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Tag: “janitors”

King of Beers Cutting Costs on the Backs of Workers

By Kate Thomas on November 6, 2009 3:48 PM
This Bud's Not For You: Being fired by Anheuser-Busch after years of service doesn't even guarantee you a lifetime supply of their beer.
This Bud's Not For You: Being fired by Anheuser-Busch after years of service doesn't even guarantee you a lifetime supply of beer.
Cleaners at Anheuser-Busch breweries in Newark and Rochester recently found themselves without jobs, despite years of loyal service to the "King of Beers." The brewing behemoth has brought in cleaning contractors who seem bent on cutting costs for the $23 billion dollar multinational on the backs of the working people who keep their plants running and profitable.

The new contracting companies, U.S. Metro Group Inc. and Dawn Brite, have refused to accept job applications from the laid-off custodians who have long worked for AB. These new contractors have slashed wages by a margin that's rumored to be around 40 percent.

As for benefits (like affordable quality healthcare)...there aren't any to speak of.

Anheuser-Busch-Cleaners-32BJLuci Peralta.jpg"Doesn't Anheuser-Busch get that we need to feed our families?" asked 32BJ member Luci Peralta, a cleaner who has worked at the Newark brewery for six years but was laid-off last week (pictured on the right next to Giovanny, another janitor that was laid off on Oct. 31). "With no income, I don't know how I'll put food on the table and make our house payments."

Since merging with Brazilian-Belgian brewing company InBev a year ago, American beer lovers have seen what was once a family-led company that spared little expense turn into "one that is focused intently on cost-cutting and profit margins." The company reported revenues of more than $23.5 billion in 2008.

However, in order to afford to buy Anheuser-Busch last year, InBev had to borrow very heavily from a syndicate of banks, including JP Morgan Chase. As a result, the combined group is now saddled with more than $50 billion in debt. Yet despite weaker sales in 2009, the company said in August that their net profit for the quarter rose 28 percent. What InBev is not saying is that they are trying to turn a huge profit in a downturn economy on the backs of their employees. And while AB's workers have already faced cuts and layoffs, it's a distinct possibility that InBev's attempts to balance their deficit asap will continue to threaten the jobs of current employees at the 11 other breweries and Anheuser-Busch facilities across the country.

The laid-off janitors at the Newark brewery had been making $13.30 an hour and receiving healthcare. Now, they're worrying how they're going to feed their children and pay their bills. "This is an awful time for Anheuser-Busch to watch these workers be put out on the street,"said Kevin Brown, New Jersey area director for SEIU. "The holidays are right around the corner, and in this economy, the workers may not find jobs that pay the same wages. They may only find minimum-wage jobs that don't even cover their basic bills."

Tags: Anheuser-Busch, Anheuser-Busch InBev, beer, benefits, brewing company, buyouts, cleaners, custodians, InBev, janitors, JPMorgan Chase, laid-off workers, lay-offs, merger, SEIU 32BJ, SEIU Local 32BJ, workers

San Francisco Residential Service Workers Ratify New Contract with Building Owners

By Rachele Huennekens, (510) 825-3546, huennekensr@seiulocal1877.org on October 8, 2009 5:40 PM

Union contract upholds superior industry standards for more than 300 door attendants, handymen, janitors, and other residential workers

San Francisco, CA - On Thursday, October 8, more than 300 residential service workers announced that they have ratified a new three-year union contract with the owners of more than 50 San Francisco residential buildings. The contract will maintain superior residential industry standards for workers' wages and benefits including affordable family health insurance and a secure pension.

"It is heartening to come to an agreement with residents and building owners that upholds the San Francisco values of respect, dignity and opportunity for all hardworking people," said Andrea Deheldorf, SEIU Local 1877 Vice President.

