SEIU - Service Employees International Union, CTW, CLC

seiu.org TAKE ACTION Stay Informed: Register for email updates. SIGN UP
  • Blog
  • Healthcare
  • Property
  • Public
  • Our Union
  • Members
  • Join Us
  • Get Local
  • Press
  • en espaƱol
  • Blog
  • Our Union
  • Press
  • Moreexpand
  • Healthcare
  • Property
  • Public
  • Members
  • Join Us
  • Get Local
  • En Español

Tag: “employees”

Big banks & U.S. Chamber of Commerce join forces to tank financial reform

By Kate Thomas on July 7, 2009 9:20 PM

Bonuses, bailouts, and a broken system: Is this the America in which big banks and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce believe in?

The Washington Post reports today that Chamber and the banking industry are intensifying their lobbying efforts against financial reform. Recognizing their parallel efforts to fund campaigns against working families, the unappetizing alliance of big bank executives, credit card and financial services companies is joining forces to intensify their lobbying efforts against financial reform. "It's no surprise that the U.S. Chamber and the big banks that drove our economy into the ground are joining forces to defend a failed financial model that enriches CEOs at the expense of shareholders, workers, and our economy," commented SEIU's Anna Burger, on efforts to block the Consumer Financial Protection Agency proposed by President Obama.

Obama's proposed agency would oversee a range of financial products, from mortgages to credit cards and checking and savings accounts to guard against anti-consumer sales practices and fight for needed reforms to protect front-line bank workers and consumers. The coalition fighting the Obama consumer agency plan views their efforts to protect those on the receiving end of multi-billion-dollar taxpayer bailouts as simply "allowing the financial services industry to serve its customers in the best way possible." Um, U.S. taxpayers who've been forced to subsidize banks' bad behavior with billions of their hard-earned money might not agree. The coalition's prescription for financial reform to make their case so far include rebranding the same reckless policies that will drive families deeper into debt and launching a massive PR campaign to scare Americans with 'Harry and Louise' style TV ads.

BofA "encourages" its employees to help consumers rack up debt

This comes a week after current and former Bank of America workers stepped forward to expose harmful anti-consumer practices by the bank that encourage customers to sign up for high-interest-rate credit and cash advance services to max out customer credit, as well as structuring a variety of check and debit card services resulting in overdraft fees and other charges. A former BofA employee from Landover Hills, MD, Gabby Inaleis, said that although initially she thought she was taking financial services job, it didn't take very long to realize BofA had no interest in helping customers reach their financial goals. Under constant pressure from her manager to meet unrealistic sales goals (example: sell at least 40 checking accounts every Friday), Gabby reported she would often sell multiple checking accounts to clients that didn't need them by offering to waive the account fees for a couple of months. "It became standard practice to make a customer who wasn't planning on opening an account wait for up to an hour to speak with a personal banker," she says.

No employee bonuses until grandmothers everywhere are penniless (and cold): Among the former bank workers who spoke out was Chris Feener, an ex-employee with 15 years' experience in the industry who worked in BofA's collections department. The department's #1 priority, said Chris, was to collect payment from customers who hadn't made a payment on their credit card for 180 days--no matter the cost. "There was a time I was encouraged to tell an elderly woman to sell her stove and cook on a Bunsen burner to pay off her credit card debt that [the bank] had inflated over time," said Chris.

The questionable practices BofA employees were made to engage in to ensure their jobs were safe didn't stop there, for Chris and his coworkers. "In 2007 when BofA's numbers were particularly low, we were given scripts to read on our customers' answering machines, threatening to sue them or collect any assets they had if they didn't," he said. "It was called the Maxwell message, and for three months straight we used that method, forcing customers needlessly to file for bankruptcy."

And that's not all! Enter more violations of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act Chris says he and his team members were pushed to do if a customer had a delinquent account: publicly humiliate the customer to shame them into paying. "We were required to call every customers neighbor on every account--the sole purpose was to embarrass the customer and encourage the neighbor to personally bring a phone note to the neighbor to deliver the messages for us."

The BofA bank workers who shared their stories all acknowledged they felt as though the practices like the ones described above were unethical. But one should not underestimate how powerful the pressure to "sell, sell, sell" can be when it comes from a person of authority, like one's manager--or an entire institution (like Bank of America). Without any real whistleblower protections, most workers are too afraid to speak up for fearing of losing their job--something no one supporting themselves in this dismal economy can afford to chance.

SEIU, U.S. PIRG and the National Association of Consumer Advocates have outlined new protections to ensure front-line bank workers can speak out and create a financial industry that puts consumers and the health of our overall economy ahead of quick profits for bank executives. Read them here. "It's clear that big bank executives and the U.S. Chamber will stop at nothing to stand in the way of real solutions for our economy," says Anna Burger. "That's why it's more important than ever that bank workers be a part of any financial reform package."

