John,

This month, Arizona’s labor movement is preparing to mark the beginning of Women’s History Month with an exciting International Women’s Day virtual event, Women in Organized Labor in collaboration with the Arizona Alliance for Retired Americans, the Smithsonian Institute, the Arizona Capitol Museum, and the Arizona Education Association-Retired.

On March 8th at 6 PM MST, join us for a virtual International Womens Day celebration featuring legendary labor leader and civil rights activist, Dolores Huerta. During the event, we will be playing a pre-recorded interview with Ms. Huerta and Tucson Mayor Regina Romero, as well as providing a virtual tour of the Smithsonian bilingual museum exhibition,
Dolores Huerta: Revolution in the Fields/Revolución en los Campos. To attend the virtual event, click here to register.


As we honor and reflect on the contributions of women to our communities, our country, and to the labor movement, I’d like to take a moment to highlight the first International Women’s Day. Originally called International Working Women’s Day, what we now recognize as the first International Womens Day started as a work stoppage. On March 8th, 1908, a group of needle trades workers on New York City’s Lower East Side walked off the job to protest child labor, low wages, unsafe working conditions, and to demand voting rights for women. Two years later in 1910, Clara Zetkin of Germany proposed at the International Women’s Conference that March 8th, 1908 be proclaimed as the first International Women's Day in commemoration of working women the world over.

Today, women in Arizona and across the country are transforming the labor movement. Yet, women are still paid substantially less than men for the same work. Women, especially Black and Brown women, have borne the brunt of the economic fallout presented by the COVID-19 pandemic. This month and every month, we remain committed to the fight for pay equality and fair, equitable workplaces.

In solidarity,

 

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