Newark, August 20, 2020: Emergency Mobilization Rally and Press Conference to condemn the NJ Supreme Court’s decision to strip the Newark Civilian Complaint Review Board of its authority

People’s Organization for Progress (Photos/Videos)

Protest NJ Supreme Court CCRB Ruling

Dear Friends:

The People’s Organization for Progress is hosting an Emergency Mobilization Rally and Press Conference to condemn the New Jersey Supreme Court’s decision to strip the Newark Civilian Complaint Review Board of its authority, tomorrow, Thursday, August 20, 2020 at 1:00 P.M., Newark City Hall, 920 Broad Street, Newark, New Jersey.

We ask that you wear a mask, gloves, and safe distance.

For more information call 973-801-0001.

Lawrence Hamm

Chairman

People’s Organization for Progress

No photo description available.

Black Women in Resistance: Two Poems by Lamont Lilly

https://www.newblackmaninexile.net/2020/08/black-women-in-resistance-two-poems-by.html

assata: general shakur

they would like us

to forget

the likes of her sacrifices

one dark woman

well-dressed

in plaid shadows

called afro-freedom

fighting yelling teaching

staying alive

on the frontline

imprisoned exiled wounded

still living

loving her people

from the outer edges

etched within our hearts

tucked safely

within our minds

one dark woman

well-dressed

in plaid shadows

called afro-freedom

clawing scratching scraping

staying alive

on the frontline

wow what a warrior

wow what a woman

what a wonderful general

she’s been

the hunted

[In honor of Korryn Gaines]

you’re in the house

with your three children

dinner and homework

minutes later

u.s. marshalls

come running in

with assault rifles

teargas and bulletproof vest

i think it’s best

at that point

that you freeze my sister

put your rifle

and the kids down

so you can be around

tomorrow

those little ones

need you alive sis

so you can be around

tomorrow

and the people?

we need you strong my sister

healthy alive

so you can lead

the troops

■■■

Lamont Lilly is an independent journalist, Black radical activist, poet and community organizer based in Durham, North Carolina. In 2016, he was the Workers World Party U.S. vice-presidential candidate. Follow him on Twitter @LamontLilly

Support the University Labor Council at UW-Madison!

#MoralRestart

From: TAA – Graduate Worker Union of UW-Madison

The University Labor Council, a coalition of unions representing workers throughout UW–Madison, released its emergency response to UW’s Smart Restart August 5, 2020. We’re proud to be a part of it.

A united labor front is a crucial step in keeping our community, our students, and ourselves safe in the face of UW administrators’ negligence. Workers across the world have won important safety measures and more during COVID by banding together.

Statement in Spanish: https://tinyurl.com/yykwmpwc

Statement from the UW–Madison University Labor Council on Smart Restart:

We are the University Labor Council, a coalition of unions representing workers throughout UW–Madison. We are food service workers, trades workers, academic staff, faculty, custodians, non-academic staff, and graduate-student workers. The University works because we do: we disinfect dorm rooms, feed and educate our community’s young adults, ensure that the university is fiscally responsible, and build safe and efficient infrastructure. Every working day, we give our skills and our time in service to the Wisconsin Idea.

It is that service to our community and state that drives us now. We are in the midst of a global health and economic crisis that has only worsened since UW moved all classes online in March. On August 15th, the university plans to reopen dormitories at 90% capacity, with multiple students housed in each room; offer in-person instruction; and continue ramping up in-person research. Smart Restart forces us to expose ourselves, our loved ones, and the Madison community for a paycheck. The world-class teaching, research, and outreach of the university cannot come at the expense of maintaining public safety. Our community’s health is more important than tuition money and dorm dollars.

We are in a crisis brought on by state legislators and university administrators and exacerbated by the global pandemic. But we have the opportunity to reinvest in Wisconsin and respond to the costs of short-sighted fiscal planning. For years, state lawmakers systematically attacked public higher education and forced campuses throughout the UW System to spend down surpluses that would have helped weather this crisis. Legislators slashed education budgets, and UW administrations prioritized administrator salaries and debt servicing over investing in students and workers. These assaults, from legislators and UW System leadership, have decimated morale, eroded students’ and workers’ trust, and further eroded workplace democracy. Campus COVID-19 responses have been inconsistent and inequitable. Students, workers, and the people of Wisconsin should not shoulder the cost of poor planning and bad policy.

