Rochester, N.Y.--Forty-three years ago, a struggle by 1,300 AFSCME city sanitation workers who were being denied the fundamental right of collective bargaining brought Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to Memphis, Tennessee. After marching with these workers, Martin Luther King Jr. declared: "Work that serves humanity… It has dignity and it has worth." Dr. King was assassinated hours later on April 4, 1968.
On Monday, April 4, 2011 hundreds of thousands Americans will stand up, say "enough is enough," and fight for the same rights for which Dr. King fought. The theme for these nationwide events is "We Are One." We hope you will join us.
Here in Rochester, we will assemble at 4:30 pm, at the Aenon Baptist Church, 175 Genesee Street and march south to Wilson High School Commencement Academy Auditroium for a rally and forum. Wilson Academy is located at 501 Genesee Street.
Here in New York and across the country, well-funded, right-wing corporate politicians are trying to take away the rights Dr. King gave his life for: the freedom to bargain, to vote, to afford a college education and justice for all workers. Officials in Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Maine, and a series of other states want to balance the budget on the backs of working people, instead of creating good jobs and asking the wealthiest citizens and large corporations to pay their fair share:
•Ohio: Just last night, in a move opposed by the majority of Ohio voters, the Legislature pushed through a bill undermining collective bargaining for 42,000 state workers plus 19,500 college system workers—and ending it entirely for child care providers. It removes health care and other vital benefits completely from the negotiating process.
•Wisconsin: Gov. Scott Walker destroyed more than 50 years of labor-management cooperation with his attack on the collective bargaining rights of public employees. A contingent of state legislators met in secret to strip public employees of their rights to collectively bargain to maintain a middle class life.
•Michigan: The Legislature approved measures that allow unelected emergency managers to break union contracts in the name of saving struggling school districts. Gov. Snyder signed the bill while thousands of protestors have turned out at the capital in recent days to voice their opposition.
•Indiana: Republican leaders in the Legislature tried to pass a right-to-work for less bill—a cornerstone of the anti-worker agenda—as well as a bill making the state's ban on collective bargaining for public service workers (which Gov. Mitch Daniels enacted in 2005) permanent. While the battle for workers' dignity continues in Indiana, due to immense public outcry, the legislative leadership has scrapped both proposals for the time being.
•Maine: Gov. Paul LePage exempted himself from a $6.1 billion budget bill that requires state employees to increase their pension contributions from 7.65 percent of their salary to 9.65 percent. (He also removed a labor-themed mural from a state office building.)
•Florida: Severe cuts to public services, Medicaid, education and pensions are in the works. Meanwhile, state employees haven't received a raise in more than four years, but most agency heads that Gov. Rick Scott has appointed are making $20,000 a year more than their predecessors.
Area Labor Leaders Rally at City Hall in Rochester, N.Y. on March 2, 2011. CSEA's Courtney Brunelle at right. photo: Ove Overmyer |
Next week, we hope you’ll join the WE ARE ONE initiative and stand together as one for the American dream.
Visit our special We Are One/April 4 web page for information about Dr. King's support for working families and his final journey in support of the AFSCME sanitation workers in Memphis, as well as more about today's battles.
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