The contract is an agreement between residential workers' union, SEIU Local 1877 - United Service Workers West, and the "Condominium/Cooperative Employers Council of San Francisco," a group representing the owners of apartment and condominium buildings in the Nob Hill, Russian Hill, and other neighborhoods throughout San Francisco. Residential workers ratified the contract by an over 80 percent majority vote, and the Condominium/Cooperative Employers Council voted to approve the agreement on Wednesday, October 7. The contract is now effective between October 1, 2009 and September 30, 2012.

"For veteran residential workers like myself, this contract is a huge victory in upholding the standards we've built up in our industry over decades," said Emmanuel Eric, a door attendant and member of the Bargaining Committee. "The wage increases, maintenance of our current healthcare plan, and assurance of retirement security will allow our families to remain in the city and weather these difficult economic times."

Under the new contract, the Condominium/Cooperative Employers Council will continue to provide quality, affordable health insurance benefits for all San Francisco residential workers and their families. In negotiations, residential workers fought hard to maintain their current benefits, and were successful in avoiding a switch to a high deductible health plan. The new contract also maintains decent wages and ensures wage increases for the residential workers.

The new contract also maintains residential workers' pension, with employers agreeing to pay an additional surcharge for each employee hour worked under a "Trust Fund Improvement Plan" option to secure the pension fund despite the faltering stock market. Workers covered under the union pension plan are assured of their benefits despite ups and downs in the economy.

While the new contract will improve working conditions for the majority of San Francisco's residential workers, it will not impact workers at a few buildings whose owners sub-contract apartment service jobs to companies that pay low wages and offer diminished benefits. At one such building, 101 Lombard Street, janitors with between three and nineteen years of service were recently fired when their Homeowners Association hired a tiny, unknown contracting company called "Luis Janitorial," which offers poverty wages and no healthcare coverage to janitors. At 1001 California Street, building owners recently sub-contracted doormen to a contractor that pays lower wages and offers no affordable family health care or pension.

"We will continue to fight the unscrupulous building owners who bypassed the negotiation process and are implementing sub-standard working conditions for residential workers," said Vice President Dehlendorf. "This behavior is unacceptable and out-of-line in a city where the majority of residential buildings have agreed to respect workers' top-quality service."


SEIU Local 1877 is part of SEIU United Service Workers West (USWW), a union of more than 40,000 janitors, security officers, airport service workers, and other property service workers across California. Nationwide, the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) is the fastest growing labor union in the Americas with more than 2 million members.

For more information visit www.SEIU-USWW.org.

Tags: contract victories, janitors, justice for janitors, Local 1877, new contract, residential service workers, SEIU Local 1877, USWW

Senator Kennedy Walked the Picket Line for Justice for Janitors

By Kate Thomas on August 31, 2009 9:58 AM

HonkforJusticeForJanitors.jpgIn 2002, Senator Ted Kennedy walked the picket lines, held a press conference, and rallied public support for 10,000 Massachusetts janitors fighting for their first contract. His dedication and continued presence throughout the long negotiations helped some of Massachusetts hardest-working and most underpaid workers win a livable wage and access to healthcare----even for part-time janitors.

The year before that, Kennedy stood with several hundred students, activists and SEIU Local 254 (now Local 615) protesting Harvard's failure to provide a ''living wage'' of $10.25 to all its employees, including property service workers. He wrote these words in a letter he sent to activists and workers before their sit-in began:

I have always believed that workers in this great country of ours deserve a living wage.

The issue of whether employers should pay a living wage is a question of the dignity of workers. Are we as a community going to respect individuals that work long and hard, who care for their families, who are our neighbors and friends, who take great pride in their work? I firmly believe that no one who works for a living should have to live in poverty, and I think most Americans understand that, too.

Whether you are employed directly by Harvard or by subcontractors, whether you are full-time or part-time, you perform difficult work with pride and dignity and you deserve to be treated fairly.

Then again in 2006, Kennedy was there for over 250 Harvard security officers who were fighting for a contract. He used whatever connections he had to get the employers to do the right thing. In 2007, he stood in support of janitors trying to get a renewed contract and sent letters of support--they ended up getting a wage that was close to $13.

