
Above Photo: Ten years ago when I started at Labor Notes, we didnât have so many strikes to coverâmuch less defiantly illegal strikes, like this one by teachers in Haverhill, Massachusetts. (Haverhill Education Association).
If your union goes into negotiations right now and doesnât win its biggest raise ever, youâre leaving money on the table.
Soaring inflation means it takes a bigger raise just to break even. And with unemployment low, labor has extra leverage to win more.
Dining hall workers at Northeastern University in Boston just approved a new contract that will raise them to $30 an hour by 2026âtriple the $9 they were making in 2012 before they unionized.
After a rowdy mass picket, Sysco food delivery Teamsters in Massachusetts won a 39 percent raise over five years.
Here in Seattle, Providence Swedish hospital workers just won their largest-ever economic package, with two-year raises of 21.5 percent or $6.50, whichever is more. (They structured it that way so the lowest-paid workers donât get the lowest raise.)
These are just a few of many examples. Lots of âbest in our unionâs historyâ press releases are crossing my desk.
The naysayers are about to try to stop this train, though. The Fedâs plan to rein in inflation has the intended side effect of raising unemployment, to discipline workplace militancy. With interest rates rising and an engineered recession on the way, weâre all supposed to get scared and quiet again.
Donât buy it. Employers can afford to pay more. Corporations and the rich have made out like bandits throughout this pandemic, raking in record profits while workers paid the price.
And between the pandemic, climate change, and widespread understaffing, everyoneâs job has gotten tougher, more hazardous, more grueling. Ask any airline pilot. Ask any postal worker.
Strikes Galore
Ten years ago when I started at Labor Notes, we didnât have so many strikes to coverâmuch less defiantly illegal strikes, like the school employees in Ontario and teachers in Massachusetts.
A glance at the new December issue of our magazine shows how much more action there is now. In fact, the serious possibility of a general strike is discussed in both Ontario and the U.K..
Rail workers are mulling a massive national strike, despite the best efforts of union leaders and the Biden administration to stop them. Airline pilots may also be moving toward walkouts.
The Sysco drivers mentioned above didnât just strikeâthey âshut the whole thing downâ in a predawn confrontation where they blocked the way for scabs and faced down 100 cops.
And thereâs moreâwe couldnât even fit them all into print! Forty-eight thousand academic workers are out in California, the biggest strike of the year. Journalists at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette have been out for nearly a month. Philly art museum strikers won a first contract by threatening to derail a long-anticipated Matisse exhibit. Even self-organized nonunion workers have been getting into the act, like at Amazon.
Itâs In The Air
Itâs not hard to connect the dots between the resurgence of bold action and big contract wins. But also contributing is another fever Iâm glad to see spreading: union reform movements, where rank and filers push from the inside to make their unions more democratic and militant.
Union reform is on the cover of our latest magazine, with a nascent effort in the Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW). Reformers just won leadership in a major Teamsters local in the Midwest.
Such a transformation inside the Massachusetts Teachers eight years ago laid the groundwork for the brave strikes weâre seeing now.
In the Teamsters, a rank-and-file movement built over decades and a change of leadership has set the stage for what could be next yearâs biggest strike, at UPS.
And whatever the outcome of the first-ever direct election now underway in the Auto Workers (the vote count started todayâhereâs a link to watch the results come in), the activists who notched that reform will help set the tone for next yearâs Big Three negotiations.
If youâre looking for advice or moral support as you push to transform your own unionâreach out. Thatâs what Labor Notes is for.
Source: Popularresistance.org