Tuesday, December 1, 2020

Trade Unions Hail Farmers For Their Agitation on Just Demands

 




The following statement was issued by the Platform of Central Trade Union Organisations on 1st December 2020

The Platform of Central Trade Union Organisations and independent Federations/Associations hail the decision of All India Kisan Sangharsh Coordination Committee (United Platform Indian Farmers’ Organisations) and the joint committee of Punjab Kisans to stand firm on their demands and continue their united struggle.

 

The Farmers who are in stay-in protests in couple of lakhs alongwith their tractors and trolleys in the four borders of Delhi, have rejected outright the Government's offer to go to Burari ground as a precondition for talks.  They are firm in their demands for scrapping of the three farm-laws and also the Electricity Bill 2020, which are also the demands of the United Platform of Central Trade Union Organisations and independent Federations/Associations, pressed for through 26th November 2020 countrywide General Strike.  There is no "misunderstanding" about anti-people and anti-farmer destructive character of the agri-laws passed recently and the Electricity Bill 2020 among the farmers of the country, as sought to be painted in a distorted manner by the PM in his Man Ki Baat and his ministers' statements. The Farmers are determined to carry on their united struggles.

 

The CTUs condemn the false propaganda of the Government on oxygen supply to Delhi getting affected due to picketing of the Farmers at the borders. Rather they have magnanimously let through all health-care traffic.

 

The AIKSCC has called upon solidarity support to their struggle through supportive agitations throughout the country from the toiling people and their organisations. 

 

The Joint Platform of Central Trade Unions and independent Federations/Associations call on their affiliates throughout the Country to demonstrate in solidarity with the Farmers' demands till they are honourably met.


          INTUC, AITUC, HMS, CITU, AIUTUC, TUCC, SEWA, AICCTU, LPF, UTUC

              And independent Federations/Associations

Saturday, November 28, 2020

WFTU solidarity statement with the All India strike on November 26th, 2020

 


During the last 6 years, the World Federation of Trade Unions, the oldest, and only class-oriented international trade union organization, has been monitoring, condemning, and fighting against the neoliberal, anti-grassroots policies implemented by the Monti government, crushing the rights and living standards of the country’s workers, farmers, and people.

The coordinated efforts of the Indian bourgeoisie to improve its position in the intra-capitalist competition include further devaluation of the labor force, shrinking of the state benefits and pensions, privatization and corporatization of the public sectors and industries, reactionary changes in labor and farmer laws and codes. In addition, the complete indifference to protecting the popular strata from the impacts of the pandemic creates a suffocating situation for ordinary people who are plagued by unemployment, hunger, and misery.

We demand the release of all the arrested trade unionists

Workers’ experience has shown that anti-labor policies hand in hand with authoritarianism, oppression, and state violence against the workers’ struggles. We strongly condemn the arrest of at least fifty union leaders during the numerous sectoral and regional activities that took place all over India in the framework of the preparations of tomorrow All India Strike. The efforts of the Monti government to sabotage the strike will come to nothing. We demand the release of all the arrested trade unionists and an end to all provocations and violations of the trade union’s rights and freedoms.

The struggles in India give hope to workers all over the world

The militant struggle in India with the pioneering and leading role of the class unions – members of the WFTU proves the strength of the workers and gives hope and courage to the oppressed employees around the world. The escalation of the struggles in recent years is remarkable and commendable with massive strikes and activities in all sectors and regions and also nationally with the impressive and admirable nationwide strike that paralyzed the country with the participation of 250 million workers on January 8th, 2020.

We join our voice with the class-oriented trade unions in India

 The World Federation of Trade Unions, continuing its support to the workers’ struggles in the length and breadth of the world, expresses its internationalist solidarity and supporting the demands of the countywide strike that is going to take place on November 26th,2020, against the anti-labor, anti-farmer and anti-national policies of the Indian government

On behalf of the 105 million workers, represented by the WFTU, we join our voice with the Indian working class demanding:

  1. Cash transfer of Rs 7500 per month for all non income tax paying families
  2. 10 kg free ration per person per month to all needy
  3. Expansion of MGNREGA to provide 200 days’ work in a year in rural areas at enhanced wages; extension of employment guarantee to urban areas
  4. Withdraw all anti farmer laws and anti worker labour codes
  5. Stop privatisation of public sector including the financial sector and stop corporatisation of Govt run manufacturing and service entities like Railways, Ordinance Factories, Ports etc.
  6. Withdraw the draconian circular on forced premature retirement of Government & PSU Employees
  7. Provide Pension to all, scrap NPS and restore earlier Pension, improve EPS-95

The Secretariat

Monday, November 23, 2020

The UFCW and the Grocery Industry

 


The UFCW and the Grocery Industry



NOVEMBER 20, 2020

The right of workers to organize in unions is one of the earliest and most basic premises of Catholic Social Teaching. In most of the United States, every time you shop for groceries you have an opportunity to choose between shopping at a supermarket whose employees have the protection of a union contract, and one that doesn’t. That’s because the United Food and Commercial Workers union (UFCW) represents more than 800,000 supermarket clerks, cashiers, stockers and other employees at many of the nation’s leading grocery store chains – but they face tough competition from nonunion competitors in every community, competitors that offer substandard health care benefits and little retirement security.

At one time, the supermarket industry was largely organized, and UFCW members represented most of the industry’s employees. However, large new non-union actors entered the scene, such as Wal-Mart and Whole Foods, and successfully beat back efforts by their workers to form unions.

