The
Labor movement and Black Lives Matter will come together
today in a nationwide Strike for Black
Lives organized by the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), which represents nearly 2 million service workers and other
unions, Civil Rights organizations, and
labor allies.
According
to SEIU President Mary Kay Henry the strike is intended
to highlight the economic plight of service workers,
many of whom are People of Color. During
the first two months of the coronavirus
pandemic, her union was concerned about how essential workers were being treated
on the front lines. Some lacked access to personal protective equipment (PPE)
that would help them avoid contracting
COVID-19.
SEIU President Mary Kay Henry at a health care workers' action. |
The
death of Black Minneapolis resident
George Floyd while in police custody
“escalated the case we were trying to make” about the mistreatment of Black
people, Henry said. “We hope to gain
that corporations and governments will understand the need to dismantle racist
policies and make sure every family has a living wage and is able to be healthy
and safe.”
The
strike is intended to put more attention
on low-wage workers who risk their lives but struggle to pay their bills. Although major
companies pledge support for the Black Lives Matter movement, they pay
their workers low wages, fail to provide paid time off while sick, and,
in some cases, fail to provide the necessary
equipment to keep them healthy on
the job, Henry said. “Most workers are infuriated by it because it’s so
hypocritical,”
The
demands being put forth during the
strike include:
- Justice for Black communities.
- Elected officials and candidates at every level use
their authority to rewrite and reimagine the rules so that Black
communities can thrive.
- Corporations take immediate action to dismantle racism,
white supremacy and economic exploitation wherever it exists, including in
our workplaces.
- Every worker has the opportunity to form a union, no
matter where they work.
Unions
and civil rights groups planning to
take part in the strike include the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, the
American Federation of Teachers, Fight for $15 and a Union, United Food and Commercial Workers, Greenpeace, MoveOn, and the American
Civil Liberties Union. Ride-sharing drivers for companies like
Uber and Lyft are also expected to join in.
Police unions, which have
been hyper-critical of the Black
Lives Matter movement, defended police
violence, and encouraged even
more aggressive action to suppress protests will not be
participating although Henry says that some unions representing correctional and probation officers “actually understand that there is systemic
inequality that has to be addressed.”
This call for the San Francisco action shows participating organization. |
The
strike will take place at different
times depending on the city and location. Some of the 25 cities expected
to have actions include Los Angeles,
Chicago, Miami, Seattle, and Houston. In Los Angeles workers will gather in cars as part of a caravan beginning at a local McDonald’s—a long time target of demands for a $15 an hour base wage and
union recognition—and then drive through the city, stopping by
places like the University of Southern
California, where organizers said they’ll “demand the nation's second-largest school district and the university drop their use of the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) on
campuses.”
Critical medical workers demanded a safe working environment, sick leave, and a living wage at a Chicago area hospital. |
Chicago
will have at least two actions. The Chicago March/Caravan for Black Lives
will start from the Illinois State
Government Thompson Center, 100 West Randolph and visit job site across the
city where the SEIU represents impacted
workers including hospital and nursing home staff, home health care workers, custodians and housekeeping staff, hospitality
and fast food workers, and state and local public
employees. Teamsters represent warehouse and distribution workers
and the Food and Commercial Workers have grocery
store and other retail workers.
At 3 pm a
Chicago Teamsters Walk Out for Black
Lives sponsored by Teamsters Joint Council 25 will begin
at a job site at 4600 South Kolin Avenue.
In
New York City, essential workers
will gather outside of the Trump
International Hotel to demand that the Senate
and President Donald Trump pass and sign the HEROES Act, House-passed legislation for providing PPE, essential
pay, and extended unemployment
benefits to workers who have not had
the option of working from home
during the coronavirus pandemic. Organizers said New York Senator Chuck Schumer is expected to rally with workers.
McDonald's has long been a target of the Fight for $15 and a Union campaign of the SEIU and of other unions including the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW.) |
Strikers
in Minneapolis, where Floyd was killed, will include nursing home and airport workers demanding a $15-per-hour
minimum wage. In Missouri, participants will rally at McDonald’s locations in St. Louis and Ferguson, a key BLM landmark
sparked by the death of Michael Brown
who was killed by police in 2014. The Ferguson strikers will also march to a memorial site where Brown was shot and
killed.
For
workers who are unable to strike,
the organizers urge them to walk off their jobs at noon for eight minutes and 46 seconds,
the amount of time initially that a police officer held George Floyd under a
knee on his.
Today’s
action are an important and historic link between a revived and energized labor movement and one of the most important and game changing
social movements of our time.
No comments:
Post a Comment