"From the fight for decent wages and benefits to his pioneering work on healthcare and immigration reform, Kennedy was there, always championing the little guy," recalled Rocio Saenz, President of SEIU Local 615 in Boston and Vice President of SEIU International. "With all of the fights to improve the lives of our workers, he was there. When we won the contract, he was on top of it. He would call and say "this is just so great--such great news for workers..."

Learn more about Senator Kennedy's legacy on SEIU.org, and help us honor him by sharing your memories. Sign our online card to Senator Kennedy's family.

Tags: harvard, janitors, justice for janitors, kennedy legacy, livable wage, living wage, security guards, senator kennedy, sit-in

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

Documentary "The Philosopher Kings" portrays culture of janitors

By Kate Thomas on June 18, 2009 2:38 PM

Janitors are everywhere―in every business, on every campus―yet they're rarely seen. They work hard to keep our community's buildings, schools and public areas sanitary, in a relatively thankless job with few perks. Yet janitors can seem almost invisible to those that aren't watching, often cleaning at night when other workers have left the office and gone home.

In the new film "The Philosopher Kings," eight extraordinary janitors throw off the cloak of invisibility to give us an extraordinary look into their lives. Director Patrick Shen shows viewers the difference between having an education and possessing knowledge by spotlighting the artists, humanitarians and thinkers who clean up--but do not study at-- some of the US's finest institutions of higher learning (such as Princeton University, Cornell University, University of California, Berkeley and Duke University).

Watch the movie's trailer:

This documentary about working people has its world premiere tonight at the AFI Theater in Silver Spring, MD. The film also has an encore screening scheduled for 1:15 p.m. on Sunday, June 21, in the same location. It is one of 11 films competing at the 2009 AFI-Discovery Channel Silverdocs Documentary Festival for the prestigious Sterling US Feature Award. For more information on the movie, visit www.philosopherkingsmovie.com.

Tags: AFI-Discovery Channel Silverdocs Documentary Festival, custodians, documentary, janitor, janitors, the philosophy kings

Tentative Accord OK'd to End Janitors' Strike

By Kate Thomas on June 18, 2009 11:23 AM

THE LOS ANGELES TIMES
June 26, 1990

By Bob Baker

A large international cleaning company and striking janitors announced Monday that they had tentatively settled a noisy and sometimes ugly three-week work stoppage that affected most of Century City's office towers.

Denmark-based ISS International Service System Inc., the nation's largest commercial cleaning contractor, agreed to a union contract for between 500 and 700 of its janitorial employees in Los Angeles.

The settlement, reached in the wake of a violent May 15 demonstration that resulted in 40 arrests and 16 injuries, represented a clear victory for the workers, most of them Latino immigrants.

The strikers lived on $100-a-week strike pay and food giveaways from the 925,000-member Service Employees International Union and paraded through Century City with picket signs condemning the glitzy office community as "luxury by day, sweatshop by night."

As union members, the janitors, who now receive about $4.50 an hour, will receive immediate pay increases of 10% to 15%. Next spring they will begin receiving health insurance, vacations and sick pay. They will be paid under an existing master agreement between SEIU Local 399 and two-dozen large downtown office buildings cleaned by ISS competitors.

The settlement grants Local 399 recognition as the janitors' bargaining representative not only in Century City but throughout the local's Los Angeles jurisdiction, including a dozen other downtown office buildings cleaned by ISS.

Janitors, who ceased picketing Monday morning, will hold a ratification vote today. The union expects widespread approval.

The strike began May 29 when the majority of 180 janitors in 13 Century City buildings walked out to protest alleged unfair labor practices and to pressure ISS for union recognition.

"To make a giant stride like this is unbelievable," said Jono Shaffer, a union organizer who has worked with Los Angeles janitors for the past three years as part of SEIU's national "Justice For Janitors" organizing program.

Shaffer faces a misdemeanor "urging to riot" charge stemming from his leadership of the May 15 demonstration.

