luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
[personal profile] luzula
In the last two weeks I have:
- Helped prepare, and then attended, a union workshop day where we sat in groups according to type of workplace, and discussed how to organize better.
- Held an intro for new union members.
- Attended and written minutes for a union city-level members' meeting.
- Worked on finding good candidates for various elected positions in the union, in preparation for the upcoming annual meeting.
- Gone to Stockholm to hold a lecture about forest biofuels and climate, at a seminar day about forest and climate issues.
- Had lunch and networked with a guy working with climate issues in another environmental organization.
- Given feedback on various press release texts about the EU parliament's recent bad decision on bioenergy.
- Proofread and sent out newsletter for environmental org except that nobody seems to have gotten it; must trouble-shoot.
- Donated a fair amount of money to a self-organized women's village in Rojava.
- Eeeemailed as always.

(no subject)

Date: 2018-01-20 11:20 pm (UTC)
jesse_the_k: Fat ewe stares at camera (ewe looking at me?)
From: [personal profile] jesse_the_k
That's a lot of work!

according to type of workplace

This is an interesting organizing principle. In the US (when we had unions) they were either industrial (everybody in the same workplace) or craft (every mechanic in the area in one union, every nurse in another).

Did you give the lecture?

Tragically, yes

Date: 2018-01-21 08:18 pm (UTC)
jesse_the_k: Slings & Arrows' Anna says: "I'll smack you so hard your cousin will fall down!" (Anna smacks hard)
From: [personal profile] jesse_the_k
...I'm no labor historian, but here's what I've observed.

As long as I can remember, there's been "fair share" legislation (state level). Employers deduct union dues from paychecks and pass that to the union. Individuals can't opt out. The theory being all workers benefit from the protections unions create. Some Southern states never had "fair share" (unions? fuck, we're used to unpaid labor!), but now few states have it.

Killing unions has been on Republican strategy since 1980, and it's basically succeeded.

In hard economic times, when the benefits unions created (hourly wages, the weekend, health insurance) are a distant memory (and never taught in schools) people have opted out of paying union dues. Hence, unions are broke.

Pink/white color unions -- state employees, teachers, nurses -- started here in Wisconsin. In 2011, our governor *spit* passed Act 10, outlawing almost all government unions and killing fair share.

The blue collar unions -- factory, truck drivers, building trades -- have declined as the US economy has swiveled away from basic production.

TBH, the larger blue collar unions were rich enough to support corruption--most famously, the Teamsters (initially a craft union for drivers, then expanded to cover many industries).

I'm stopping now because I don't want to cry.

Re: Tragically, yes

Date: 2018-01-23 10:42 pm (UTC)
jesse_the_k: Slings & Arrows' Anna offers up "Virtual Timbits" (Anna brings doughnuts)
From: [personal profile] jesse_the_k
Absolutely! Let’s Skype about this!
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