Subsidized Businesses May Get Without Giving Back
Friday, December 22, 2006
(Rochester & Genesee Valley Area Labor Federation)Jim
Bertolone, President,
Assisted by Jesse
Lenney, Organizer for UNITE HERE and Metro
Justice Council Member
On
December 11 we celebrated the 59th
anniversary
of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
Focusing on Article 23, Section
4, and Article 25, Section 1:
Everyone has the right
to form and to join trade unions for the
protection of their
interests.
Article 25,
Section 1
Everyone has the right
to a standard of living adequate for the
health and well being of themselves
and of their family, including medical
care.
Labor law was originally established through the creation of the United States Department of Labor to advocate for workers in order to level the playing field against powerful corporate interests. Public policy was, until the 1980’s, to come down on the side of workers’ rights to join a union for the purposes of collective bargaining. In the last two decades the forces of darkness have slowly and without a vote of the people stacked the process against workers so that violating these protected rights is of little consequence to employers. The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) at the highest level with its political appointees has become an arm of Corporate America instead of a place where workers can go to have their rights protected. Imagine if you will, prior to the 1965 Voting Rights Act, African-Americans being told by their bosses that if they register to vote they will lose their jobs, or that if they vote for certain candidates they will move their jobs to Mexico. That is the current state of workers under the NLRB process.
Last year, Human Rights
Watch, which enforces the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, along with 11
Nobel Peace Prize winners, that
included former President Jimmy Carter and
Bishop Desmond Tutu of
The Rochester Crowne
Plaza Hotel has long been an important
downtown asset.
The Crowne receives many
of the local business, non-profit, and
religious convention dollars. It has
also been the recipient of millions of dollars
in public subsidies, much of
which were federal monies intended to
alleviate poverty, urban blight, and aid
our city’s schools. Unfortunately, despite
such generous public and private
support, the management of the
The
The Crowne’s workers
are not paid enough to live free of
government services, yet in a recent meeting
with employees; the
Considering the $5.2 million in subsidies the Crowne has received and their enormous profits last year, laundry worker and housekeeper Taleea Lee asks, “Why should I have to go to the government for food stamps and health care when I work full time?”
Over these last few months, I have had the honor of working with the employees at the Crowne, who are some of the most courageous people I've ever met. These folks at the Crowne have really blown me away. In a union drive workers find the courage to hope for something better, even while their employer enlists all sorts of tactics to discourage them. Workers also form new relationship and build community among various workers of different ages, income strata, and race. These are relationships built across barriers the rest of our society doesn't always seem able to cross. And workers begin to build an understanding of the forces that affect their lives. It is this understanding and organization that must be spread across this country if we progressives are ever to see our vision of a better world materialized. Progressive activists can not do this alone, and these workers can not do this alone.
Anything less than any
worker at the
Published: Rochester
Business Journal, December 22, 2006
