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Calvert teachers "won't be bullied"
Contact tracing falling short in MD agency facilities, worker says
Today's Labor Quote
Today's Labor History
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Calvert teachers "won't be bullied"
It appears that the commitment of the Calvert County Board of Education to equality doesn't extend to the county's hardworking educators. That's according to the [link removed] Calvert Education Association, the organization representing the teachers of Calvert County Public Schools (CCPS), which has been renegotiating the contract for the teachers since December 2019. After nearly a dozen negotiating sessions over the past six months, CEA (part of the [link removed] Maryland State Education Association) says CCPS is stalling discussions on salaries to try to pressure teachers to give up their workplace protections, including protections against racial and gender-based discrimination. "Our teachers are working harder than they ever have for the students of Calvert County," says CEA president Dona Ostenso. "It is alarming and frankly offensive that representatives of the school board are trying to make teachers choose between their salaries and their most basic rights." However, Ostenso declared, "We won't be bullied into allowing our members to suffer discrimination at work."
photo: From CEA's [link removed] Facebook page: "With all of the craziness going on right now, CEA members (and families) are still taking time to complete the Census 2020"
Contact tracing falling short in MD agency facilities, worker says
AFSCME Council 3 President Patrick Moran said that members of his union who work in the state's detention facilities are "working in literal Petri dishes." One of his members working at the Baltimore detention center said she wasn't notified that she had come into contact with an infected individual five different times over an eight-hour shift in mid-April. "I really didn't care how, I just know they should have told me," she [link removed] told Maryland Matters. "I shouldn't have to overhear at the locker." Moran said that there are "severe inadequacies" in the state's contact tracing methods across all departments and that the government "need[s] to be collaborative" with their members when it comes to ironing out the details of the process. "Our folks are first responders," he said.
Today's Labor Quote: Jeffrey Reed
"The union is fighting for us. Like now they're trying to get these companies that we work for to give grocery workers first responder status. That way we could have access to more PPE and get as many people tested as possible, just like they're going through it now with these meat packing plants all over the country. You know, the unions are saying, Hey man, these people need PPE. These people need protections."
Reed is a UFCW 400 shop steward featured on [link removed] "The Essentials" podcast.
Today's Labor History
This week's [link removed] Labor History Today podcast: "Strike for Your Life!"; labor history's lessons for the COVID-19 crisis
Peter Rachleff, co-director of the East Side Freedom Library in St. Paul, Minnesota, on how "Lessons from labor history can inform our labor movement during the COVID-19 crisis." "As a labor historian, the closest thing I can think of to the spread of coronavirus strikes is the epidemic of sitdown strikes to spread across the country in the mid-1930s." Historian and writer Jeremy Brecher, from "Strike for Your Life!" Also this week, we preview Debs In Canton, a new audio/radio drama from the filmmakers of American Socialist: The Life and Times of Eugene Victor Debs.
[link removed] Last week's show: Jack Kelly's "The Edge of Anarchy"; "Union Maids" director Julia Reichert (Part 2)
Laundry & Dry Cleaning International Union granted a charter by the AFL-CIO - 1958
International Organization of Masters, Mates & Pilots merges with Longshoremens' Association - 1971
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents raid the Agriprocessors, Inc. slaughterhouse and meat packing plant in Postville, Iowa, arrest nearly 400 immigrant workers. Some 300 are convicted on document fraud charges. The raid was the largest ever until that date. Several employees and lower and mid-level managers were convicted on various charges, but not the owner -- although he later was jailed for bank fraud and related crimes - 2008
- David Prosten
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Published by the Metropolitan Washington Council, an AFL-CIO "Union City" Central Labor Council whose 200 affiliated union locals represent 150,000 area union members.
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