Tags: anna burger, bailouts, bank of america, bank workers, bankers, banks, big banks, bofa, CEOs, chamber, chris feener, consumer financial protection agency, credit cards, employees, executive bonuses, Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, financial reform, gabby inaleis, national association of consumer advocates, seiu, taxpayers, u.s. pirg, us chamber of commerce, whistleblower protections, working families

Sharing Responsibility, Ditching the Chamber

By Jessica Kutch on June 30, 2009 8:05 PM

The Chamber of Commerce's veneer of unity on health care is beginning to fade.

In the latest blow to the Chamber's "Just Say No!" strategy on health care reform, Wal-Mart joined with SEIU and the Center for American Progress today in announcing support for an employer mandate on health coverage.

An excerpt of the letter is below:

As the nation's largest private employer, the nation's largest union of health care workers with over one million members, and a think tank that has been a leader on health care policy...we are coming together to advance what we believe are important proposals that should be included in the current efforts to reform our nation's health care system.

[...] We are for shared responsibility. Not every business can make the same contribution, but everyone must make some contribution. We are for an employer mandate which is fair and broad in its coverage... Support for a mandate also requires the strongest possible commitment to rein in health care costs. Guaranteeing cost containment is essential.

Read the full letter here.

Read coverage of this letter, here. Praise from the White House Office of Health Reform on this strong support for health care reform--including an employer mandate--here.

Tags: businesses, cap, center for american progress, chamber, chamber of commerce, employees, employer mandate, employer-based healthcare, employers, health care costs, healthcare reform, seiu, u.s. chamber of commerce, wal-mart, walmart

10 Questions to Ask Bank of America CEO Ken Lewis at House Testimony on Disastrous Merrill Lynch Purchase

By Michael Whitney on June 11, 2009 9:15 AM

20090610email-lewis.jpgAhead of Bank of America CEO Ken Lewis' testimony before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, we put together the top ten questions that employees, consumers, taxpayers and shareholders would like reporters and legislators to ask Ken Lewis.

"SEIU hopes members of the Committee are as tough on Ken Lewis as we would be if we could get him under oath and the bright lights," said SEIU Secretary-Treasurer Anna Burger.

Here are the top 10 questions to ask Bank of America CEO Ken Lewis:

  1. How can you commit to pay for former Countrywide CEO Angelo Mozilo's legal defense--"a million a month" according to Bloomberg--while Bank of America announced layoffs for 35,000 employees and refuses cost-of-living raises for its lowest-wage workers?

  2. Why do you nickel and dime your lowest paid workers (tellers earn $10.50/hour without access to affordable health insurance) at the same time you shower lavish perks and deals for executives and traders?

  3. As Bank of America employees speak out about unpaid overtime and a predatory sales culture, what do you plan to do to improve employment practices?

  4. 4. Given dismal economic performance, low-staff morale, and a core business model of pushing debt on consumers, what has Bank of America done to meet its stated goal of being "the world's most admired company?"

  5. After reportedly receiving tax breaks, and more than $195 billion in bailouts, government guarantees, and taxpayer-funded healthcare for its workers, what is Bank of America's plan to reduce its dependence on the U.S. taxpayer?

  6. After being bailed out by hard-working taxpayers facing the toughest economic times since the Great Depression, do you think it's right for Bank of America to lobby against laws that would helps working families--like the Employee Free Choice Act, healthcare reform, and credit card reform?

  7. As you argue against any laws that would create greater transparency in the industry, could you tell us what other calamities on your books you are hiding? First it was the Merrill Lynch deal--what's the next shoe to drop?

  8. During your time as CEO, at what point did cutting costs and gouging customers with unnecessary products and skyrocketing fees become more important than customer satisfaction?

  9. At a time when people are struggling, have you considered lowering banking and overdraft fees that are already higher than many other non-bailed-out banks?

  10. Why do you create incentives for Bank of America employees to push further debt on customers?
"Ken Lewis was at the center of Bank of America's disastrous 'bigger at any cost' model of banking," said SEIU Secretary Treasurer Anna Burger. "Today, as Bank of America stock prices have dropped by more 90 percent and after the bank received access for up to $195 billion in taxpayer bailout funds, workers, consumers and taxpayers are footing the bill for Ken Lewis' failed gamble."

"Now, Bank of America workers have started speaking out and demanding change. Enough is enough. It's time for Bank of America and Ken Lewis to do what's right and spell out steps to become a partner for America's families instead of a toxic asset."

Tags: bank of america, bofa, ceo ken lewis, consumers, employees, house committee on oversight and government reform, ken lewis, shareholders, taxpayers, testimony

This Weekend, Join Nebraska's Union Freedom Ride

By Rafael Noboa Rivera on May 27, 2009 12:22 PM
feature-NE-freedomride.jpg

Tags: employee free choice act, employees, nebraska, union growth, unions

How (Not) to Join a Union

By Brad Levinson on May 5, 2009 1:37 PM

Ever wonder how, exactly unions are formed? The Center for American Progress is out with a new video that explains the process step-by-step.

