Miami-Dade County Commission Endorses Employee Free Choice Act
Wednesday, May 9, 2007
For Immediate
Release
Contact:
Caren Benjamin (202)
637-5018
Miami-Dade County
Commission Endorses Employee Free
Choice Act
Miami Latest
Locality to Call on Congress to Defend
Workers' Freedom to Bargain Collectively and
Restore Our Nation's Middle
Class
(Miami, May
9) - - With passage of a
resolution supporting the Employee Free Choice
Act, the Miami-Dade County
Commission and the Mayor of Miami today joined
the nearly 30 state and local
government bodies who have stood up for the
rights of working people to form
unions and bargain for a better life.
"We are grateful for the efforts
of the Miami-Dade County Commission who have
shown their crucial support of
America's workers, and also for the energy,
hard work and passion of South
Florida's union members and their families,
whose dedication made this
resolution a reality, AFL-CIO President John
Sweeney said. "Local officials see
firsthand the community-wide harm done by
stagnant wages, skyrocketing personal
debt and out-of-control health care costs.
These elected leaders know that a
union contract is the best economic uplift
program for working people in our
nation's history and are brave enough to tell
the U.S. Congress that its time to
take action."
South Florida AFL-CIO
President Fred Frost also thanked
Miami Mayor Carlos Alvarez, who signed on to
the resolution. "Our Mayor and our
County Commission have shown true leadership on
the rights of working families.
As the governing officials of the eighth
largest county in America, their voices
should be heard loud and clear in the halls of
the U.S.
Congress."
Approved overwhelmingly in
the U.S. House of Representatives
in March, the Employee Free Choice Act restores
balance to the system of forming
unions and bargaining. The legislation gives
employees - not employers - the
option of deciding how they will choose whether
to form a union. The workers
may choose either of the options that exist
today - ballot elections or majority
sign-up, which enables people to form unions
when a majority of employees
indicate in writing they want one. The
legislation, now pending before the U.S.
Senate, also creates real penalties for
employers who illegally interfere with
organizing efforts and sets up a system to
ensure that workers get a first
contract even if their employers refuse to
bargain in good faith.
To
date, similar resolutions supporting the
Employee Free Choice Act have been
passed in cities, states and counties coast to
coast, ranging from Boston to
Portland, the Alabama House of Representatives
to Summit County, Ohio. With the
Miami resolution and one headed for passage
this week in Lancaster County,
Penn., there soon will be 30 that have received
official support from their
local governments. Nearly 40 more are pending
in places ranging from Los Angeles
to Buffalo.