To ensure the health of the communities we serve, we demand that the University of Wisconsin–Madison:

  1. Move all courses online until Dane County Health Services reports zero new cases for fourteen (14) consecutive days.
  2. Provide employment and payment continuity for all workers—hourly, part-time, and salaried—during the pandemic. Do not shift the burden of the fiscal crisis onto low-income workers and vulnerable communities.
  3. Reinstate the $15 per hour promised wage for hourly workers and extend it to student workers.
  4. Meet and confer with campus labor unions and lobby the state Joint Committee on Employee Relations to immediately approve the trades workers’ contract.

Our response to Smart Restart is only the first step in articulating a new vision for UW–Madison: a vision that centers students, workers, and marginalized communities. The University Labor Council invites all campus workers—those with and without a union—to join us in this struggle to defend our public university and democratize the workplace. An injury to one is an injury to all!

Dave Branson, Executive Director, Building and Construction Trades Council of South Central Wisconsin

Alejandra Canales, Co-President, Teaching Assistants Association, Local 3220, American Federation of Teachers

CV Vitolo-Haddad, Co-President, TAA, Local 3220, AFT

Alyssa Franze, President, United Faculty and Academic Staff, Local 223, AFT

Peter Haney, President, Local 2412, American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees

Barb Peters, President, Local 171, AFSCME

_____________________________________

ALSO: EMAIL ADMINISTRATORS!

***For the email addresses of UW administrators and sample email text, visit: https://bit.ly/TAAdayofaction***

In response to inaction from university administrators, students and workers across the U.S. have successfully used blast-email campaigns to win on their demands. Following the lead of our allies across higher education, the TAA is asking as many community members as possible to reach out to UW–Madison administrators and local elected officials to directly share your questions and concerns about the upcoming fall semester. Campus leaders have largely been unresponsive to the collective concerns of workers and students under COVID-19—this is our opportunity to make them listen.

We are asking people to start sending emails on Tuesday. From there, this will be an ongoing event throughout the week.

***For the email addresses of UW administrators and sample email text, visit: https://bit.ly/TAAdayofaction***

#MoralRestart

August 19, 2020: TAA-AFT Town Hall For a Safe Restart at UW Madison

Image may contain: text that says 'TOWN HALL FOR A SAFE RESTART ACUST196PM 6PM AUGUST 19 TAA'

Town Hall for a Safe Restart

TAA – Graduate Worker Union of UW-Madison

As UW continues to push ahead with “Smart Restart,” we’re hearing lots of questions and concerns from grad workers about its problem. In this town hall, come learn how we’re organizing for a safer semester and chat with us on about we can protect each other.

Go to the bit.ly link below or click the link in the event description to register for the event and we’ll send the Zoom info to your email.

http://bit.ly/TAAtownhall

_____________________________________

ALSO: EMAIL ADMINISTRATORS!

***For the email addresses of UW administrators and sample email text, visit: https://bit.ly/TAAdayofaction***

In response to inaction from university administrators, students and workers across the U.S. have successfully used blast-email campaigns to win on their demands. Following the lead of our allies across higher education, the TAA is asking as many community members as possible to reach out to UW–Madison administrators and local elected officials to directly share your questions and concerns about the upcoming fall semester. Campus leaders have largely been unresponsive to the collective concerns of workers and students under COVID-19—this is our opportunity to make them listen.

We are asking people to start sending emails on Tuesday. From there, this will be an ongoing event throughout the week.

***For the email addresses of UW administrators and sample email text, visit: https://bit.ly/TAAdayofaction***

_____________________________________

From: TAA – Graduate Worker Union of UW-Madison

The University Labor Council, a coalition of unions representing workers throughout UW–Madison, released its emergency response to UW’s Smart Restart August 5, 2020. We’re proud to be a part of it.

A united labor front is a crucial step in keeping our community, our students, and ourselves safe in the face of UW administrators’ negligence. Workers across the world have won important safety measures and more during COVID by banding together.

Statement in Spanish: https://tinyurl.com/yykwmpwc

Statement from the UW–Madison University Labor Council on Smart Restart:

We are the University Labor Council, a coalition of unions representing workers throughout UW–Madison. We are food service workers, trades workers, academic staff, faculty, custodians, non-academic staff, and graduate-student workers. The University works because we do: we disinfect dorm rooms, feed and educate our community’s young adults, ensure that the university is fiscally responsible, and build safe and efficient infrastructure. Every working day, we give our skills and our time in service to the Wisconsin Idea.