Watch it here:

The main point of the video is simple: it's really, really hard to join a union. Only one in seven union drives will ultimately reach a point where they get a first contract within a year.

Here's the gist:

When a group of co-workers decide that they want to form a union, they sign cards that say they'd like to join. The process continues until at least 30% of the employees sign the cards, but most unions wait until around 50% or even 70% of employees sign them, for reasons that will become clear in just a moment.

At this point, the boss gets to make a choice. If the signed cards totals 50% plus one, then the employer can choose to recognize the union, since there's a majority. We call that "majority signup."

But if the boss chooses not to recognize the union through majority signup, they have a second option - even though a majority have said they want a union, forcing a process called the "secret ballot."

This is what the Employee Free Choice Act is all about: we want employees to make the choice, not their bosses.

In a secret ballot election, the boss gets to decide how, when and under what conditions the process is held. Many employers use the "secret ballot" method as a way to drag the process out. This election can be delayed for weeks, months, even years - enough time to scare employees into changing their minds.

During a "secret ballot" election, here's what a typical employee might face:

  • 91% of the time, workers experience one-on-one meetings with their bosses, who may threaten anything from changing their hours, shipping their job overseas, or even closing down the company completely.
  • In 82% of cases, workers may be observed or receive visits from union-busting public relations firms and lawyers.
  • In 25% of cases, employees are illegally fired during the course of trying to join a union.
  • 40% of the time, there's simply never a vote.
The Employee Free Choice Act gives employees - not CEOs - the free choice to join unions. It's designed, not to stifle your rights, but to level the playing field so that it's the workers who get to decide: they can choose to organize under either the majority signup method, or the secret ballot method.

Tags: employee free choice act, employees, employer intimidation tactics, forming a union, secret ballots, union, union drives, unions

By Rafael Noboa Rivera on April 20, 2009 3:41 PM

Tags: employee free choice act, employees, freedom ride, freedom to form unions, Nebraska, union support

Nebraska, not DC

By Ryan Anderson on April 15, 2009 1:30 PM

Now, in my experience, there aren't that many cherry blossoms in Nebraska this time a year. Or statues of Civil War generals. Or, uh, White Houses.

But for whatever reason, that's the backdrop the Chamber of Commerce has chosen for their new anti-Employee Free Choice Act attack ad in the state, an ad whose theme of is supposedly "You can't let Washington tell Nebraskans what to do."

As it so happens, I agree with that message. And so do a great number of Nebraskans who are speaking out on behalf of the Employee Free Choice Act:

Tags: ads, chamber of commerce, employee free choice act, employees, nebraska

Continue reading Nebraska, not DC.

The Employee Free Choice Act: What's At Stake

By Keith Kelleher, president of SEIU Healthcare Illinois & Indiana on January 5, 2009 1:50 PM

SEIU Leader Shares First-hand Experiences Trying to Organize Detroit Fast Food Workers in the 1980s

In 1980, the United Labor Unions set out to organize employees at Detroit fast food chains in the hopes of sparking a nationwide movement to unionize the workforce in this fast-growing industry. As a rookie organizer working on the campaign, I learned firsthand what is at stake when workers stand up for better wages, healthcare, and a voice on the job.

We started with a Burger King franchise in Detroit's Greyhound station. While the drive was a challenge, the spark spread between employees as they encouraged each other to join the union and stand up to their managers. Greyhound Food Management ran a tough campaign to keep workers from organizing -- threatening some, making promises to others -- but didn't succeed. By a margin of just one vote, the Burger King employees opted to create a union.

Encouraged by our victory, we shifted our focus to three McDonald's franchises on Detroit's North Side. The employees were struggling with all kinds of issues -- minimum wage violations, sexual harassment, unfair scheduling, and health and safety issues ranging from grill burns to meat slicer injuries. Fed up and fired up, they decided to organize a union and won overwhelming support from their co-workers. Nothing could stop them.

Or so they thought.

Tags: anti-union campaign, better wages, burger king, economic crisis, employee free choice act, employees, employer intimidation tactics, employer threats, fast food restaurants, healthcare, legislation, low-wage workers, mcdonald's, mcdonalds, misleading information, seiu, SEIU Healthcare Illinois & Indiana, union, voice on the job

Continue reading The Employee Free Choice Act: What's At Stake.

New SEIU Ads Put Focus on Employee Free Choice Act

By Michael Whitney on January 5, 2009 11:35 AM

This morning SEIU unveiled online advertising to promote the New York Times' recent support of the early passage of the Employee Free Choice Act. The ads are running on the websites of The Hill, Roll Call, Politico, the Washington Post, and progressive blogs (see the ad on the right).

