DPE NewsLine
May 2008
The purpose of this newsletter is to inform you
of recent activities by the Department for
Professional Employees, AFL-CIO as well as
emerging issues affecting the professional and
technical workforce. NewsLine is
published every month. Issues of NewsLine
are accessible on the DPE web page
www.dpeaflcio.org. Feedback welcome; send
to
lkennedy@dpeaflcio.org.
In This Issue:
- Welcome, Utility
Workers!
- Common Ground
Around Doing Work Right
- Outlawing Employer
Misclassification
- Billions in U.S.
Taxes Fund Jobs Where?
- The Future of
Unions: A British Perspective
- Equal Pay Day
Brings No Relief
- American Library
Association: Preparing for Annual Meeting
- Kaiser Permanente
Forum
- DC CLUW Chapter
Honors AFSCME, CWA Activists
- San Francisco
Program Addresses Health Care Minus the
Insurance Industry
- SiCKO Plays
to a Crowd at the AFL-CIO
- DPE Signs On
- DPE in the News
____________________________________________________________________________
WELCOME, UTILITY
WORKERS! – The Utility Workers Union of
America (UWUA) affiliated with DPE.
Representing workers in the electric, gas,
nuclear, water, and service industries, UWUA is
organizing increasing numbers of professional
and technical workers, from chemists to
engineers. Our thanks and welcome to UWUA
National President D. Michael Langford, National
Secretary-Treasurer Gary M. Ruffner, and the
members of UWUA.
COMMON GROUND AROUND
DOING WORK RIGHT – On April 21, 2008,
representatives from the DPE Work Group on
Professional Associations met for a fifth time
with representatives from professional
associations. They agreed to a narrative of key
elements defining professional integrity and
challenges to it. That document will become a
starting point for a leadership discussion on
June 5, 2008, “Strengthening Professionalism in
the Public Interest.”
Since July 2006, representatives from unions
affiliated with DPE – including AFM, AFSCME,
AFT, AFTRA, IAM, IBEW, IFPTE, SAG, UAN, and USW
– have met in the DPE Work Group to investigate
how unions could learn from, and work with,
professional associations. Volunteers from the
work group have met monthly since November 2007
with representatives from eight professional
associations, in disciplines ranging from
engineering and science to education, health
care, and human services.
For more
information about the project, please contact
DPE President Paul E. Almeida,
palmeida@aflcio.org, 202-638-0320 extension
14, or DPE Executive Director David Cohen,
dcohen@dpeaflcio.org, 202-638-0320 extension
13.
OUTLAWING EMPLOYEE
MISCLASSIFICATION – On April 15, 2008, the
DPE Work Group on Independent Contractors and
Antitrust met for an update and exchange about
legislative initiatives to combat employers’
misclassification of employees as independent
contractors.
AFL-CIO
Legislative Representative Kelly Ross and
Associate General Counsel William Lurye briefed
the group about three bills: the Obama-Durbin-Kennedy-Murray
Independent Contractor Proper Classification Act
of 2007 (S. 2044), introduced in September 2007;
a bill from Rep. Jim McDermott (D-WA) introduced
that day (H.R. 5804); and a draft House bill
circulating for comment. The first two bills
focused on Internal Revenue Code Section 530, a
loophole that provides a “safe harbor” for,
among other things, common practices – even if
wrong – and that thus rewards an accumulation of
employers’ abuses. The third bill seeks to
require employer record-keeping and notification
about employees and independent contractors and
to assess civil penalties for abuses.
Misclassification of employees as independent
contractors by unscrupulous employers hurts the
employees, federal and state governments, and
employers who follow the law. Misclassification
means an outlaw employer does not withhold
income taxes from workers’ pay, may force
workers to contribute on their own for Medicare
and Social Security taxes, and avoids the
employer’s paying its share for workers’
compensation and unemployment insurance. It
deprives the federal and state governments of
billions of dollars with which to pay for
workplace benefits. And by lowering the cost to
bad employers, it makes good employers less
competitive.
The unions
participating in the April 15 meeting responded
by explaining the particular concerns of the
workers they represent to Lurye and Ross. Those
range from vigorous support for combatting
misclassification to the potential for an
unintended interaction of the legislative
proposals with laws and regulations affecting
specific industries.
