Sunday, August 30, 2009

Shop Stewards: Como resolver un Problema en las areas de Trabajo

Como un buen Shop Steward resuelve los problema en las areas de trabajo:

1. Hablar con el foreman para que resuelva la situacion.

2. Si el foreman no lo hace entonces hablar con el Supervisor.

3. Darle un periodo de tiempo para que resuelva el problema.

4. Si el Supervisor no arregla entoces proceder a llamar al delegado (Business Agent) de su area.

Delegados (Business Agents) por Area que hablan EspaƱol:

Brooklyn, Queens & Bronx: Fabio Morales 646-510-8718

Manhattan & Staten Island: Manuel Ortiz 917-418-0334

Long Island: Mario Chamorr0 917-578-3951

Norte de New Jersey: Abraham Hernandez 347-852-5069

Sur de New Jersey: Gary Salva 201-681-6175

Cuando llames un Delegado y no contesta debes de dejarle un mensaje y luego enviarle un texto sobre la urgencia de que te llame lo antes posible.

De no comunicarte con algun delegado llamar a la oficina de la local 212-227-4803 y explicar la urgencia de comunicarte con algun delegado.

Si el problema ocurreen horas de la noche y no te comunicas con el delegado de tu zona debes de llamar a cualquiera de los demas delegados hasta dar con uno. Recuerda SIEMPRE dejar mensaje.

Esto es todo por ahora queridos Shop Stewards. Seguiremos publicando breves instrucciones para shop stewards mas adelante.

Gracias,

LiUNA Local 78.

PS. Favor dejar comentarios que nos ayuden a ser mejores Shop Stewards...

Saturday, January 3, 2009

Join Secretary of Labor nominee Hilda Solis and support the Employee Free Choice Act



The announcement of Representative Hilda Solis as President-elect Obama's Secretary of Labor is great news for America's workers. Solis comes from a union family and has never forgotten her roots in her public service career. Her appointment is a win for the prospects of the Employee Free Choice Act and the economic future for the people of this country who get up and go to work every day.

On every issue that's important to working people, Hilda Solis has stood up for an America where everyone's hard work is valued and rewarded. Congresswoman Solis does not just vote on behalf of workers, she is their unwavering and tireless voice.

Stand with our next Secretary of Labor and support the Employee Free Choice Act.

Source: http://freechoice.seiu.org/page/s/solisfreechoice?gclid=CIjS3M3C85cCFQtZHgodjE5HDQ

Friday, December 19, 2008

Obama Names Picks for Transportation Labor Posts



CHICAGO - Swiftly completing his Cabinet, President-elect Barack Obama named four officials to oversee transportation, labor, trade and small business policy in his new administration Friday but warned that economic recovery may take years.
Little more than a month before he takes office, Obama noted his speed in putting his full economic team in place, saying he had done so at an earlier point than any president in history because of the magnitude of the troubles the country faces.

"Daunting as the challenges we are inheriting may be, I am convinced that our team and the American people are prepared to meet them," he said. "It will take longer than anybody of us would like — years, not months.
It will get worse before it gets better." "But it will get better if we are willing to act boldly and swiftly," Obama said — and he promised to do just that.

At his fifth news conference in as many days, Obama announced his selections of Republican Rep. Ray LaHood of Illinois for transportation secretary, California Rep. Hilda Solis for labor secretary, former Dallas Mayor Ron Kirk for U.S. trade representative and venture capitalist Karen Mills to head the Small Business Administration. AP

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Bad News!!!

You control what you'll see on election day.


Saturday, September 20, 2008

Humberto Yeppes

Mass for Humberto Yeppes, 59, of West New York, will be today at 10 a.m. at St. Augustine Church, Union City. He died Wednesday at Palisades Medical Center, North Bergen.

Born in Pereira, Colombia, he moved to the United States in 1965 and lived in New York City before moving to West New York 30 years ago.

Yeppes worked as an asbestos remover.

He was the first Vice-President and founding member of Local 78 LIUNA, New York City.

Surviving are his wife, Yolanda Soto; three sons, Mauricio Alejandro, Hector Batres and Stanley Batres; two daughters, Helen Batres and Karla Batres; two brothers, Fabio and Octavio; five sisters, Mery, Nelly, Nuvia, Myriam, and Nancy; and five grandchildren.

