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Are You Ready for
Convention?
Take Action
Your union has postcards for you to sign and send to your
Congressmen urging them to vote the right way on healthcare
reform. Check in with your local president and ask them about
it! If they haven't gotten postcards yet they can call our
office and we'll send them right over. Oregon's Congressmen need
to know that their constituents are still keeping up on the
healthcare debate. Unless we keep the pressure on middle class
Oregonians and hard working families won't win!
Convention in 4 Days! Bend - Here Comes Oregon's Union
Movement!
This is it! Sunday's Welcome Party will kick of our 2009
Convention in Bend, and boy are people excited! We want to keep
a few surprises in the bag for this weekend, but here are a few
highlights: - Welcome party keynote speaker comedian Carl
Wolfson is ready to keep you laughing all night long as he takes
a hard look at where we're at in Oregon and the country as a
whole
- Curious about the candidates for governor? Many of
them will be at the convention. Catch their speeches, or catch
them in the hall
- Ready for the new Oregon AFL-CIO? We'll
be kicking off a new campaign that will help your union with
organizing, politics and outreach as we move forward
In Other News...
One Union Employer Seems to be Losing Their Commitment to
the Movement
A few months ago the IBEW called with a problem. Fred Meyer,
a long time union-employer, was using out of state, low wage,
labor to remodel their stores. The labor movement was
infuriated, but because Fred Meyer is a union employer we were
careful with the actions we took.
But Fred Meyer took it a step further last week.
UFCW is in the middle of contract negotiations with Fred
Meyer, and their bargaining team was in Portland. Bargaining get
delayed so a few Fred Meyer representatives went by the store in
Hillsboro to talk to workers. According to UFCW and Fred Meyer's
contract union reps can talk to union members on the job as long
as their work isn't interrupted. But a manager at Fred Meyer
told the union reps they couldn't talk to members on the job.
When the UFCW representatives tried to show the manager the
contract he wouldn't take it, and called the cops, saying that
the reps were trespassing.
UFCW 555's president and a few local and international staff
were arrested and are awaiting a trail next week.
It's time for Fred Meyer to realize that fighting their
workers' union won't help their business grow in Oregon!
National Labor Relations Nominee not an Easy Sell
President Obama's nominee to the National Labor Relations
Board, labor lawyer Craig Becker, is running into a hard time
getting the nomination. After months of fighting outside of the
Senate over whether Becker would make a could Board member,
Senator McCain has put a hold on the nomination, blocking the
full Senate from taking a vote for now.
Two of Obama's previous appointees, one a labor lawyer and
the other a Republican staffer to the Senate HELP Committee,
were approved unanimously. Although Senate Republicans cite some
of Becker's previous writings as their reason for concern the
hold seems to be strictly political.
Breaking News From Columbia
The following is a letter we received this afternoon. The
continued violence against labor leaders in Columbia has
devastated their workers' movement and brought pain to an
already-hurting country.
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
We regret that we must send you tragic news of yet another
assassination of a Colombian trade union leader, Honorio
Llorente Melendez, a union organizer in the palm oil sector and,
until he was recently fired for his union activity, the
treasurer of the Sintrainagro agricultural workers' union in
Sogamoso, Colombia. Brother Llorente had close ties to the US
labor movement: a delegation of CLC leaders visited his
community in 2008 to meet with union leaders; his regional labor
council is working with the Solidarity Center on a campaign to
organize palm sector workers; and one of his trade union
colleagues from his region is a member of a delegation of
Colombian union leaders currently participating in a Solidarity
Center training in the US. Brother Llorente was actively
involved in the campaign to organize palm oil workers in
Colombia, and was awaiting a court hearing on his illegal firing
later this week. He was murdered on Saturday, October 17,
shortly after he departed a community demonstration against a
proposed construction project. He leaves behind five
children.
We ask that you not let Brother Llorente's murder go
unnoticed. Please read and sign the attached letter, and send a
copy to your congressional representatives. We also ask that you
honor Brother Llorente's life by adjourning the next meeting of
your central labor council in his honor, as the Sacramento
Central Labor Council will do this week. We kindly request that
you send copies of your letters to Molly McCoy at the Solidarity
Center (mmccoy@solidaritycenter.org) and confirm if your
organization recognized Brother Llorente at your meeting, so
that the government of Colombia can in turn be notified of your
support. The Solidarity Center can also assist should you wish
to further show solidarity with Brother Llorente and with the
surviving Colombian trade unionists through a letter of support
or donation.
In Solidarity,
Bill Camp Sacramento Central Labor Council (CA), Jeff Crosby
North Shore labor Council (MA)
The Weekly Update is created by the Oregon AFL-CIO.
President: Tom Chamberlain
Secretary-Treasurer: Barbara Byrd
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