For more
information, please contact DPE Executive
Director David Cohen,
dcohen@dpeaflcio.org, 202-638-0320 extension
13.
BILLIONS IN U.S. TAXES
FUND JOBS WHERE? – Earlier this year,
the Bush Department of Defense took an
unprecedented step. It awarded a contract worth
tens of billions of dollars – for the aerial
refueling tanker replacement – to a European
contractor over a domestic one. Those billions
of U.S. taxpayer dollars, absent a change in the
decision, will be funding foreign jobs rather
than employing U.S. workers.
On April 17, 2008, members of Congress from the
Senate and the House, from both parties, joined
IFPTE President Gregory J. Junemann, SPEEA–IFPTE
Local 2001 President Cynthia Cole, and SPEEA
Midwest Council Chair Debbie Logsdon in speaking
out at a rally on Capitol Hill. The speakers
from Congress included Senators Patty Murray
(D-WA), Maria Cantwell (D-WA), and Pat Roberts
(R-KS) and Representatives Norm Dicks (D-WA) and
Todd Tiahrt (R-KS). Showing the support of DPE
was Executive Director David Cohen.
For more about the rally, see the IFPTE website,
www.ifpte.org, and the website of the
Society of Professional Engineering Employees in
Aerospace (SPEEA),
www.speea.org. For the March 4, 2008
AFL-CIO Executive Council resolution,
“Offshoring America’s Economic and National
Security,” click on
http://www.aflcio.org/aboutus/thisistheaflcio/ecouncil/ec03042008k.cfm.
The USW denunciation of the Bush Administration
deal, and John McCain’s role in lobbying for the
European contractor, is at
http://www.usw.org/usw/program/content/4538.php.
For the latest news from IAM, see
http://www.goiam.org/content.cfm?cID=12956.
THE FUTURE FOR UNIONS:
A BRITISH PERSPECTIVE – On April 9, 2008,
DPE hosted Tom Wilson, head of the Organisation
and Services Department at the British Trades
Union Congress, in a stimulating trans-Atlantic
exchange. In addition to representatives from
unions affiliated with DPE and from the Albert
Shanker Institute, the participants included the
new President of the National Labor College,
Bill Scheuerman.
In a
presentation titled “The Future for Unions,”
Wilson tracked the decline and renewal of
British unions from 1979 to date. A precipitous
fall in membership ended about 1997. In
Wilson’s view, the subsequent stabilization, and
even a slight increase in union membership,
should not, however, distract observers from a
fundamental shift. The members of British
unions are decreasingly low-wage workers with
low skills, and instead increasingly
professional, managerial, and related workers.
Wilson commented that this shift from low-skill
to high-skill workers as union members raises a
question of how to reconcile the historic
mission of unions – championing the lowest-paid
and most vulnerable – with the interests of a
changing constituency. The shift, he said, has
led British unions to a far greater emphasis on
promoting skills (see
www.unionlearn.org.uk), to a tension between
an occupational union identity and the clout of
larger membership numbers, and to a greater
demand by union members for professionalism from
their unions.
Tom Wilson’s publication, The Future for
Unions, is accessible online at
http://www.unions21.org.uk/pubs/ffu.pdf.
EQUAL PAY DAY BRINGS NO RELIEF – Senators
Edward Kennedy (D-MA) and Tom Harkin (D-IA) and
Reps. Rosa DeLauro (D-CT) and George Miller
(D-CA) spoke at a Capitol Hill press conference
on April 23, held in conjunction with Equal Pay
Day, to support the passage of the Lilly
Ledbetter Fair Pay Act by the Senate. Other
speakers –and organizers of the event – included
Marsha Zakowski, President, Coalition of Labor
Union Women (CLUW); Rosalyn Pelles, Director,
Department of Civil, Human and Women's Rights,
AFL-CIO; Michele Leber, Chair, National
Committee on Pay Equity (NCPE); Margot Dorfman,
CEO, U.S. Women’s Chamber of Commerce; and Lilly
Ledbetter, whose complaint of wage
discrimination was denied by the Supreme Court
decision in May 2007.