In late December 2008, the New York Times editorialized about unions and the Obama Administration's commitment to labor. The paper gave a full-throated endorsement of the Employee Free Choice Act and why it is such an important part of an economic recovery program.

The Times wrote of the Employee Free Choice Act:

The measure is vital legislation and should not be postponed. By giving employees a bigger say in compensation issues, unions also help to establish corporate norms, the absence of which has contributed to unjustifiable disparities between executive pay and rank-and-file pay. There is a strong argument that the slack labor market of a recession actually makes unions all the more important.

SEIU's online ads invite viewers to join the campaign for the Employee Free Choice Act.

Tags: CEO pay, economic recovery, economic recovery program, employee free choice act, employees, executive pay, labor unions, legislation, nytimes, Obama administration, online ads, rank-and-file pay, unions, voice on the job, workers' rights

Americans Working More, Playing Less

By Kate Thomas on December 12, 2008 1:33 PM

If you're feeling a little more worn out and weary at this time of year than usual, it could be because leisure time for American workers decreased by 20 percent this year, according to a Harris Poll Interactive study released this week. The average time Americans spent working in 2008 was 46 hours a week, while the average time spent playing was just 16 hours, according to the poll.

Thumbnail image for HardWork_ClockingIn.jpgInterestingly enough, although the median time spent working only rose from 45 to 46 hours over the last year, the number of hours spent playing in 2008 demonstrated a four hour drop from 2007, when the median leisure time for working people clocked in at 20 hours a week.

How to explain the missing three hours in this equation? The polling agency posits that the missing three hours were spent in a "nebulous, grey area" which Americans considered neither working nor playing. "As the American economic situation worsened, people who were worried about their jobs spent more time 'just checking in' via computer or wireless device," Harris said. "While our respondents didn't consider this as time spent working, they also didn't count it as leisure time and landing instead in a nebulous grey area." The study results revealed Americans have become more worried this year about appearing expendable to their employers, so they are putting in longer hours on the job and cutting back on downtime. Younger employees were especially likely to be working longer hours.

Tags: employees, employers, hard working Americans, job, leisure time, work

1
SEIU

Service Employees International Union
Change to Win Federation USA
Canadian Labour Congress
1800 Massachusetts Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20036
© SEIU | Privacy Policy

Take Action

  • Tell Congress to Act on Health Insurance Reform: 1-866-311-3405
  • Text 'SEIU' to 787753 for mobile updates
  • Tell the U.S. Chamber: Let People With H1N1 Use Paid Sick Time
  • Write Congress: Support the Employee Free Choice Act
  • Become an organizer
  • Follow SEIU on Twitter
  • Join our Facebook Group

Featured Video

On the one year anniversary of the election of Barack Obama, we stand on the precipe of real, progressive change. And after coming this far down the road to fixing health care, we can't let up now.
Employee Free Choice

SEARCH SEIU.org

 

MOST POPULAR

  • Our Union
  • Healthcare
  • Members
  • Jobs
  • Local
  • Blog

ACTIVE TOPICS

andy stern anna burger bank of america banks big banks chamber of commerce congress economic recovery employee free choice act healthcare healthcare crisis healthcare reform home care ken lewis president obama seiu union unions workers working families

TAKE ACTION

  • Register for email updates
  • Sign up for SMS alerts
  • Become an Organizer

STAY CONNECTED

  • facebook
  • twitter
  • youtube
  • flickr

rss RSS FEEDS

  • All site content
  • Blog posts
  • Releases
  • » all feeds

MEMBERS

  • Benefits
  • Scholarships
  • Your Role as Steward
  • Institute for Change
  • Financial Service Program
  • Member Political Organizers
  • Financial Officer Training
  • Safety and Health
  • What Is Pandemic Flu

JOIN US

  • Jobs
  • Internships
  • Become an Organizer

OUR UNION

  • Contact
  • Fast Facts
  • A Closer Look
  • How Unions Help
  • Get Local
  • Legislative Scorecard
  • Press

LEADERS

  • Andy Stern
  • Anna Burger
  • Mary Kay Henry
  • Gerry Hudson
  • Eliseo Medina
  • Dave Regan
  • Tom Woodruff

HEALTHCARE DIVISION

  • Long Term Care
  • Hospital Systems
  • Nurse Alliance

PROPERTY SERVICES DIVISION

  • Stand for Security
  • Justice for Janitors

PUBLIC SERVICES DIVISION

  • State/Local
  • Mental Health
  • Disabilities
  • Education
  • Child Care/Head Start
SEIU

Service Employees International Union
Change to Win Federation USA | Canadian Labour Congress
1800 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20036
© SEIU | Privacy Policy