It is that service to our community and state that drives us now. We are in the midst of a global health and economic crisis that has only worsened since UW moved all classes online in March. On August 15th, the university plans to reopen dormitories at 90% capacity, with multiple students housed in each room; offer in-person instruction; and continue ramping up in-person research. Smart Restart forces us to expose ourselves, our loved ones, and the Madison community for a paycheck. The world-class teaching, research, and outreach of the university cannot come at the expense of maintaining public safety. Our community’s health is more important than tuition money and dorm dollars.

We are in a crisis brought on by state legislators and university administrators and exacerbated by the global pandemic. But we have the opportunity to reinvest in Wisconsin and respond to the costs of short-sighted fiscal planning. For years, state lawmakers systematically attacked public higher education and forced campuses throughout the UW System to spend down surpluses that would have helped weather this crisis. Legislators slashed education budgets, and UW administrations prioritized administrator salaries and debt servicing over investing in students and workers. These assaults, from legislators and UW System leadership, have decimated morale, eroded students’ and workers’ trust, and further eroded workplace democracy. Campus COVID-19 responses have been inconsistent and inequitable. Students, workers, and the people of Wisconsin should not shoulder the cost of poor planning and bad policy.

To ensure the health of the communities we serve, we demand that the University of Wisconsin–Madison:

  1. Move all courses online until Dane County Health Services reports zero new cases for fourteen (14) consecutive days.
  2. Provide employment and payment continuity for all workers—hourly, part-time, and salaried—during the pandemic. Do not shift the burden of the fiscal crisis onto low-income workers and vulnerable communities.
  3. Reinstate the $15 per hour promised wage for hourly workers and extend it to student workers.
  4. Meet and confer with campus labor unions and lobby the state Joint Committee on Employee Relations to immediately approve the trades workers’ contract.

Our response to Smart Restart is only the first step in articulating a new vision for UW–Madison: a vision that centers students, workers, and marginalized communities. The University Labor Council invites all campus workers—those with and without a union—to join us in this struggle to defend our public university and democratize the workplace. An injury to one is an injury to all!

Dave Branson, Executive Director, Building and Construction Trades Council of South Central Wisconsin

Alejandra Canales, Co-President, Teaching Assistants Association, Local 3220, American Federation of Teachers

CV Vitolo-Haddad, Co-President, TAA, Local 3220, AFT

Alyssa Franze, President, United Faculty and Academic Staff, Local 223, AFT

Peter Haney, President, Local 2412, American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees

Barb Peters, President, Local 171, AFSCME

Sign Letter: ‘Close University of North Carolina System Universities to Normal Student Residence and In-Person Instruction’

https://bit.ly/2EhejhC

https://ue150.org/

Home

Dear Governor Cooper and North Carolina State Senators and Representatives,

As faculty, workers, staff, and students of the University of North Carolina System, we write to you today with an urgent request. On July 29, Orange County Health Director Quintana Stewart and Medical Director Dr. Erica Pettigrew sent a remarkably detailed and grave letter of warning to UNC-Chapel Hill leadership regarding the imminent health risks facing not only their campus but also the surrounding communities due to the return of thousands of students to the area without adequate or appropriate planning. That letter and a relevant Chronicle of Higher Education article from August 5, 2020, are appended here.

The UNC System and campus leadership chose to defy the Orange County Health Director’s request that the University go to all online instruction for all courses for the first 5 weeks of classes, and to provide housing on campus only for students with no other options and genuine housing needs (e.g., international students). Since thousands of students began to move back to Chapel Hill on August 3, four distinct cluster outbreaks of Covid-19 in student residences,, have been recorded. Because Covid-19 spreads asymptomatically, and because there is neither adequate nor timely testing for infections, undoubtedly many more students, perhaps in the hundreds, are actually already infected – and we are only in the second week of classes. Indeed, when the UNC-Chapel Hill dashboard was updated today, we learned that in the first week of classes, 130 students and 5 employees tested positive. And now, UNC-Chapel Hill is moving all courses to remote instruction, effective Wednesday, August 19.

Other campuses throughout the UNC System will inevitably report similar outbreaks of Covid-19 arising from the UNC Board of Governor (BOG) decision to compel all UNC System campus chancellors to open their campuses for the Fall 2020 semester to students in residence and face-to-face instruction. Poor students and students of African American, Native, and Latinx descent have been particularly affected on our HBCU and NC Promise School campuses.