"We look forward to being on a new footing with these guys," said Christopher Burrows, an attorney representing ISS.

Sources familiar with the negotiations said the May 15 demonstration brought a new sense of urgency to the labor dispute.

Los Angeles police cut short a march by 400 pro-union demonstrators in Century City, clubbing men and women repeatedly to force them to turn back on Olympic Boulevard. Widespread television footage of the police action created substantial sympathy for the janitors and anger among national leaders of organized labor.

During informal talks between the union and ISS in New York on Friday, the president of an SEIU local representing 74,000 New York janitors reportedly threatened to send ISS' 5,000 New York janitors out on strike if a settlement with the Century City janitors was not reached.

Talks were moved to Chicago on Sunday. After eight hours of negotiations a tentative settlement was signed.

The settlement calls for both sides to drop all lawsuits against each other as well as all National Labor Relations Board complaints. But the union is continuing to pursue a $10-million claim against the city of Los Angeles growing out of injuries suffered in the May 15 demonstration.

The Century City strike was a contentious, complicated power struggle that held strong significance for those segments of organized labor concerned with immigrant workers.

In the early 1980s, most janitors in Los Angeles worked under a standard union contract that provided health benefits and pay of about $7 an hour. But a flood of Central American immigrants allowed non-union contractors to underbid union contractors. The lack of a strong organizing presence resulted in many buildings becoming non-union and pay dropping drastically.

The "Justice For Janitors" campaign was effective enough to double the proportion of unionized janitors in downtown Los Angeles, to about 65% of those working in large buildings. But Century City remained a non-union bastion. This was particularly frustrating to union organizers because ISS, Century City's prime cleaning contractor, had signed union contracts in other U.S. cities. The union contended that by operating non-union, ISS was exploiting the vulnerable nature of Latino immigrants.

The union also tried to put pressure on JMB Realty Corp., a national building maintenance company that hired ISS in many of the Century City buildings. But there was little apparent movement until the union's march from a Beverly Hills park into Century City exploded.

"What happened crystallized the issues and pointed out this glaring gap between people who clean these luxurious skyscrapers and the people who inhabit them," said David Sickler, the AFL-CIO's regional director. "The gap resembles that of Third World countries."

Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley reacted to the demonstration by issuing a rare call for a Police Commission investigation of tactics by police and demonstrators.

Despite the settlement, the union said Monday it will go through with a second Beverly Hills-to-Century City march scheduled for Thursday. Leaders said the march will attempt to assert their right to demonstrate. On Friday a union attorney obtained a Superior Court order which restrains police from cutting the next march short on the same grounds officers employed May 15 -- their suspicion, rather than on-the-spot proof, that demonstrators planned to disrupt traffic in Century City.

Tags: janitors, justice for janitors

Justice for Janitors Day: 19 Years of Fighting for Justice

By Kate Thomas on June 17, 2009 6:07 PM
Justice for Janitors

Watch a short video* documenting the June 15, 1990 incident

June 15th has been observed for 19 years in the U.S. as Justice for Janitors Day, a day when janitors and other workers who secure, clean, and maintain office buildings demonstrate for justice. The original Justice for Janitors Day was established after janitors in Los Angeles were beaten by police during a peaceful demonstration on June 15, 1990. The incident generated intense public outrage and resulted in the cleaning contractor recognizing the L.A. janitors in a union. In remembrance of that monumental day, SEIU janitors and supporters take action every June 15 in cities nationwide. This day is also observed around the globe as International Justice Day.

On Monday, SEIU Local 49 janitors held a rally and march in Portland in remembrance of Justice for Janitors Day and to send a message to Portland real estate interests that even in tough economic times, the men and women who keep the city's buildings clean expect their contract to be followed.

