Showing posts with label Labor Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Labor Day. Show all posts

Thursday, September 1, 2016

Why Workers Deserve Your Attention and Respect


By Tony Speelman
@aspeel1500

Tony Speelman, President UFCW Local 1500
While most Americans view Labor Day as the last long weekend of the summer and another day off work, this is the one day we should all stop for a minute and recognize the countless number of men and women across New York who make our community work. From workers at Stop & Shop to Fairway, these amazing people are dedicated and passionate, sacrifice for the good of others, and are committed to creating a better life for themselves and their families.
Jerome Gomez, a UFCW Local 1500 member working at Fairway Market, regularly donates blood to help his community. Or take a look at Georgette Wilson a UFCW Local 1500 members from Stop & Shop, who besides fundraising and walking each year for cancer charities like the Making Strides Against Breast Cancer Walk and the Light the Night Walk, she travels to Albany every year to fight for better legislation to help New York workers and to help her community. These are the true every day heroes of Labor Day.
While these stories may not be new, they are rarely given the media attention that a vacuous celebrity, lying athlete, or misbegotten politician can attract with a single tweet. While that may speak to a failure in our culture, we have opportunity on Labor Day to remember and acknowledge what this day is truly about. It’s about workers. It’s about real people. In fact, the the history behind this misunderstood holiday was actually a result of one of the most intense and violent struggles for workers’ rights.  
In 1894, during a time of severe economic and social unrest, thousands of workers at the Pullman Palace Car Company in Chicago went on strike to protest the way George Pullman, founder and president of the company, treated his workers. To put down the strike, Pullman gained the support of President Grover Cleveland, who ordered federal troops to intervene—leading to a bloody confrontation and the deaths of more than 30 Pullman workers. Soon afterwards and amid growing criticism of the brutal response to the striking workers, President Cleveland established Labor Day as a national holiday in an effort to appease organized labor.
It’s been 122 years since the Pullman Strike, and our country is still grappling with economic divisions and social unrest.

Today, millions of hard-working Americans are struggling like never before in low-paying jobs with erratic schedules and little to no benefits.

It is the sad reality that, in addition to stagnant wages and incomes, too many of America’s workers face dangerous workplaces, exploitation, and mistreatment every single day. Many are also too afraid to reach for a better life because of threats from an irresponsible employer or they are conditioned to believe that they have not earned the opportunity for something more.

Here in New York, hard-working men and women who choose to become part of a union family soon realize they need not struggle alone. In Westbury UFCW Local 1500 represents workers at Stop & Shop, Food Bazaar, Tops Markets, Fairway Market, Key Food, Gristedes, D’Agostino, ShopRite, King Kullen and PeaPod.

Whether someone is a union member or not, the fact is that no one in America should have to struggle alone. Every hard-working person deserves a better life because they’ve earned it.
This Labor Day and in the days leading up to Election Day, we have a responsibility to speak out for each other and our communities. We can start by honoring the sacrifices working people here in New York City that have made to our shared prosperity of New York and this country.
Yet, if we are really going to change this nation for the better, it must begin with all of us realizing that Labor Day is not about one last summery day. Rather, it’s about the day where we all realize the power we have to come together and define a better future for all hard-working families.


Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Labor Day Art Contest Winners Announced!

We received so many wonderful submissions for the first-ever UFCW Labor Day Art Contest, so it was a difficult choice to pick three winners.

Jeff Moser of Local 324 submitted the winning artwork for the contest. Congratulations to Jeff, who wins a $500 Visa gift card. Congratulations, as well, to the two runners-up: Nancy Bacon of Local 75, and Tiffany Siebuhr of Local 324 – they’ll receive $50 Visa gift cards.

Congratulations to all, and thank you to all who submitted your fantastic artwork to the UFCW!