Humberto Yeppes Video:

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Merger of Local Union 1030 into Local Union 78

Effective from September8, 2008 forward, members of former Local 1030 must make payment of dues and other fees directly to Local 78, Mr Pawel Gruchacz, Secretary-Treasurer, 30 Cliff Street, 6th Floor, New York, NY 10038.

Click here for the Report of the Merger of Local 1030 into Local 78

Friday, May 30, 2008

Edison Severino - May 1, 2007 Immigration Rally



Edison Severino at the Immigration Rally in New York City. May 1, 2007

Friday, May 16, 2008

Why Workers Organize


By Edison Severino

When people ask me if unions have a future in this country, my answer is an unequivocal yes. My experiences with Local 78, Asbestos, Lead and Hazardous Waste Laborers, and other workers trying to organize have proved a quintessential case in point.

When the asbestos abatement workers in New York first organized, our demands went beyond the basic wage and benefit issues that are usually connected with labor unions. We wanted better pay, but more than anything else, what fueled the organizing campaign was our need for respect, the universal need to be treated by our bosses as another human being, not just a unit of production.

The New York City asbestos industry was almost entirely non-union when the Laborers International Union of North America targeted it for unionization in 1995. Virtually all of the workers in the industry were immigrants, predominantly from Eastern Europe and Latin America. We didn’t speak English, and many of us were undocumented. The supervisors, meanwhile, were almost all native-born American. The power dynamic was tilted so much in favor of the bosses that the working conditions and the degree of disrespect reached an unsustainable level. Supervisors turned the working area into their own little fiefdom.


Edison Severino addressing asbestos workers at 130 Liberty, Manhattan.


Asbestos abatement is physically-demanding and dangerous work. In 1995, the going rate was $12 per hour, with no benefits. Meanwhile, construction workers working in the same building were making five or six times that. Shifts often lasted twelve to sixteen hours, and just the mention of the word “overtime” would get you fired.

Supervisors had various methods of squeezing as much production out of workers as possible. Some supervisors made us wear numbers on the outside of our suits. If they saw a worker resting or slacking off the slightest bit, they would call his or her number. That meant you were fired. Others divided workers into pairs, giving each pair a certain area to remove. At the end of each day, the pair that had done the least work was told not to come back. If it was legal and economically advantageous to brand us, there are some supervisors who might have done that.

In the most serious manifestation of this disrespect, supervisors often downplayed or even ignored the health risks that asbestos poses. A large portion of every asbestos abatement project is devoted to protecting the general public and the workers from asbestos exposure. These measures, while necessary, are costly. In order to get the job done quickly and cheaply, supervisors would flout the safety regulations, putting the workers in grave danger. We were often told not to wear the full-face masks because they slowed down our production. Of course, these masks also have the “side effect” of protecting us from inhaling asbestos fibers.

Working under these conditions on a daily basis, we were eager to start organizing when the Laborers’ representatives came knocking. Hundreds of workers immediately made the commitment to fight for better conditions and signed union authorization cards. After months of job actions, the campaign came to a culmination in the strike at the Exxon building in midtown Manhattan in February of 1996. Through the snow and cold, hundreds of workers marched against contractor Asbestos Containment Services Inc., calling for an end to the disrespect, low pay and dangerous conditions.



Despite frenzied efforts by the contractor, we maintained our unity and held the line. By the time the snow began to melt, we went back to work, but only after the balance of power was dramatically altered. We returned with a signed union contract laying out the rules of employment, and with a shop steward and union representatives whose job was to enforce the contract and represent us collectively.

After the campaign, LIUNA sent me to Alabama and North Carolina to help out in a campaign to organize chicken processing workers. It was there that I came to realize that our situation in New York was not unique. While the chicken plant workers complained about low pay, more than anything else they talked about not being allowed to take bathroom breaks. How much would it have cost the company to allow a worker to take a five minute break? But this was not about cost savings. The company denied the workers this basic human decency because they only saw them as production units, closer to machines or work animals than as men and women.

As long as the bosses write the rules of employment, there will be abuses of power like those suffered by asbestos workers in New York City and chicken processing workers in North Carolina and Alabama. Wherever people are treated not as fellow humans but as cogs in the production machine, they will come together and fight for more control over their working conditions. That is the essence of a workers’ union.

Edison Severino is currently the Business Manager for Laborers Local 78, the largest asbestos, lead and hazardous waste local in the country, with over 3,400 members and 90% market share in New York City and Long Island.

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Report on Inquiry into Payment Practices of New York Insulation

Click here to open and download Book 1, which includes the first group of NY Insulation employees who made complaints.