Last year, SEIU Local 49 janitors won a major improvement in their multi-employer union contract -- company-paid health coverage for their children. This July, the janitors are supposed to receive a $0.50 per hour raise in pay. Local elected officials Jeff Cogen, Multnomah County Commissioner; Sam Adams, Portland Mayor; and Nick Fish, Portland City Councilor, attended the J4J rally to echo the janitor's concerns that low-wage workers can't accept any steps backwards to help wealthy property owners balance their budgets.

JusticeforJanitorsDay_09SEIULocal49_crop.jpg

Since 1985, more than 225,000 janitors in 30 cities throughout the U.S. and Canada have united through SEIU's Justice for Janitors (J4J) campaign.

Tags: cleaning contractor, contracts, international justice day, iss, j4j, janitors, justice, justice for janitors, seiu local 49

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

Janitors Call On Banks to Use Taxpayer Money to Create Jobs, Not Reward CEOs

By Kate Thomas on March 9, 2009 2:01 PM

Janitorscrossingstreet_web.jpgOn Thursday, hundreds of Chicago janitors and supporters rallied at Fifth Third Bank in Schaumburg to call for good jobs and an economic recovery that works for everyone, not just the people at the top. Janitors marched from Woodfield Mall to the bank, chanting loudly and holding purple banners reading "Value Work."

Fifth Third Bank took $3.4 billion in taxpayer-funded bailout money, and CEO Kevin Kabat was paid over $200,000--more than seven times the average teller's annual pay--for perks like country club dues, parking and estate planning. Fifth Third Bank's CEO also received a base salary increase from the year before, as well as stock and option awards valued at about $1.9 million on the days they were granted.

The average salary for a downtown janitor is about $1,950 a month, with suburban janitors making even less than that.

Janitor with Polish Sign.jpgThursday's march builds on momentum from the rally held earlier in the week, when 3,300 janitors marched through downtown Chicago to call on Bank of America and other banks to use federal bailout money to create jobs that will strengthen the economy, instead of paying executives excessive salaries and bonuses. Both rallies are part of an effort by SEIU Local 1 janitors and community supporters to call attention to low-wage workers struggling to keep afloat in a time when corporate CEOs are still getting multimillion dollar compensation and bonuses.

With more hardworking Americans losing their jobs and their homes every day, janitors want to protect and create good jobs that will help get this country's financial system back on track. "We're here to show that we're important in this economy too," said Alexandra Figus, who's worked as a janitor for 29 years. "We have families and homes. Our homes are going into foreclosure. I'm a mother. I have a family. That's why I'm here. We need job security."

Thursday's rally occurs as nearly 15,000 SEIU Local 1 janitors begin contract negotiations with the Building Owners and Managers Association (BOMA) of Chicago, including 3,000 janitors who work in suburban office buildings. The current agreement expires April 5.

Tags: CEO pay, chicago janitors, fifth third bank, janitors, justice for janitors, low-wage workers, march, rally, seiu local 1

Hilda Solis Will Stand for Justice, Open Doors for Millions of Workers in America

By Kate Thomas on January 9, 2009 2:34 PM

Statement by SEIU EVP Eliseo Medina Supporting Hilda Solis's Confirmation as U.S. Secretary of Labor

WASHINGTON, DC--SEIU Executive Vice President Eliseo Medina issued the following statement in support of Representative Hilda Solis's confirmation as U.S. Secretary of Labor:

"At this critical juncture in our great nation, I cannot think of anyone more qualified than Representative Hilda Solis to re-establish the U.S. Labor Department's priorities of justice, fairness, and equal opportunity for all workers.

"A daughter of labor leaders, Rep. Solis knows first-hand the economic struggles facing Americans today, and she has become an outspoken advocate for the millions of Americans who, despite getting up and working hard every day, are too often forced to choose between the impossible--covering rent or taking their sick child to the doctor, taking on another job or losing their home.

"I have long admired Hilda's passion, perseverance, and unyielding strength. Years ago in California, I watched as she took on the employers of large supermarket chains who were denying fair pay and illegally exploiting thousands of hard-working janitors. Years later, during the LA janitors strike, Rep Solis used her talents as a consensus-builder to bring employers and janitors together, unite their diverse interests, and help secure fair wages and affordable healthcare for thousands of janitors.