Later on April 23, a minority of primarily Republican senators once
again made it harder for
women workers to overcome pay
discrimination. The Senate fell four votes
short of the 60 required to begin consideration
of the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act. Ledbetter,
one of the few female supervisors at the
Goodyear plant in Gadsden, Alabama, was earning
20% less than the lowest paid man in the
same position when she filed a complaint with
the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
Lower court rulings supported her claim and
awarded her damages, but the Supreme Court, in a
5-4 decision, held that her claim was not filed
within 180 days of Goodyear's initial
discriminatory pay decision and therefore was
not valid. In July, the House of
Representatives passed the Lilly Ledbetter Fair
Pay Act to reverse the effect of the Supreme
Court decision and establish each discriminatory
paycheck as a violation of law. The struggle
for fair pay continues.
Equal Pay Day symbolizes how far into the
current year a woman must work, on average, to
earn as much as a man earned in the previous
year, based on U.S. Census Bureau statistics
of median wages of fulltime, year-round
workers.
Pamela Wilson, Assistant to DPE President
Almeida, attended the press conference. For
more information about the wage gap, see DPE’s
fact sheet, Professional Women: Vital
Statistics,
http://www.dpeaflcio.org/programs/factsheets.htm,
and visit the National Committee on Pay Equity’s
website,
http://www.pay-equity.org/.
AMERICAN LIBRARY
ASSOCIATION: PREPARING FOR ANNUAL MEETING
JOINT AFL-CIO-ALA
COMMITTEE PROGRAM FOCUSES ON PENSIONS AND HEALTH
CARE REFORM, FEATURES BOOK SIGNING –
Entitled “Dude, Where Is my Retirement?” the
Committee’s program for the annual conference of
the American Library Association focuses on
retirement income (in)security, a subject that
regularly occupies the public, especially as the
population ages. Pension
plans once taken for granted are evaporating.
Along with pension reform, the program will
address the need for a fundamental reform
of our health care system. Scheduled for 10:30
– 12 noon on Monday, June 30 at the Anaheim
Convention Center, the program features Thomas
Mackell, J.D., M.A., Ph.D., Chairman of the
Board of Directors, Federal Reserve Bank of
Richmond and Steven Wallace, Ph.D., Associate
Director, UCLA Center for Health Policy
Research, and Professor, UCLA School of Public
Health.
In a new book,
When the Good Pensions Go Away, published in
April 2008 by Wiley Press, Dr. Mackell analyzes
the coming
retirement crisis. "In the
brave new world of outsourced jobs, short-term
gigs and on-again, off-again health care
coverage, American workers cannot rationally
plan their economic futures. It is like being
placed in a lifeboat without oars with the
desire to row to a safe haven," he wrote in a
chapter titled "The Fractured American
Retirement Dream." The book seeks to help
Americans retire with dignity and inspire a
collective call to action to hold political
leaders accountable for finding a viable
solution before a major collapse in the economy
occurs.
The AFL-CIO-ALA
Joint Committee on Library Services to Labor
Groups is finalizing plans for the annual
conference, including the development of
materials. Jessica Storrs, Research Librarian,
AFSCME and Jannie Cobb, Librarian, National
Labor College are among the active union members
of this committee. Working with Eileen Hardy,
Marketing Specialist, American Library
Association, Joint Committee Co-Chair Pamela
Wilson, Assistant to DPE President Almeida, has
arranged for a book signing to follow the
program.
Ms. Wilson is
working with ALA member, Patricia Anderson,
Library Director, Montville Township Public
Library, and Christine Silvia-DeGennaro, AFL-CIO
to develop a Living Wage Resolution for adoption
by the American Library Association-Allied
Professional Association (ALA-APA) and with
ALA-APA Director Jenifer Grady and union and
other members of the Committee on the Salaries
and Status of Library Workers, to finalize
programs and materials for the June 26-30
conference in Anaheim. AFSCME is among the
unions to be featured in a series of valuable
programs sponsored by ALA-APA. For a listing of
programs, times and locations,
see http://ala-apa.org/salaries/confprograms.html.
ALA-APA ANGELS RECEPTION – “Thirty
library leaders will be honored as ALA-APA
Angels at the American Library Association
Annual Conference in June. The ALA-Allied
Professional Association (ALA-APA) is
celebrating five years of service by honoring
some of the many people and organizations that
have helped it grow and flourish in its missions
of providing certification and supporting better
salaries,” states an ALA-APA release.
