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August 26, 2011

Labor On The Bimah, 2011

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In the last few weeks, the Jewish Labor Committee has been reaching out to nearly a thousand rabbis across the United States. As we've done for quite some time, we are asking them to join a growing number of rabbis incorporating a message about the importance of workers rights in some meaningful way during Sabbath services between Labor Day weekend and Rosh Hashanah, which will begin the evening of September 28th.

The Sabbath Torah reading preceding Labor Day this year is known as Shoftim, Deuteronomy 16:18-21:9. While the word shoftim means judges, it has been interpreted to refer to the importance of justice. This reading contains the oft-quoted commandment, "Justice, justice shall you pursue "¦," considered by many to be the bedrock of Jewish ethical teachings.

During this extended period of economic difficulties for many in our communities, we are focusing on the pursuit of a more just economy. The widening gap between rich and poor, deepening unemployment and the struggle of workers for a fairer, more just and more decent society must be a "Call to Action" as stated in Shoftim.

We've compiled some articles by rabbis that may be of interest in this regard: Click here to download this publication

Additionally, we would be glad to work with congregations to secure a speaker from the local labor movement, perhaps someone whose life was improved dramatically through the benefit of union representation. Additional material on the labor movement -- and the relationship the Jewish community has had with the labor movement -- is also available. Just let us know what you need.

There is a specific campaign for decency and dignity at the workplace that we are asking rabbis to support by "signing the pledge" at www.justiceathyatt.org. This campaign has to do with the situation at a number of Hyatt hotels.

Hundreds of rabbis and cantors in diverse communities have already demonstrated their concern for the workers of Hyatt hotels ever since August 2009, when all 98 housekeepers of the three Boston Hyatts were fired from jobs many had held for 20 to 25 years. Many workers had trained the new workers from an outsourcing company, having been told that these new workers would simply be their "vacation replacements." We have since learned that across the country, Hyatt has eliminated jobs, replaced career housekeepers with minimum wage temporary workers, and imposed dangerous workloads on those who remain.

Workers at 18 Hyatt properties across North America have called for boycotts. Quite a few rabbis are honoring those boycotts, and have pledged to treat the Hyatt as "not kosher" until it treats the company treats its workers with justice. By stating that Hyatt Hotels are not kosher, these rabbis are pronouncing the hotels "unfit" in an ethical and spiritual context and urging Jews to avoid contact with Hyatt.

Hyatt once had a very respectable reputation. We invite rabbis - and others! -- to read a report Open the Gates of Justice, that illustrates the way that Hyatt not only treated the Boston workers unjustly, but has a practice of oppressing its workers nationwide. Many rabbis and cantors took time out of their work and family lives to sit down with Hyatt workers, to hear their stories, and to document their own conclusions in this report.

The battle to secure justice for these hotel workers is far from over. You can make a difference. Please read this report. Please share it. Help us as the Jewish Labor Committee encourages rabbis and other Jewish communal figures to sign the pledge here. Help us invite Hyatt workers to speak to congregations across the country.

We look forward to working with rabbis and their congregations on this year's "Labor on the Bimah" and at other times throughout the year.

August 22, 2011

The Rules of the Game Must Change -- and the Settlement Enterprise Must End

By Stuart Appelbaum

August 22, 2011: A new grassroots movement is on the streets and boulevards of Israel. Tent communities have sprung up, and massive demonstrations are taking place not only in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, but also in over a dozen smaller cities and communities across the State of Israel. The protests are against the high cost of housing, medical care and childcare, and against the increasing financial pressures on middle-class and working-class Israelis at a time when the Israeli economy is doing very well indeed.

The Jewish Labor Committee welcomes this new movement for social justice within Israel. We support the calls for "changing the rules of the game" in a country that is seeing the basic expenses of living going up and up, and the disparities between the very rich and everyone else increasing day by day. The calls of this new movement must be heard by the Netanyahu Government.