"Rep. Solis has also become a champion for the rights of immigrant workers. As a daughter of immigrants, Rep. Solis exemplifies the American Dream and the tremendous contributions that immigrants have made and will continue to make to our country. Rep. Solis knows that fixing our broken immigration system and restoring the rule of law is the only way to guarantee civil rights and basic fairness for all workers--no matter where they come from.

"Today, as she stands at the threshold of history, ready to serve her country as the first Latina Secretary of Labor, we are reminded that Solis' story is truly the American story. Her values--hard work, commitment to economic fairness, and willingness to fight for justice--are America's values.

"In support of America's workforce, we urge Congress to move swiftly so that Rep. Solis can begin her work to improve lives and open doors for millions of workers in America."

Tags: american dream, eliseo medina, Hilda Solis, immigrant rights, immigrant workers, immigrants, janitors, secretary of labor

Wall Street Journal Highlights Change That Works Campaign

By Kate Thomas on January 8, 2009 4:59 PM

In a thoughtful article, the Wall Street Journal writes, "The SEIU, whose ranks include nurses and other health-care workers along with workers ranging from janitors to security officers, supports Mr. Obama's health-care plan and wants states and local governments to receive financial relief in a recovery package. Also high on the SEIU's list is the Employee Free Choice Act, which would make it easier for unions to organize workers by gathering signatures in favor of certification rather than via lengthy secret balloting."

Read the full article.

Tags: Barack Obama, CONNECT@SEIU, economic recovery, employee free choice act, healthcare plan, janitors, security officers, wall street journal, wsj

Houston Janitors and Responsible Corporate Leaders Help Address Crisis for Thousands of Low-Wage Workers with Groundbreaking New Health Clinic

By Contact Erica Hade, (312) 343-0322 on December 17, 2008 3:55 PM

HOUSTON - SEIU janitors and corporate leaders joined together today to unveil the new Houston Service Workers' Clinic, a groundbreaking labor-business partnership that could provide a model for other cities also struggling with the crisis in health care.

The clinic is a joint project between janitors and responsible business and community leaders - including Cigna Health and Baylor College of Medicine - to make health care more accessible for low-wage workers. It will provide quality, affordable care to more than 5,300 commercial office janitors for only $205 a month per worker - less than one-third of a penny per square foot of rental space in downtown buildings.

"This innovative program goes hand-in-hand with the mission of Baylor College of Medicine's Department of Family and Community Medicine to provide patient-centered medical care and serve as a force for promoting health in the community," said Dr. John C. Rogers, interim chair of the department. "This program offers a creative approach to bringing a new group into the ranks of the insured. Our physicians will offer the highest quality primary care and serve as a gateway for specialized care."

Its unveiling comes as thousands of Houston janitors celebrate the anniversary of a month-long strike that put a human face on the city's healthcare crisis.

"Two years ago I stood beside the Mayor and told the world 'Houston won big,'" said Mercedes Herrera, a Houston janitor who helped lead the workers' historic strike. "Today we celebrate another victory for Houston families as we open our health care clinic."

Nearly 46 million Americans don't have health coverage, including one in three Houstonians. As health costs rise year after year, many more Americans risk losing their coverage. Seeking a national solution, SEIU is engaging healthcare workers through Healthcare United, voters through Americans for Health Care, plus business leaders and stakeholders from all walks of life.

###
Nationwide, SEIU is the largest union of property services workers, representing more than 225,000 janitors in 30 metropolitan areas, including more than 5,300 janitors in Houston.

