Author Archives: Biko

Celebrate Black Workers for Justice 40th Anniversary

For online purchase of tickets: https://bit.ly/3ESyjlV /For virtual attendance: https://bit.ly/3rYA0c9

 

Virginia Beach City Workers Demand Collective Bargaining, End to Jim Crow Legacy

January 20, 2022

Virginia Beach city workers held a rally and press conference at City Hall on Tuesday, January 18, demanding a real voice for safety, dignity, living wages and an end to institutional racism on the job. The members of newly formed Virginia Beach City Workers Union, UE Local 111, were joined by supporters from the faith community in calling on the Virginia Beach City Council to pass a resolution in support of collective bargaining.

Alfred “Red” McClenny
Alfred “Red” McClenny

“We have to confront this systematic racism and racial disparity that manipulates the city’s decision making when it comes to social and economic equality,” said Alfred “Red” McClenny, who works in waste management for the Department of Public Works. “I feel collective bargaining is a step to help us bridge that racial divide.

https://www.ueunion.org/ue-news/2022/virginia-beach-city-workers-demand-collective-bargaining-end-to-jim-crow-legacy

Dr. King Supported the Struggle of Black Workers

The following remarks were made by BWFJ member Ajamu Dillahunt during a Martin Luther King Holiday event sponsored by the Raleigh & Durham Workers’ Assemblies.

Good morning, Brothers and Sisters, comrades, and friends! Welcome to this important event at a critical time in the history of the US. I want to express my gratitude to the Raleigh & Durham Workers Assemblies for asking me to share a few thoughts about Dr. King and his support for Labor.

Every year in January since 1986 we are confronted with what I call the struggle for Dr. King’s legacy. The corporate media, the corporations themselves, the schools and the religious institutions serve up a version of Dr. King that stripped him of the analysis and vision that propelled him through decades of struggle. The focus on his “I Have A Dream” speech and his advocacy of non-violence ignores, if not buries, his view on labor, the economy, war and so much more that is relevant to our struggle for survival, much less social transformation.

Our friend, Charles McKinney, one of our most important historians in this moment suggested that these institutions are “Killing King Again.” James Earl Ray’s bullets took his life on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel and today a well-financed and orchestrated assassination of his body of work has taken place. Charles calls it Martin Luther King, Jr. 2.0. For people seeking the truth and those seeking to end exploitation and oppression, we have to ground ourselves in King 1.0 and enter this struggle for ideas and even more important, take ACTION.

We say that for Workers the best way to celebrate Dr. King’s Legacy is to Organize, Fight for A Union, For Dignity at Work. So let’s briefly put that in context. Continue reading

SOCIAL-ECONOMIC CRISIS OF COVID-19 PANDEMIC SHOWS NEED FOR PUBLIC SERVICE WORKERS  COLLECTIVE BARGAINING RIGHTS

The recent national wave of workers resistance, sickouts and strikes across the U.S., the largest in many decades, shows that today’s workers’ demands and concerns must be heard and addressed! Objectively, the demands are real, reasonable, and necessary for everyone because they impact the quality of all our family lives and community. We are all workers! Hence, in North Carolina and many southern states, the call to repeal and abolish “Right to Work” laws that deny worker protections and public sector collective bargaining rights, has come front and center again.

The recent wave of militant actions by bus drivers, cafeteria, school workers and city workers in Elizabeth City, Greensboro, Charlotte, Forsyth, Pitt, Durham, and Wake Counties, as well as State workers, show that public workers cannot serve us – the residents and voting citizens of the 10th largest state in the US – when they are understaffed, underpaid and disempowered by NC state laws like General Statute section 95-98. This law bans public service workers from exercising the nationally recognized human right to collectively bargain. It was legislated to keep Black housekeepers, cafeteria workers and ground keepers on the State university campuses from union organizing and collective bargaining.

In 2006, the United Nations’ International Labor Organization found that NC’s ban on collective bargaining was in violation of the UN Charter on Human Rights.  Our delegation with representatives from Black Workers for Justice, NC Public Service Workers Union – U.E. Local 150, and others walked into Governor Mike Easely’s office to deliver a copy of the ILO formal decision. His top administrative team responded with an Executive Order and series of “meet and confer” sessions that fell short of a needed political initiative to repeal the Jim Crow era statute’s ban on collective bargaining.

Public service workers provide clean and safe water and sewer services, schools, food and buses for our children, and sanitation services for our communities. Public workers staff our mental health hospitals, repair our roads and build our bridges. Public workers make North Carolina a great place to live, play and work!

We must challenge the present Governor Cooper’s administration, and educate others, while pushing the state to take action to bring collective bargaining to the public sector. If Virginia can, so can we!

Angaza Sababu Laughinghouse

NC Public Service Workers Union-UE local 150/ Executive Board

Raleigh Area Workers Asembly/Co-Chair ( affliliated with Southern Workers Assembly)

 

 

Workers in Fayetteville at Valley Protein Plant Struggle for Safety and A Union

The gas nearly leveled Meldrick Knuckles. He’d later compare the sensation
to losing a game of tug-of-war, his breath snatched away in seconds.
Knuckles works at the Valley Proteins animal rendering plant in Fayetteville.
The facility takes in unused body parts from area poultry farms — like
feathers, skins, intestines, and blood — and cooks them into a fine protein
powder that gets sold back to farms as animal feed.
“It’s like a recycling circle,” Knuckles said.

As a yard jockey or “yard dog,” he is assigned to dump trailers full of poultry
parts into the plant’s multiple massive cooking pits. Each pit functions as an
industrial blender, some descending more than 12 feet and getting narrower
at the bottom. Employees say a gas line runs near the pits to help fuel the
rendering process. Even when everything works correctly, the smells can be
all-encompassing.
Recently, on the second Saturday of September, Knuckles was standing on a
catwalk above one of the pits when he noticed the troubling gas. He started
backpedaling until he could draw in clean air. Once his balance restored, he
completed his shift and said he later informed his supervisor about the fumes.
The next day, near the bottom of the pit below where Knuckles had worked,
two Valley Proteins maintenance workers were found dead. According to their
death certificates, their immediate cause of death was asphyxia — oxygen
deprivation. The medical examiner listed their underlying cause of death as “in
confined area with high levels of Hydrogen Sulfide Gas.”
Hydrogen sulfide is a highly toxic gas that smells like rotten eggs. It’s found in
petroleum and natural gases but also gets produced when bacteria break
down organic materials like animal parts. Heavier than air, it tends to gather in
enclosed, low-lying spaces.

https://ue150.org/uncategorized/death-dont-stop-nothing-inside-an-accident-at-a-fayetteville-factory/