Impressive in a country with a multiplicity of political parties, ethnicities, and a range of social cleavages, this movement encompasses wide sectors of Israeli society rarely marching side-by-side in shared protest: secular and religious Jews, college students and retirees, political activists and those new to participating in a demonstration, parents with baby-strollers and municipal clerks.

But although this new Israeli movement has for the most part not done so, we at the Jewish Labor Committee cannot help but connect the issues it is raising with the expensive burden of the settlements in the West Bank, and the unresolved occupation of that territory. The political as well as financial necessity to end the Israeli occupation of the West Bank has been clear to us for some time. Yet, in a cynical attempt to appease the unrest over the shortage of affordable housing and simultaneously satisfy the parties opposed to ending the occupation, the Israeli Government has authorized the construction of 277 new housing units in the West Bank community of Ariel, and 1,600 apartments in Ramat Shlomo, 930 housing units in Har Homa -- the latter two being communities in disputed areas in East Jerusalem.

It is with the utmost concern for Israel and the prospect for peace between Israel and the Palestinian Authority, and a fair and just negotiated two-state solution, that the Jewish Labor Committee opposes the recent decisions of the Netanyahu Administration to authorize this construction. We join with those within Israel and abroad calling for the Netanyahu Government to freeze the authorization, development and construction of new housing in East Jerusalem and the West Bank, and for such agencies as the World Zionist Organization to similarly halt the construction and expansion of settlements beyond the Green Line.

We agree with the many critics of such construction, in the U.S., Israel and the international community, that the expansion of these communities in Jerusalem and settlements in the West Bank is an obstacle to the much-needed resumption of peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians. The announcement of their authorization by the Netanyahu Government aggravates relations between Israel and its allies, as well as between Israel and the Palestinians. The expansion of Ramat Shlomo and Har Homa, only make a bad situation worse in terms of the challenge of Jerusalem. The cost of not only building the new housing units in Ariel but protecting the entire settlement enterprise in the West Bank is both a political and financial drain on Israeli society at a time when clearly a different path must be followed.

Government subsidization of housing for Israeli settlers in the West Bank has been a policy for decades, and did much to supplement the minority of Jewish settlers in the territories who moved there for political or ideological reasons with an influx of Israelis who just needed affordable housing. The continued subsidization of such communities to effect political "facts on the ground" must stop. The legitimate demands for decent, affordable housing within Israel must be addressed, but they cannot be dealt with by additional housing in East Jerusalem or settlements on the West Bank, which unnecessarily complicate the negotiations to end the occupation.

We do not believe that the "invisible hand" of the market can resolve this critical problem, and call on the Israeli Government to bring its precious resources "back home" where they are needed to build new and renovate existing housing within the Green Line.

Stuart Appelbaum is President of the Jewish Labor Committee, and President of the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union, UFCW, CLC.

August 16, 2011

How YOU Can Help Support Verizon Workers

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August 16, 2011: Last week, we wrote to Verizon President & CEO Lloyd McAdam urging him to return to the bargaining table and negotiate in good faith for a fair settlement for the 45,000 brave Verizon workers who are on strike.

Many of you have asked us what you can do to help support the Verizon workers. In consultation with the Communications Workers of America, one of the two unions representing the Verizon workers, here are a few simple ways you can help:

Sign the on-line petition: Add your name to the list of people telling Mr. McAdam that his company should play fair. Let him know that he should not demand that his workers should not be forced to give-back more than $1 billion in wages and benefits when the company earned $19 billion in profits over the past four years and the top five executives earned more than $250 million in the same period. Go to www.cwa-union.org and the petition will pop-up before the CWA home page.

Write your own letter to:
Mr. Lloyd C. McAdam
President & Chief Executive Officer
Verizon Communications, Inc.
140 West Street
New York, NY 10007

Be sure to mention if you are a Verizon customer.

Are you a Verizon customer? If so,
Call up the corporate headquarters -- 212-395-1000 - and express your dissatisfaction. Tell them you are monitoring the situation closely and want it to be settled fairly.
If you have a pending service call or installation, insist that they send union labor to fulfill your order. If they send "replacement workers," refuse to let the scabs enter your property and make sure the company knows why.

