the lack of consumer demand caused by 30 years of stagnant and declining wages and now rising unemployment.

At the same time there is growing awareness that our continued reliance on fossil fuel energy generation is bad for our climate, bad for our economy, is ultimately unsustainable, and is harmful to our nation’s security and future. More and more Americans realize that unless we maximize the use of sustainable, domestic sources of energy, our future is threatened.

So we have arrived at the intersection of what is good for the economy is what is good for the environment. We realize now that there is not an inherent conflict between good jobs and a healthy climate and environment. In fact good jobs and a healthy environment complement one another.

It is very hard for the average worker to care about the environment if s/he is worried about how to provide dinner for the family or pay the rent on Friday.

Moving to sustainable energy generation means, among other things, wind farms in the natural wind tunnel through the heart of America, solar farms in the Southwest, installing solar panels, weatherization, retrofitting buildings, domestic manufacturing, carbon capture and sequestration for coal, and more.

Altogether we believe this work could create as many as 2 million good paying, middle class producing jobs.

It is critical that we are very intentional about how we create these jobs to ensure that they maximize the benefit to the economy and maximize the political constituencies they attract by pumping good wages into the pockets of working families to create more consumer demand and provide benefits essential to healthy families. These jobs must pay prevailing wages. Good jobs, a healthy environment, sustainable work, sustainable economy, sustainable environment. Now is the time.

Dr. King and the Struggle for Economic Justice

Stewart Acuff Stewart Acuff

By Stewart Acuff
Chief of Staff and Assistant to the President, Utility Workers Union of America
This Monday the nation will pause for a minute to celebrate the birthday, life, work, and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King.

All through this three day weekend we will see ads on tv, read them in newspapers, and hear ads on the radio with corporate America thanking Dr. King for his incredible efforts to free African-Americans and fight racial injustice.

 

But corporate America will stop far short of the whole story. Those ad won’t say anything about Dr. King’s struggle for economic and social justice. They won’t say anything about the Poor People’s Movement and Dr. King’s effort and determination to end poverty in America.

And corporate America won’t say anything about Dr. King’s support for unions and for the freedom to form unions and bargain collectively.

Dr. King was killed in Memphis, Tennessee on April 4, 1968 while leading a sanitation workers strike to have their union recognized by their employer and win collective bargaining.

Dr. King marched with workers at the Scripto strike in Atlanta and his Southern Christian Leadership Conference worked hard to help hospital workers organize with 1199 in Charleston, South Carolina.

At the 1961 AFL-CIO convention Dr. King said:” Our needs are identical with labor’s needs–decent wages, fair working conditions, livable housing, old age security, health can welfare measures, conditions in which families can grow, have education for their children and respect in the community. That is why the labor-hater and labor-baiter is virtually always a twin-headed creature spewing anti-Negro epithets from one mouth and anti-labor propaganda for the other mouth. I dream of equality of opportunity, of privilege and property widely distributed; a dream of a land where men will not take necessities from the many to give luxuries to the few.”

On this Dr. King Day, tell your senator to support the Employee Free Choice Act. Dr. King’s dream has been defered but we can still fulfill it.

A Decade of Disaster for Workers

 

Stewart Acuff Stewart Acuff

 By Stewart Acuff
Chief of Staff of the Utility Workers Union of America

A front page story in the Jan. 2 issue of the Washington Post gives a damning report on George Bush’s economic policy and what happened to our country during the last decade, the decade of the aughts.

Put succinctly, the decade was a disaster for America’s working families.

  • Zero job growth in the last decade when every previous for 60 years had job growth of at least 20 percent.
  • Not stagnant but declining income for working and middle class families.
  • And declining net worth or family wealth–despite substantial growth in productivity.

You have to hope that Lawrence Summers and the economic team at the White House are reading the Post.

You cannot grow the economy from the top. You must have broadly shared prosperity.

As the Post put it: “Capital was funneled to build mini-mansions in the Sun Belt, many which now sit empty, rather than toward industrial machines or other business investment that might generate economic output and jobs for years to come.”

The prescription for a policy of broadly shared prosperity is clear:

  • Pass the Employee Free Choice Act to allow workers to freely form unions and bargain for a fair and greater share of the wealth they create and the productivity they generate.
  • Reform health care. Take the system from the grip of insurance companies, create a large public plan to make sure everyone is covered and to compete with the insurance companies–and do not tax the benefits of working families. Force every employer to provide health care for their workers.
  • Invest now, immediately in sustainable energy–wind farms, solar farms and small scale solar energy generation. Make sure all elements of new energy generation are produced here with wages that can sustain middle class lifestyles. No more impoverishing our own people. That means wind turbines built here, not in China, erected here by union operations. Power lines and a new electricity grid erected by members of the Utility Workers Union.
  • Create a real industrial policy and investment incentives and re-think trade policy to re-create an American manufacturing base so we get back to creating wealth instead of borrowing it.