The impetuous and ill-planned decision by the UNC BOG to require 240,000 students on 16 UNC System campuses to live and study in crowded conditions in the face of a pandemic endangers not only students, but also thousands of their faculty, staff and other workers on campus, and community members. This decision has created a public health disaster of growing magnitude and is a dark day for the University of North Carolina.

Today, we implore you as the chief executive of the State of North Carolina, and someone vitally concerned for the future of public higher education in our State, to communicate your own concerns and warnings to the UNC BOG in explicit terms, with special regard to North Carolina laws governing public health emergencies, about the public health disaster now spreading across and beyond 16 UNC System campuses. We need to ensure that the UNC Board of Governors immediately close down all UNC campuses to all students except those who have no other place to live (e.g., homeless students, international students), and convert all courses to online only to avoid further infections of students, faculty and staff.

We recognize that you, like all of us, are deeply distressed by the economic harm caused by closing down institutions, but opening up institutions such as UNC campuses without protection or plan, then having to close them down again, because of many infections and deaths, is now an unfortunate necessity. The cause of the problem was the UNC BOG ignoring the early and strong warnings of those faculty, students, and staff member at UNC campuses who had a more accurate appraisal than the BOG members of the dangers of pandemic spread while inviting thousands of young adults to campus environments where they could transmit the virus. Unfortunately our warnings went unheeded, and you must now act.

We ask that you do the responsible thing and mandate the closure of UNC System universities to normal student residence and in-face instruction on campus until such time as students, faculty, and staff can return safely to their work. We speak not only for ourselves, but on behalf of our students, co-workers, families, and neighbors in making this plea. Ultimately it is your decision-making power as our leaders of the State that will matter the most as we move forward together. Thank you for your consideration and leadership.

Sincerely,

The undersigned 

 

Appendix:

 

Letter from Orange County Health Department: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1NqZrCqCSdAv8gqq1CZ4xYPFu2wDR2z81/view

Chronicle of Higher Education article: https://www.chronicle.com/article/its-local-health-department-urged-a-virtual-fall-unc-is-reopening-anyway

Washington Post article on UNC-Chapel Hill’s switch to remote instruction: https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/unc-chapel-hill-coronavirus-cluster/2020/08/17/8ebce060-e0ab-11ea-8181-606e603bb1c4_story.html

Milwaukee, August 22, 2020: Save The Post Office Rally

USPS Downtown Facility, 345 W Saint Paul Avenue, Milwaukee, WI 53203 – 11 A.M.

Wall Street is trying to destroy our public Postal Service. Whether it’s to privatize this amazing public institution to benefit his campaign donors and corporate and banker cronies, or to steal the election by keeping us from voting safely by mail, we will not let Trump destroy the USPS. The attack on the USPS, is also an attack on public sector unions and specifically Black and Brown workers, women and LGBTQ workers that make up a significant number of the USPS workforce.We are also fighting to save our unions at the USPS!

Join together to stand up for our postal service and save the USPS!

We are committed to maintaining public health measures to practice safe protesting during the pandemic. All event participants are expected to wear a mask, maintain social distancing, and follow all local safety guidelines.  Individual hosts are responsible for compliance with their own local laws and event requirements (including orders limiting the sizes of events).

Please remember that we are still in a pandemic and your health, and that of those around you, is very important.

If you do attend, please wear a mask, bring plenty of hand sanitizer and remain at least six feet away from others. 

_________________________________

For more information:

APWU – The American Postal Workers Union

https://www.nrlca.org/

ALSO: Next Tuesday, Aug 25, Postal Workers across the country will take action to #SavethePostOffice. We’ll have more information soon. In the meantime, talk to your local and your co-workers about how you can take action in your neighborhood. https://bit.ly/34dpvGJ

Image may contain: 16 people, people smiling, people standing

Chicago, August 29, 2020: The People’s Town Hall: 46th Ward For CPAC

Image may contain: text that says 'The 46th Ward Neighbors Against Police Violence INVITES YOU TO JOIN THE PEOPLE'S TOWN HALL #CPACNow #DefundCPD #CPDoutofCPS Sunday, August 29th @ 4pm Location: Clarendon Park'

The People’s Town Hall: 46th Ward For CPAC

Join us on Saturday evening, August 29th at Wilson & Clarendon and for a People’s Town Hall to uplift voices from our community and around Chicago who have been affected by police violence. James Cappleman has demonstrated a complete disregard for the safety of our neighbors who are targets of police violence and refuses to support CPAC which would put the power in the people’s hands. Join us in sharing our support for CPAC and demanding accountability from our alderman. Chicagoans from all wards are invited to attend and support 46 ward neighbors ❤

Wear a mask, bring a chair for yourself (if you want), and pull up to this family-friendly event.

