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Tag: “contracting out”

CSEA/SEIU Local 2001 to Protest Scheme to Outsource Students' Health and Safety

By Kate Thomas on July 14, 2009 6:47 PM

Members of the CSEA/SEIU Local 2001 chapter that represents the Connecticut Windham Public Schools' food service workers will speak out against outsourcing food services at Board of Education public forum tonight.

The union members who provide food services in Windham's public schools are committed to providing the district's children with healthy, nutritious meals every day--while outside contractors are less accountable to the taxpayer and cut corners in food quality, nutrition and service."Our schools' cafeteria program does not need to make a profit, so we can focus exclusively on providing the best quality, nutritious meals to the kids," said Mary Jackson, manager of food services at Windham High School.

Reversing the history of poor labor-relations in this country has been a priority of SEIU for more than five years. Tonight's speak out will be the fourth time members have organized community opposition to contracting-out services to a private, for-profit corporation at a Board event since March 2009.

Tags: cafeteria workers, contracting out, contractors, CSEA/SEIU Local 2001, food quality, food service quality, food service workers, nutrition, windham public schools

Living wages are in Con Ed's Power

By Kate Thomas on July 6, 2009 4:39 PM
"I work at Con Ed, but need food stamps to get by....And with a monthly electricity bill of some $200. I feel that Con Ed is taking back whatever little I get paid."
     - Fernando Cruz, a maintenance worker who cleans the Manhattan offices of Con Edison, in Friday's NY Daily News

Fernando Cruz puts in 40 hour weeks at the Con Ed power plant at 14th St. and Avenue C in NYC. For his hard work, the father of two is paid $8.50 an hour, with no real health care and benefits. This results in a weekly take-home pay of around $300--not nearly enough pay his bills and support his family.

Fernando is one of more than 28 million people--about a quarter of the working-age workforce--who work full time yet still earn less than the income that marks the federal poverty line for a family of four: $9.04 per hour, a full-time salary of $18,800 a year. Although the 40-hour week is still considered the benchmark in American work culture, the fact is that working "9-to-5" for millions of low-wage workers doesn't result in financial compensation equaling that of a living wage...and so every day, workers like Fernando fall farther and farther behind.

Right now, the cleaning contractors Con Ed uses at its plants, offices and electrical substations across the city are Nelson Services, Apple Maintenance, T&T Cleaning and Janitorial, Accent Maintenance and Martinez Cleaning. SEIU 32BJ is demanding that Con Ed CEO Kevin Burke hire cleaning contractors that provide workers the wages and benefits they need to support their families. "What Con Ed is doing by not assuming responsibility [for the workers their contractors is promoting hunger wages," says 32BJ secretary-treasurer Héctor Figueroa.

Figueroa said the union has met with a VP of Con Ed to discuss the matter of contractors hired by the energy company not giving employees health benefits, sick leave or pensions, along with paying them only $8.50/hour. Their efforts were met with a "tough luck" response from the VP. "He told us that he was 'very sorry,' but that because these workers were not their employees, he didn't think this was Con Ed's problem," Figueroa reported to NY Daily News.

Tags: 32bj, benefits, con ed, con edison, contracting out, contractors, federal poverty line, healthcare, low-wage workers, nelson services, pensions, poverty wages, property services, seiu local 32bj, utilities, wages

Report shows NJ food service workers get low pay, few benefits

By Kate Thomas on May 8, 2009 5:24 PM

Thousands of school food service workers in New Jersey are living at or near poverty, according to a new report commissioned by SEIU Local 32BJ. The report found that the average hourly wage for food preparation workers in educational services was only $8.15, and revealed that many of these jobs pay no more than the NJ state minimum wage of $7.15.

Cafeteriaworker.jpgThe report, prepared by the Rutgers University Center for Women and Work/School of Management, ascertained that 64 percent of NJ K-12 school districts contract their food service to an outside company and that those private sector cafeteria jobs are largely part-time and typical offer with no affordable health benefits. As a result, most workers are uninsured or forced to turn to the state's public health insurance programs-- a result that contributes largely to the school food service industry acting as one of the biggest drains on New Jersey FamilyCare, as over 6,300 employees and their children covered by the taxpayer-funded state health assistance plan.

Tags: 32bj, cafeteria workers, Center for Women and Work at Rutgers, contracting out, food service workers, food services, health benefits, low wages, nutrition, outsourcing, public health insurance programs, public school food service workers, public schools, Rutgers University Center for Women and Work/School of Management, schools, seiu local 32bj

Continue reading Report shows NJ food service workers get low pay, few benefits .
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Service Employees International Union
Change to Win Federation USA | Canadian Labour Congress
1800 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20036
© SEIU | Privacy Policy