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Tag: “fast”

Video: Janitors protesting Cisco Systems end hunger strike

By Kate Thomas on July 17, 2009 11:20 AM

On June 9, dozens of janitors laid off from Cisco Systems in San Jose, CA ended a 7-day hunger fast protesting the company's corporate greed and unfair treatment. Check out this new video SEIU United Service Workers West created documenting the breaking of the fast:

The janitors at Cisco Systems first began protesting the corporation--which currently has more than $34 billion in cash assets on hand--when contractor ABM Industries Inc. laid off more than 40 percent of its total janitorial workforce in February. The janitors that remain on the job at Cisco are now being forced to shoulder higher workloads.

The important principle these fasting janitors have sacrificed so much to make: a company that has $34 billion in cash assets and paid its CEO $18.8 million last year shouldn't just stand by while $12-an-hour workers are let go by the contractor Cisco hired to work on its campus.

Tags: ABM, ceo john chambers, cisco, cisco systems, corporate greed, fast, hunger strike, janitors, justice, justice for janitors, local 1877, low wage workers

When did layoffs become 'acceptable'? Put working families above Cisco profits

By Kate Thomas on June 8, 2009 7:20 PM

Shouldn't we ask whether it's morally defensible for a top executive to accept tens of millions in pay while he is destroying the lives of his workers?

As janitors and community supporters continue their hunger strike outside of Cisco Systems corporate headquarters in San Jose, Mercury News columnist Mike Cassidy has written a thought-provoking column about the corporate strategy of treating layoffs as 'par-for-the-course' events that are the cost of doing business in this downtrodden economy.

Cassidy points to the disparity between the blasé attitude the tone of conversations surrounding layoffs have taken on and the real-life devastation that large-scale layoffs cause for people, families, and communities. (One example of this 'detached' attitude that springs to mind is Bank of America ex-chairman Ken Lewis, whose response when asked about the job cuts BofA delivered to nearly 35,000 of its employees in April showed little care for his employees.)

"I understand that at times, in the interest of survival or reinvention, companies must pare down or realign their work forces. I know that this is one of the worst economies since the Great Depression...

But that doesn't mean we can ignore the way massive job losses, including from profitable companies with extravagantly paid executives, are choking the life out of our economy and our communities. People who don't work don't buy things or keep current on their mortgages. Stores close. Homes go vacant. Neighborhoods and commercial districts shrivel up.

Cassidy also rightly points to the hypocrisy of corporate executives such as Cisco's multimillionaire CEO John Chambers, who appears to be one of many high-powered executives not reported to have considered making cuts to their high-dollar salaries and compensation packages a regular business practice in lean times.

The important principle these fasting janitors are sacrificing so much to make: a company that has $34 billion in cash assets and paid its CEO $18.8 million last year shouldn't just stand by while $12-an-hour workers are let go by the contractor Cisco hired to work on its campus. The question "what choice did we have?" from a chief executive in the face of shattering company layoffs shouldn't be rhetorical, says Cassidy. This question, he says, "should be put to business leaders by the press and politicians. We should all be talking about it. Isn't there another way?"

Justice for Cisco Janitors has estimated that it would cost just a month and half of Cisco CEO Chambers' salary, or a little more than $1 million, to bring back all of the 70+ laid-off janitors of SEIU Local 1877 to work for the rest of this year. Please stand with these janitors--who are currently in Day 6 of their hunger strike--as they demand justice for the janitors at Cisco Systems and stand up to all the corporations who are deaf to the kitchen-table concerns of middle class Americans.

Click here to send a letter to Cisco Chairman and CEO John Chambers or visit http://seiuaction.org/campaign/justiceatcisco

Tags: ABM, bank of america, ceo john chambers, ceo ken lewis, cisco, corporate executives, fast, hunger strike, janitors, layoffs, local 1877, low wage workers, low-wage workers, mercury news, mike cassidy, seiu local 1877

Janitors in midst of 7-Day hunger strike protesting Cisco Systems

By Kate Thomas on June 5, 2009 6:57 PM

CiscoJanitorsProtestCA_corporategreed.jpgFor two days now, dozens of janitors, members of faith and community supporters have had absolutely nothing to eat, only drinking water as they determinedly camp out outside of Cisco System's corporate headquarters in San Jose. This fasting will go on for at least another five days, with new participants joining the fast each day at 1 p.m., when a religious leader from the Interfaith Council will conduct a ceremony blessing them.

The janitors at Cisco Systems began protesting the corporation--which currently has more than $34 billion in cash assets on hand--when contractor ABM Industries Inc. laid off more than 40 percent of its total janitorial workforce in February. The janitors that remain on the job at Cisco are now being forced to shoulder higher workloads. Shouldn't more work = more pay? Cisco doesn't think so. The only thing these janitors have experienced an increase in since their coworkers were laid off is the threat to their health and safety.

The hopeful outcome of this fast? That Cisco will live up to its claims of "corporate social responsibility" and put the common good ahead of corporate greed by reinstating the laid-off janitors.

Targeting low-wage service workers for layoffs while protecting enormous profits is a sad pattern we've seen emerge more and more in recent months from big corporations. We'll bring you more about the janitors' struggle in the coming days. In the meantime, visit www.justiceatcisco.com and check out photos from Day 1 of the fast here.

Take action to support these fasting janitors by sending a letter to Cisco CEO John Chambers now.

Tags: ABM, cisco, cisco system, fast, hunger strike, janitors, justice for janitors, local 1877, low wage workers, low-wage workers, seiu local 1877

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