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June 18, 2008
- 'Big Bang' Creates New TNG-CWA Unit in Bay Area
- Tentative Pact Bargained at Mercy Hospital, Buffalo
- FCC Adopts Speed Matters Recommendations in Broadband
Ruling
- IN BRIEF:
- Iowa Congressman's Bill Urges Spending Stimulus Checks on
U.S. Goods
- Senate GOPers Block Extended Jobless Aid
'Big Bang' Creates New TNG-CWA Unit in Bay Area
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| BANG-East Bay staff writers and Northern California
Newspaper Guild organizers Josh Richman, left, and Karen
Holzmeister celebrate their organizing
victory. |
A big victory for a campaign dubbed "One Big Bang" has
created a new unit of The Newspaper Guild-CWA comprising 225
workers at the largest newspaper company in northern
California's Bay Area.
Reporters, photographers, copy editors and other newsroom
workers at nine papers owned by Denver-based MediaNews Group
cast ballots June 13 at seven polling sites in an election run
by the National Labor Relations Board.
"This vote represents a powerful investment in the future of
journalism in the Bay Area, one that's going to move us all
forward, both staff and managers," said Contra Costa Times
reporter Sara Steffens, co-chair of the organizing committee.
"It will be good for our news coverage and good for our
communities."
The election capped a nine-month organizing drive that began
after MediaNews merged newsroom operations at the Oakland
Tribune and four smaller newspapers with the non-union Contra
Costa Times. After the merger, MediaNews withdrew recognition of
the existing Guild unit.
Rather than play defense, the Northern California Media
Workers, TNG-CWA Local 39521, decided to organize all the papers
that were now part of what MediaNews calls its Bay Area News
Group (BANG) – East Bay. Workers called their campaign,
"One Big Bang: One Guild Universe."
TNG-CWA President Linda Foley said the BANG victory is part
of an ongoing effort for the Guild at MediaNews, building both
worker and community support.
"Using strategic industry funds, we have focused on the
importance of having quality, local journalism," Foley said.
"The journalists at BANG saw a union that was strong and could
fight for them and their profession. The terrific group of
Guild supporters who have hung on at what used to be the
Alamedia Newspaper Group now find themselves in a bigger,
stronger and more powerful Guild, ready to ensure that they are
partners -- not pawns -- in an industry transitioning into
a digital world."
Despite a strong counter-campaign by management and
anti-union consultants, the BANG organizers ran a positive
campaign. They repeatedly reached out to MediaNews executives
and publicly stated that both the Guild and management cared
deeply about the papers' quality and future of journalism.
"We're looking forward to working together with management to
ensure our papers and web sites are as efficient and
high-quality as possible," said Karl Fischer, another Contra
Costa Times reporter and a campaign co-chair. "We know
management is interested in those goals too."
Contract negotiations are expected to be underway soon.
Currently, members are talking about contract priorities at the
bargaining table and who they want to represent them at the
bargaining table.
Tentative Pact Bargained at Mercy Hospital, Buffalo
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| Local 1133 Members on informational picket line at Mercy
Hospital. |
CWA Local 1133's bargaining team reached a tentative
agreement with Catholic Health System and Mercy Hospital in
Buffalo, N.Y., following an overwhelming strike authorization
vote and a massive informational picket line outside the
hospital that sent a strong message to management.
Local leaders and negotiators are meeting with members this
week to lay out the details of the proposed contract
terms. CWA represents 2,000 employees at the hospital.
Critical issues for the nurses and other health care workers
are health care, benefits for part-time workers, wages and
staffing levels, especially on the night shift, said local
President Peggy Chadwick-Ledwon.
FCC Adopts Speed Matters Recommendations in Broadband
Ruling
In a victory for CWA's Speed Matters campaign, the Federal
Communications Commission this week released its order raising
its definition of "high speed" broadband service from 200
kilobits per second (kbps) to 768 kbps for downloading.
The definition hadn't been changed in nine years.
While the new definition is not quite the 2 megabits
downstream and 1 megabit upstream that CWA urged, the FCC did
adopt other CWA recommendations. Significantly, the new order
requires broadband providers to report upload speeds as well
as download speeds, acknowledging that most applications
today – uploading video to YouTube, teleconferencing,
telemedicine and interactive distance learning – require
two-way communication.
Further, the FCC adopted another CWA Speed Matters
recommendation to collect detailed information about the actual
number of subscribers by census tract, moving away from its
flawed methodology of claiming an area had broadband if there
was only one subscriber in a zip code. CWA was heavily
involved in the rulemaking process.
There is one problem in the FCC Order that must be corrected,
in CWA's view. Unlike current data collection, this order
does not require broadband providers to report separately the
number of residential and business subscribers. Without this
information, the FCC will not be able to track the number of
households that subscribe to broadband -- a key metric in any
assessment of broadband adoption. CWA has already contacted the
FCC about the need for this change.
The FCC Order makes passage of S. 1492 -- the Broadband Data
Improvement Act now pending in the Senate -- more important than
ever. S. 1492 and the companion H.R. 3919 that has already
passed the House complement the new requirements in the FCC
Broadband Data Order. The legislation would make funds available
to states to collect broadband data and to create local
public-private partnerships to create community plans to
accelerate broadband availability and adoption.
Speed Matters is a CWA Strategic Industries Fund campaign to
promote the rollout of faster Internet networks to create jobs
and spur the U.S. economy. For more information: www.speedmatters.org.
IN BRIEF:
- At the urging of a freshman representative, Iowa
Democrat Bruce Braley, the U.S. House has overwhelmingly passed
a bill that urges taxpayers to spend their stimulus checks on
American products and services.
"If the
millions of American families receiving tax rebates from the
stimulus spend their checks on American-made goods and services,
the effect of the stimulus will be magnified," Braley said.
"Buying American will infuse an additional $10 billion into the
American economy and will help narrow our growing trade
deficit."
Braley told CWA that, "I appreciate the
support of the Communications Workers to push for the passage of
this resolution. The men and women of the labor movement
have known for a long time that buying American supports
American jobs."
- Last week it was House Republicans holding up
benefits for jobless workers whose aid is about to expire
– though enough of them finally came to their senses to
pass the bill. Now Senate Republicans are balking.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.)
attempted to bring the House bill to the floor this week,
legislation that would provide an extra 13 weeks of benefits for
unemployed workers, plus another 13 weeks for workers in states
with high unemployment. But Minority Leader John Kyl (R-Ariz.)
used Senate rules to block the bill.
About 300,000
jobless workers each month run out of unemployment benefits. As
of the end of May, 1.5 million people had been unemployed for
longer than six months, according to the U.S. Department of
Labor. The House-passed bill would extend aid to about 3.8
million jobless workers once they run out of state
benefits.
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