*Please dm us about any accessibility questions or concerns.*

– – – –

HOSTED BY
46th Ward Neighbors Against Police Violence and Chicago Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression

ENDORSED BY
Northside Action For Justice

– – – –

About 46th Ward Neighbors Against Police Violence

Our goal is to bring together 46th Ward neighbors to push for structural transformation of the criminal justice system. We want CPAC now!!

What is CPAC?

CPAC is a Civilian Police Accountability Council, which would control the police budget, have hiring and firing power, and make sure that police crimes are NOT tolerated and that our community members, particularly our Black and Brown neighbors, are SAFE. To learn more about CPAC go to www.StopPoliceCrimes.com and come to this event!

Voces de la Frontera: Details of Strauss Workers Victory

Photo by Joe Brusky for the MTEA.

Photo: Joe Brusky, MTEA

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Monday, August 17, 2020

PRESS CONTACT:

Jacquelyn Kovarik | communications@vdlf.org and jacquelyn@vdlf.org  | 414-436-9822

Press Statement: Details of Strauss Workers Victory

(MILWAUKEE, WI) –  On Friday the Voces de la Frontera Essential Workers Rights Network hosted a press conference outside the Voces de la Frontera office in Walker’s Point to publicly announce the Strauss Workers Settlement with Strass Brands, Inc. You can watch the full recorded press conference here on our Voces YouTube channel.  

We want to now send out an update with the details of this victory. These workers received a total cash settlement of $264,000, to be divided amongst the 28 workers. Each worker is entitled to four days of pay per each year that they worked for Strauss. To put that in perspective, most of these workers had worked for Strauss for over a decade, with the median length being 15 years and the maximum at 23 years. Furthermore, each worker additionally received their unused vacation pay from 2020 and their projected vacation pay for 2021. These 28 workers chose not to be reinstated at Strauss. Although the agreement is far from perfect, these workers see important justice in this cash settlement.

Deny Alvarado, the 29th terminated worker, was not included in this settlement agreement because he was a whistleblower supervisor and so was not protected by the union agreement. We want to highlight that he was also terminated for being a whistleblower about Strauss’ lack of COVID-19 protections. He is a single father with a child with asthma, and was equally concerned about the potential health impacts on his family as the line workers. Alvarado worked loyally for Strauss for 17 years, and we see it as unacceptable that he is not receiving just compensation along with the line workers. Although we could not include Alvarado in this settlement agreement, we are working to see how we can still support him. One key way we are doing this is continuing to put pressure on Strauss to enforce OSHA-CDC guidelines for COVID-19 protections in the workplace.

We want to highlight that this labor victory was made possible because of the tireless organizing and strong leadership of the Strauss workers themselves. These essential workers are the true heroes. Through the Voces de la Frontera Essential Workers Right Network, these workers were able to engage the larger community in direct public action. They were able to be united, strong, and stand up for their inherent dignity. Essential workers in the Voces network and the larger community send a strong message to the public with this Strauss settlement agreement: immigrant workers’ lives matter and we will fight for them to be protected in Wisconsin as this pandemic rages on.

Christine Neumann-Ortiz, the Executive Director of Voces de la Frontera, said:

“There were three things that led us to victory. The first was the leadership of these workers and their co-workers. Without them, there could have been no change. The second is the dignity and safety that they demanded, for themselves and for their families. And the third is support that we were able to get from the general community. We did direct action, we protested, and we made it public.

In every fight that the Essential Workers Rights Network is organizing, we see progress when these three things are present: unity, dignity, and strong public community support. We invite others to join the Voces Essential Workers Rights Network. We will be putting on trainings, starting on August 23rd, so that other workers can have the protections and the safety that they deserve.”

For more information, please reach out to Communications Director Jacquelyn Kovarik at jacquelyn@vdlf.org or at 414-436-9822.