“ALA-APA angels
were instrumental in the creation and
development of ALA-APA. They represent
thousands of library employees who gave their
time, energy, ideas and contributions to shape
the work that ALA-APA is doing through the
Certified Public Library Administrator Program
and in advocating for fair pay.” AFT, AFSCME,
and DPE are among the ALA-APA union
angels.
The ALA-APA's
Angels Reception will be held from 7:30 - 9 p.m.
on Friday, June 27, in Anaheim, Calif.
All are invited to attend to support their
colleagues and ALA-APA. Tickets for this
fundraising event are $25 and may be purchased
online at
http://www.ala.org/template.cfm?section=alaregistration&template=/cfapps/registration/change/default.cfm
and onsite. Join in celebrating the
achievements and bright future of ALA-APA – the
Organization for the Advancement of Library
Employees, which advocates for improving the
salaries and status of librarians and library
support staff.
For
information about ALA-APA, including the
fundraising reception, contact ALA-APA director
Jenifer Grady by phone, 312-280-2424 or email,
jgrady@ala.org. For information
about ALA and the Annual Meeting, see
www.ala.org. To discuss DPE’s
involvement, contact Pamela by phone,
202-638-6684, or email,
pwilson@dpeaflcio.org.
KAISER PERMANENTE FORUM – “You
create the best quality care by having the
front-line workers mobilized to find the
innovations to do that,” said John August,
Executive Director, Coalition of Kaiser
Permanente Unions to a crowded room on April 24,
at the First Annual Health Care Forum presented
by the Kaiser Permanente Health Care Institute
at the National Labor College (NLC) in Silver
Spring, MD. He noted that when front-line
workers are part of the team developing
strategies and techniques to improve health care
quality and reduce costs, the results are
effective and often innovative. Examples range
from those easily implemented, like a reflective
vest to be worn by nurses dispensing medications
to remind workers and supervisors: “Don’t Interrupt” (distraction is a
major cause of medication errors) – to a
complete overhaul of operating room procedures.
Entitled “Preserving
Quality of Care and Protecting Union Benefits in
the Maelstrom of National Health Care Reform,”
the forum focused on preserving
and improving quality care, and Kaiser
Permanente as a model for maintaining quality;
it also addressed the components of
health care reform, the
political outlook for reform, and
bargaining and protecting union
health benefits.
AFL-CIO President John Sweeney and George
Halvorson, Chairman and CEO, Kaiser Permanente,
were the keynote speakers. Mr. Sweeney
said, "Our goal is not just to create universal
health coverage, but high-quality, affordable
universal health coverage. And that's going to
require a strong government role in controlling
costs and enforcing standards of care."
Senator Sheldon
Whitehouse (D-RI) gave the luncheon address.
Terrence O’Sullivan, General President, LIUNA;
Walter Allen, Jr., Chief Financial
Officer/Executive Director, OPEIU Local 30 and
Southern California Labor Lead for the Labor
Management Partnership; and Dale Chase,
President, AFSCME Council #67 were among the
speakers.
“Failed global
policies are stripping away the nation’s best
jobs, and with them, essential benefits like
health care. The debate over health care is
central to this year’s national elections.
The NLC is
committed to playing a crucial role in the labor
movement’s discussion on health care,” said NLC
President Bill Scheuerman, Ph.D., who indicated
that a discussion of the health care system
itself might be the focus of the next program on
health care at NLC.
Kaiser
Permanente, the nation’s largest nonprofit
health insurer, has had a unique
labor-management partnership for over 10 years
that involves more than 160,000 union,
management, and physician employees. In 2007,
Kaiser and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente
Unions donated $450,000 to the National Labor
College to fund the Kaiser Permanente Healthcare
Institute, a program at the college dedicated to
educating labor leaders and union members on
health care issues. As part of the grant, the
NLC is sponsoring an annual health care forum
for leaders of unions and allied organizations.
Pamela Wilson,
Assistant to DPE President Almeida, participated
in the one-day forum. For further information,
visit the National Labor College’s website,
http://www.nlc.edu.