Tags: affordable healthcare, baylor college of medicine, commercial office janitors, healthcare, Houston janitors, janitors, justice for janitors

More than 400 March to Support Workers Struggling for a Voice on the Job

By Kate Thomas on December 12, 2008 3:54 PM

Rally part of national campaign to restore middle class, fix broken health care system

OrganizingConferenceRallyLine3.JPG

As a part of a nationwide campaign to restore the American middle class, more than 400 members of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) gathered yesterday at the University of Colorado-Aurora campus for a march to highlight the need for health care reform and legislation that will protect workers' rights to have a voice on the job. Participants also marched to support janitors fired from Carnation Building Services (a nonunion Aurora janitorial contractor) for participating in organizing drives and seeking union membership.

Leading the march was SEIU President Andy Stern. "We want change that works. That's why we're here today," Stern told the The Denver Post.

Denver_rally_speakersSpeakers at the rally called for the passage of the Employee Free Choice Act, which would allow workers like those at Carnation to gain a voice at work without fear of intimidation or retaliation by their employers. According to a report by American Rights at Work, 51 percent of employers threaten to close down a work site when employees try to join together to form a union and an additional 30 percent unlawfully fire workers who support forming a union.

Tags: barack obama, Carnation building services, denver organizing conference, employee free choice act, facebook, healthcare reform, janitors, jobs, legislation, middle class, organize, union, voice on the job, workers' rights

Continue reading More than 400 March to Support Workers Struggling for a Voice on the Job.

SEIU Members to Hold March, Rally Supporting the Freedom to Join Unions and Emphasizing the Need to Fix the Broken Health Care System

By SEIU’s Communications Team on December 10, 2008 12:17 PM
Supporters to Call on Congress to Pass Legislation for a Voice on the Job, Health Care for All, Strengthened Economy

Tomorrow, more than 500 members of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) will hold a rally at the Denver Convention Center to highlight the urgent need for health care reform and legislation that will protect workers' rights to have a voice on the job. In a worsening economic climate where CEOs continue to pay themselves 344 times more than workers on average, there has never been a more critical moment to establish a clear agenda to support the Employee Free Choice Act and help rebuild the middle class.

Tags: andy stern, campaign, denver convention center, denver organizing conference, economy, employee free choice act, facebook, healthcare reform, janitors, legislation, middle class, organize, union, union membership, voice on the job, workers' rights

Continue reading SEIU Members to Hold March, Rally Supporting the Freedom to Join Unions and Emphasizing the Need to Fix the Broken Health Care System .

Student Petition Backs Janitors at College

By SEIU Local 2 Canada on December 5, 2008 5:02 PM

Marquise Facilities Corporation asked to respect worker rights

SEIU_Local_2_Canada.jpgVANCOUVER, BRITISH COLOMBIA-- A delegation of students at Langara College delivered a petition to the school's administration yesterday demanding the school intervene to protect the rights of workers who clean the campus.

Students are concerned for the welfare of over 30 workers after it was announced that the company they work for had lost the contract to clean the college and would be replaced by a different cleaning contractor in January. To date workers haven't been told if they will keep their current wages and benefits or even if they will have jobs with the new contractor.

"We don't earn much money. I have no savings. I can't afford to lose my job. This is horrible news to get right before the holidays. Many of us have worked here for years. I hope the college stands up for us," said Lakhvir Shokar a cleaning worker.

The petition, which contained over 300 hundred signatures, calls on the College to direct the new cleaning contractor, Marquise Facilities Corporation, to retain the current employees, ensure they don't suffer a reduction in wages or benefits and to recognize their union, the Service Employees International Union (SEIU).

SEIU spokesperson Anu Sharma says that the union has sent a letter to Marquise Facilities Corporation asking the company to respect the rights of workers and hasn't ruled out pickets and other actions at the college if they are not.

The Service Employees International Union is the largest and fastest growing union in North America, with 100,000 workers in Canada and 2 million workers across Canada, the United States and Puerto Rico.

For more information, visit SEIU Local 2 Canada

Tags: Canada, janitors, justice for janitors, property services, SEIU Local 2 Canada

Who We Are

By Mike Link on November 12, 2008 9:26 AM

Tags: facilities services, janitors, justice for janitors, property services, security guards, stand for security

1
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