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Aldermen, community leaders and workers call out Bank of America for approving $4 billion for executive bonuses - the equivalent of 175,000 tellers' jobs

GoodJobsChicagoRally.JPGOn Sunday afternoon, over 3,000 janitors and community supporters crowded into the historic Chicago Theater and then marched to LaSalle Street in an effort to call attention to low-wage workers struggling to keep afloat in a time when corporate CEOs are still getting bonuses.

SEIU Local 1 janitors and other rally participants spoke about bailed-out banks--such as Bank of America--who paid huge bonuses to well-compensated executives at the same time they were eliminating jobs in the working- and middle-class sectors. "Instead of using taxpayer money to save jobs, Bank of America approved $4 billion for executive bonuses," said Urszula Przybys, a downtown janitor. "Those executives are secure and we're barely making it. They are not even being asked to take responsibility for the mess they created, but we're paying for their mistakes."

With $4 billion, Bank of America could have created nearly 175,000 jobs at an average bank teller's annual salary of $22,901. "Communities need good jobs, not more money put into pockets of the richest Americans and big corporations," said Tom Balanoff, President of SEIU Local 1.

ChicagoJanitorsRally_SEIULocal1.JPGChicago janitors work hard to keep our community's buildings, schools and public areas sanitary, cleaning the equivalent of nearly 33,000 miles of office space every night. They work hard in a relatively thankless job with few perks, as they struggle to pay their mortgages and create a better life for their children. "We need to send a strong message that janitors deserve a living wage and better benefit," Alderman Ricardo Munoz told the audience during the Chicago Theater event.

According to the EPI, the average Chicago janitor makes $23,400 a year--not nearly enough to meet the cost of living for a family of four in the Chicago area. "We know it's tough times," said SEIU Local 1 spokeswoman Erica Hade to the Chicago Sun-Times. "Everybody is struggling. Working people are struggling to pay their mortgages and make ends meet. But we think there needs to be a partnership between everyone who's hurting to try to get our economy back on track."

The rally occurs as nearly 15,000 SEIU Local 1 janitors begin contract negotiations with the Building Owners and Managers Association (BOMA) of Chicago in a few days' time. Their union contract expires April 5. A second rally is scheduled for March 5 at the Fifth Third Bank in Schaumburg--stay tuned for more details later in the week.

Watch video coverage from the event here :

(video courtesy of Progress Illinois)

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