DC CLUW CHAPTER HONORS
AFSCME, CWA ACTIVISTS –
The late Susan Ellen Holleran, former
CLUW State Vice President of DC, who retired in
2005 from AFSCME after many years working on and
expanding special projects; and Barbara
Easterling, the first woman elected
Secretary-Treasurer of CWA and the first woman
to serve as Secretary-Treasurer of the AFL-CIO,
were honored for their labor activism on April
27 at the DC Chapter of the Coalition of Labor
Union Women’s Gloria Johnson Awards Luncheon.
To learn more about Ms. Holleran, a creative and
talented advocate for women and the working
class, see
http://www.laborheritage.org/holleran.htm;
to learn more about Ms. Easterling,
whose trailblazing
career has inspired women in the labor movement
here and around the world, see
http://www.cwa-secy-treas.org/default.htm.
Pamela Wilson, Assistant to DPE President
Almeida, was among the many attendees at the
luncheon.
After retiring from AFSCME, Ms. Holleran worked
as a volunteer at the CLUW Cervical Cancer
Prevention Works program. She died on December
15, 2007 of cervical cancer, an almost always
preventable disease. All
unions and union members are encouraged to join
the CLUW team on Saturday, May 17 in
Washington, DC for the second annual Walk To
Beat The Clock
to raise awareness
about cervical
health and
the tools women
have to prevent
cervical cancer.
This year, the CLUW
team will walk to commemorate Susan Holleran’s
life. The deadline to sign up for the team is May 11. See
http://www.cluw.org/cervcancer.html.
SAN FRANCISCO PROGRAM
ADDRESSES HEALTH CARE MINUS THE INSURANCE
INDUSTRY – Michael
Lighty, Director of Public Policy,
California Nurses Association (CNA) and Cindy
Young, Senior Health Policy Advisor, California
School Employees Association (CSEA), were the
speakers at a well-attended forum, “Unions Speak
Out for Health Care Minus the Insurance
Industry,” sponsored by the California Universal
Health Care Organizing Project & the California
Universal Health Care Education Project. Pamela
Wilson, Assistant to DPE President Almeida,
participated. For information from CNA, see
www.calnurses.org; for CSEA,
http://pub.csea.com/cseaHome/Issues/Healthcarereform/tabid/661/Default.aspx.
For information about the meeting sponsors, see
www.singlepayernow.net.
SiCKO PLAYS TO A
CROWD AT THE AFL-CIO
– Nearly a hundred people from labor and
the community packed the AFL-CIO’s Gompers Room
at noon on April 25 for a free screening of
Michael Moore’s Academy Award-nominated film,
SiCKO. Our healthcare system “is costing
thousands of lives every year,” said
Representative John Conyers, Jr. (D-MI) in his
introduction to the film. Mr. Conyers is author
of the HR 676 bill, which would create a
universal single-payer healthcare system in the
U.S. California Nurses Association (CNA)
Communications Specialist Donna Smith – whose
terrible struggle with the broken US healthcare
system is documented in SiCKO – also
spoke. DPE joined the DC Labor Film Fest, the
AFL-CIO, CNA, CLUW, OPEIU, and USW in sponsoring
and promoting this event, including arranging
for interviews on Pacifica Radio, WPFW, 89.3 FM.
To Heal DC host Joni Eisenberg
interviewed Ms. Smith on April 14 and 28.
DPE SIGNS ON – In a
letter of April 15, 2008 to the Chair and
Ranking Member of the House Energy and Commerce
Committee, DPE joined AFSCME, the AFL-CIO, and
many other organizations in support of giving
the Food and Drug Administration authority to
approve biogeneric drugs; to see the letter,
click on
http://www.dpeaflcio.org/policy/letters/Biologics%20letter%20to%20Dingell%20and%20Barton04-15-08.pdf.
DPE IN THE NEWS – On
April 7, 2008, Lou Dobbs Tonight reported
that the Bush Department of Homeland Security is
extending the time foreign students can stay to
work in the U.S. The report featured DPE
President Paul E. Almeida, who contrasted the
annual number of U.S. science, technology,
engineering, and math graduates with the smaller
number of U.S. high-tech jobs. To see a video
excerpt, click on
http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/bestoftv/2008/04/07/ldt.h1b.visas.cnn?iref=videosearch.
To read the transcript of the entire show, go to
http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0804/07/ldt.01.html.
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