By Jeff Moser
By Jeff Moser
By Nancy Bacon
By Nancy Bacon
Runner Up3--Tiffany Siebuhr--UFCW Labor Day Art Contest
By Tiffany Siebuhr

Wednesday, August 10, 2016

Labor Day Art Contest!

www.ufcw.org/contest
Every year, we celebrate Labor Day to honor working people and all their contributions to our country and its middle class. The UFCW is made up of hard-working men and women who serve in our communities at retail and grocery stores, meatpacking and processing plants, and countless other facilities across multiple industries.

This year, the UFCW International is hosting its first ever Labor Day art contest, to celebrate working people with something made by working people! UFCW members and their children are eligible to enter an original work of art to be in the running for a $500 Visa gift card AND have their artwork framed and displayed at the DC labor Fest in the fall! The winning piece will also be available for all UFCW locals and members at our online UFCW Store.

Two runners up will receive $50 Visa gift cards, as well. To enter, send us a high resolution photo image of your art at www.ufcw.org/contest. Your submission must have a Labor Day theme. The deadline to submit is August 25th, and winners will be notified by August 29th.

This is your chance to showcase what you think Labor Day is all about while showing off your creative skills—we can’t wait to see what you can do!

Friday, September 4, 2015

Celebrating Labor Day


By: Bruce W. Both

Each Labor Day we celebrate the many accomplishments that organized labor has helped to create for all American workers.  The five day work week, the 8-hour work day, child labor laws and holiday pay are just a few that come to mind.  Looking forward, the fight for better rights for hardworking men and women will never end, and there is still much work to do.

As the gap between the wealthy few and the rest of America continues to grow, more must be done to address the millions of Americans who are struggling to provide for their families in part-time, low-wage jobs. 

Here in New York too many workers are struggling to stay afloat in a fragile economy.  Men and women alike are forced to take on two, three and sometimes four jobs to support their families. New York likes to flaunt itself as a progressive capital, yet the local laws protecting workers and wages don’t stack up against other states like Vermont, Washington and Rhode Island.  This should be seen as unacceptable when you consider how expensive it is to make ends meet while living in New York.

The national opinion on these issues is shifting in favor of workers.  The latest results from the 2015 installment of Gallup’s annual Work and Education survey show that Americans’ approval of labor unions has jumped five percentage points to 58% over the past year, and is now at its highest point since 2008, when 59% approved. Consistent with the recent increase in approval of unions, the percentage of Americans saying they would like labor unions to have more influence in the country has also been rising, and now stands at 37%, up from 25% in 2009. Meanwhile, the percentage wanting unions to have less influence has declined from 42% to 35%. 
America wants better treatment, better jobs and higher wages for working men and women, so why can’t they get it?  
As union members, we all have what every worker in our country should want: respect, a voice at work, better benefits, wages, representation and protection from greedy corporations.

Congressional Republicans and their corporate backers have stuck to the same old, tired argument that raising wages, and reforming the National Labor Laws will be bad for businesses. Attacking these ideals and hard working men and women who are fighting to better their lives to support their families, not only divide our country but our communities as well. We know that by joining together, we can make both working conditions and companies better.

That’s what Labor Day is about.
We all want the same thing, better jobs, better communities, and a better country. We can only achieve them by working together, not by divisive attacks that further separate us further.

UFCW Local 1500 salutes all of our union employers for employing and partnering with the hard working men and women who make their stores and their companies better. Please remember these Union members who help you every single day of the year while you’re enjoying your Labor Day.  Happy Labor Day!

Friday, September 5, 2014

Obama: “I’d Join a Union”


 
During a speech in Milwaukee, Wisconsin for Labor Day, President Obama uttered a phrase that has not been uttered by a sitting president since the days of FDR, “I’d join a union.” Indeed, he said, “if I were looking for a good job that lets me build some security for my job, I’d join a union. If I were busting my butt in the service industry and wanted an honest day’s pay for an honest day’s work, I’d join a union.” Obama also endorsed the “Fight for $15” fast-food worker’s movement. 
Watch the entire speech here.
Post via ILCA 
  - image credit: Colleen Crinion

Translate