Want to support union workers and the right to organize? Look for these names:

  • Albertsons
  • Kroger
  • Ralphs
  • King Soopers
  • Fred Meyer
  • Albertsons
  • Safeway
  • Jewel-Osco
  • Stop & Shop
  • Giant

The UFCW is one of the nation’s largest unions, reporting 1.3 million members. Outside of the grocery chains, they represent cashiers and clerks at many drugstores and workers at meatpacking plants, as well as other segments of the economy.

Uruguay: Health Services Unions Call for a National Strike

 


                                      Health care workers transfer a COVID-19 patient                                                         to a hospital, Montevideo, Uruguay, Nov. 11, 2020. | Photo: EFE


The National Medical Union rejects "the position of the private health care providers, who refuse to integrate the medical sector in advisory commissions linked to strengthening and improving the quality of care."

Uruguay's National Medical Union (SMU) and the Medical Federation of the Interior (FEMI) Wednesday called for a 24-hour strike in the private sector and mobile emergencies to demand better working conditions.

On November 5, the General Assembly of the SMU agreed to carry out the national strike due to "the lack of progress in the negotiation with the Wage Council of the private sector."

SMU representatives noted that the wage guidelines proposed by the private sector and the government 'are tremendously insufficient and represent a setback in the working conditions achieved in previous agreements', including "the loss of wages, labor rights, and quality in Health Care services."

"In the pandemic scenario, it is not acceptable to try to cut rights, lose wages. This weakens the health system, causing the loss of quality of care for the population." SMU chairman Federico Preve noted.

"The SMU holds collective negotiations to defend doctors' wages and working conditions."


 

On November 6, the SMU Executive Committee rejected "the position of the private health care providers, who within the scope of the National Health Board (JUNASA), refuse to integrate the medical sector in advisory commissions linked to strengthening and improving the quality of care."

Negotiations between the government, the private sector, and health workers unions are part of the eighth round of annual wage councils in which almost all the sectoral tables have already closed. 

Meanwhile, Minister of Labor and Social Security Pablo Mieres has pointed out that the Government prioritizes the dialogue, but few agreements have been reached.

On Tuesday, Uruguay reported 104 new COVID-19 cases, pushing the total number of confirmed cases to 4,208 since the outbreak of the epidemic in the country. The Death toll stands at 68, while 792 cases remain active.



$15 is the floor, not the ceiling! Raise Starbucks Pay to $15 an Hour! $25 /hour will keep is out of poverty!

 Raise Starbucks Pay to $15 an Hour | Coworker.org




Campaign created by
Jasmine Barringer

Why is this important?

As the largest coffee chain in the world, Starbucks should treat employees above average -- especially since the company is known for taking care of employees. We are a branded coffee name yet employees pay are comparable to coffee houses a fraction of the size of Starbucks. Starbucks is a multibillion dollar company, but it's been reported that it pays an effective tax rate of zero, yet is still unable to pay livable wages to its employees.

We have been continually working throughout the pandemic, but the pay is not a livable wage starting at $12 an hour. During the COVID-19 pandemic, there have been many new rules/regulations and restraints implemented. We have new work every day, but we're not seeing a return for that work. At my location, for example, we have a great crew, but morale is starting to go down with many employees feeling as if their work is unappreciated. With the morales of employees going down, we are seeing a direct correlation to our customer connection score (the happiness of our customers). Customers are feeling less like they have a 3rd place, and more like they are just getting rushed thru with less smiles because there is so much more going on behind the bar. Employees deserve to feel they can handle their bills and what ever else they need while working full time at any job, but especially a company as large and profitable as Starbucks.

SHARE!

https://www.coworker.org/petitions/starbucks-pay-to-15-an-hour?share=89a61ad5-83f0-4fe9-b3c2-6e6e5bbe955d&source=email-share-button&utm_medium=&utm_source=email


Thursday, November 19, 2020

NOVEMBER 26 GENERAL STRIKE!

 Government & Bosses Want To Legislate 10hour- Workday/60hour Work Week

They Want To Ban Unions And Workers’ Strikes


Against the thousands police forces that flooded Athens to impose ban to demonstrations, a militant protest was organized with discipline and all health protection measures in the morning of November 17 right in front of the Embassy of the USA in Athens. This action broke in action the ban to the demonstration of November 17 that the Government attempted to impose.

Monday, October 26, 2020

Attack on Bolivian union leader denounced

 

Orlando Gutiérrez, Chief Executive of FSTMB

Through a statement, the Union Federation of Mining Workers of Bolivia (Fstmb), denounced this Friday that its main executive, Orlando Gutiérrez, is seriously injured and blames the Government for the injuries suffered by its leader. The organization declared itself in a "state of national emergency" and blamed groups called "pititas" for generating the attacks.

“This serious attack is carried out as a form of revenge perpetrated by the fascist right, by the so-called 'pititas', platforms, hiring hitmen and thugs (…). So we declare a state of national emergency in the ranks of wage-earning mining, reproaching the criminal persecution of our union leaders ”, denounces the mining entity.

The federation also noted that both Gutiérrez and his family received "death threats" through social networks. However, they state that groups opposed to the MAS resort to "violent" attitudes in rejection of the victory of Evo Morales' party.

"Comrade Gutiérrez and his family received many death threats through social networks, from the right wing, but when they were defeated at the polls in the elections, in desperation they resorted to this totally undemocratic attitude of violence."

The representative of the salaried mining arm is at the Cemes clinic, at the government headquarters. No further details were given on the status of the Fstmb secretary.