Donate to support the workers on strike: For the 45,000 Verizon workers, the decision to go on strike was a very difficult one for they knew they would be without a paycheck until their contract was settled. But they also knew that the issues were crucial, not just for them, but for working men and women across the country. You can show your support by making a contribution to the special fund set up to provide assistance to Verizon workers in need. Go to www.cwa-union.org/solidarityfund, contribute whatever you can, identify the organization as "Jewish Labor Committee" and check the box next to the statement, "This donation is on behalf of the organization listed above."

Participate in a picket-line at a local Verizon Wireless Store: Can you give an hour or two to hand out leaflets in support of the Verizon workers in front of a Verizon Wireless store? To find a store near where you live or work, contact your local CWA or International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW), the other union representing Verizon workers, or go to the CWA web site. If you live in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Chicago or Los Angeles, you can also contact our regional JLC office there:
Jewish Labor Committee -- New England Region - Marya Axner (Boston)
Tel 617-227-0888 / Fax 617-482-7300 / email NewEnglandJLC@jewishlabor.org

United Hebrew Trades - New York Jewish Labor Committee - Carolyn De Paolo (NYC)
Tel 212-477-0767 email NewYorkJLC@aol.com

Jewish Labor Committee, Philadelphia - Michael Hersch
Tel 215-587-6822 / Cell: 215-668-5454 email PhiladelphiaJLC@jewishlabor.org

Jewish Labor Committee, Chicago - Eli Fishman
Tel 312-607-0260 email ChicagoJLC@yahoo.com

Jewish Labor Committee Western Region - Leslie Gersicoff (Los Angeles)
Tel 323-658-5500 Email JLCLA2@aol.com

August 11, 2011

Jewish Labor Committee Tells Verizon to Play Fair, and Negotiate in Good Faith

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New England JLC was at the August 10, 2011 "Shame on Shammo!" Rally for Verizon workers outside the Four Seasons Hotel in Boston, where Verizon CFO Fran Shammo was speaking. We joined Verizon workers outside of the event, who were marching with a range of supporters. In photo is New England JLC Regional Director Marya Axner.

On August 11, the Jewish Labor Committee called on the head of Verizon Communications to get back to the bargaining table and negotiate in good faith with its workers. 45,000 Verizon workers, from Massachusetts to Virginia went on strike on Sunday, August 7 when management refused to compromise on its unprecedented demands for wage and benefit concessions.

In a letter to Verizon Communications President and CEO Lowell C. McAdams, JLC President Stuart Appelbaum said that Verizon "should not be demanding such harsh concessions from your employees." "Competitive pressure" cannot be cited as a rationale to push for $1 billion in wage and benefit give-backs from your workforce after your company was able to pay its top five executives more than $250 million in the past four years," Appelbaum said in the letter. "It's a clear double standard."

He continued: "Verizon's success is due in great measure to the talent and devotion of your workforce, not just your top five executives. When a company is doing so well financially, employees should be rewarded, not punished and told to make sacrifices that are plainly unnecessary and grossly unfair.

"What Verizon is demanding--wage cuts, reduced sick days and holidays, the elimination of pensions, much higher health care costs, among other things--will destroy the middle class job standards that have strengthened your company and the lives of thousands of working families."

Verizon has posted more than $19 billion in profits in the past four years and has earned $6.9 billion in the first six months of this year. Verizon has also indicated that it plans to send more jobs offshore to Mexico, the Philippines and other countries, placing the security of American jobs in jeopardy.

Jewish Labor Committee members have already joined picket line in front of Verizon stores in support of the two unions that represent Verizon workers -- the Communication Workers of America (CWA) and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW). They will stay there as long as is takes to help send a clear message of solidarity and strength to the company.

The JLC letter reminds the CEO of Verizon that "greater profits and greater security for workers go together."

"By investing in your employees, you improve their productivity and their performance."

Appelbaum concludes by urging the company "to return to the bargaining table immediately and negotiate a fair settlement.

"Listening to the concerns of your workers will help ensure the future success of your company."