Showing posts with label Union Movement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Union Movement. Show all posts

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Writers Guild leadership claims victory in Strike



WGA Presidents Letter

WGAE
February 09, 2008

WGAE President Michael Winship and WGAW President Patric M. Verrone announce tentative deal.
To Our Fellow Members,

We have a tentative deal.

It is an agreement that protects a future in which the Internet becomes the primary means of both content creation and delivery. It creates formulas for revenue-based residuals in new media, provides access to deals and financial data to help us evaluate and enforce those formulas, and establishes the principle that, "When they get paid, we get paid."

Specific terms of the agreement are described in the summary on our website and will be further discussed at our Saturday membership meetings on both coasts. At those meetings we will also discuss how we will proceed regarding ratification of this agreement and lifting the restraining order that ends the strike.

Less than six months ago, the AMPTP wanted to enact profit-based residuals, defer all Internet compensation in favor of a study, forever eliminate "distributor's gross" valuations, and enforce 39 pages of rollbacks to compensation, pension and health benefits, reacquisition, and separated rights. Today, thanks to three months of physical resolve, determination, and perseverance, we have a contract that includes WGA jurisdiction and separated rights in new media, residuals for Internet reuse, enforcement and auditing tools, expansion of fair market value and distributor's gross language, improvements to other traditional elements of the MBA, and no rollbacks.

Over these three difficult months, we shut down production of nearly all scripted content in TV and film and had a serious impact on the business of our employers in ways they did not expect and were hard pressed to deflect. Nevertheless, an ongoing struggle against seven, multinational media conglomerates, no matter how successful, is exhausting, taking an enormous personal toll on our members and countless others. As such, we believe that continuing to strike now will not bring sufficient gains to outweigh the potential risks and that the time has come to accept this contract and settle the strike.

Much has been achieved, and while this agreement is neither perfect nor perhaps all that we deserve for the countless hours of hard work and sacrifice, our strike has been a success. We activated, engaged, and involved the membership of our Guilds with a solidarity that has never before occurred. We developed a captains system and a communications structure that used the Internet to build bonds within our membership and beyond. We earned the backing of other unions and their members worldwide, the respect of elected leaders and politicians throughout the nation, and the overwhelming support of fans and the general public. Our thanks to all of them, and to the staffs at both Guilds who have worked so long and patiently to help us all.

There is much yet to be done and we intend to use all the techniques and relationships we've developed in this strike to make it happen. We must support our brothers and sisters in SAG who, as their contract expires in less than five months, will be facing many of the same
challenges we have just endured. We must further pursue new relationships we have established in Washington and in state and local governments so that we can maintain leverage against the consolidated multinational conglomerates with whom we bargain. We must be vigilant in monitoring the deals that are made in new media so that in the years ahead we can enforce and expand our contract. We must fight to get decent working conditions and benefits for writers of reality TV, animation, and any other genre in which writers do not have a WGA contract.

Most important, however, is to continue to use the new collective power we have generated for our collective benefit. More than ever, now and beyond, we are all in this together.

Best,

Michael Winship
President
Writers Guild of America, East

Patric M. Verrone
President
Writers Guild of America, West

Friday, February 01, 2008

Venezuela Union Leader is Fired from State Oil Company

Fired union leader Orlando Chirino (Aporrea)
Caracas, 30 January 30, 2008 (venezuelanalysis.com) - Venezuelan union leader Orlando Chirino classified his dismissal from state owned oil company PDVSA, as an act of ‘discrimination and political persecution" this week. Chirino, a national coordinator of the National Union of Workers (UNT) and a member of the joint direction of the oil industry union Sinutrapetrol, was fired without explanation by PDVSA management towards the end of 2007.

Speaking to the media as he lodged a complaint with the Ministry of Labor last Friday, Chirino said his sacking was arbitrary and without prior warning. He pointed out that although his wages were suspended on November 30 he did not receive notification of his dismissal until December 28.
"This act of discrimination that violates my constitutional right to work," he added.

Chirino explained that he was covered by a clause in the PDVSA collective contract, which gives additional protection against sacking to workers who earn no more than three times the minimum wage, however he said the PDVSA management increased his wage prior to his sacking in order to remove these protections.

Chirino, who has worked for PDVSA since March 2003, said, "I gambled my life defending the principal industry and president Chavez from the attack of the coup plotting opposition and imperialism," during the oil industry lockout (Dec 2002- Jan 2003).

From 2006 Chirino worked in the Department of Social Control of SISDEM (System of Democratization of Employment), in PDVSA. However, he alleged that he has been the victim of marginalization and discrimination within PDVSA for two years, and that he has been denied the usual salary increases and bonuses. The reason for this persecution, "corresponds to my categorical opposition to bureaucratic and corrupt practices in the industry and my intransigent defense of worker's rights," he said.

Chirino claimed the decision to fire him was primarily based on his opposition to President Chavez's proposed constitutional reforms together with pressure from the Ministry of Labor and the Bolivarian Socialist Force of Workers (FSBT), which he described as a "bureaucratic union current."

Chirino lost significant support in the trade union movement last year, including from within his own trade union current C-CURA, due to his opposition to the constitutional reforms (which he described as "class collaborationist") and a proposal he made to fuse with sectors of the largely discredited, right-wing opposition aligned trade union federation, the CTV.

Despite Chirino's opposition, the vast majority of the rank and file workers in C-CURA also voted to join the new United Socialist Party of Venezuela and in September, twenty-four unions aligned to C-CURA in Zulia sent Chirinos an open letter criticizing his position on the reforms and the PSUV.

In a statement on October 22 a number of other union leaders from C-CURA, including Stalin Pérez Borges, National Coordinator of the UNT and Ismael Hernández, Coordinator of the UNT Carabobo (both identified with the MAREA Socialista current within C-CURA and the PSUV), also distanced themselves from Chirino's position on the reforms and criticized his comments on the CTV.

Hernandez said that Chirino's comments were often mistakenly believed to be to be the views of C-CURA. However, he clarified, "Chirino's declarations reflect his personal opinion...but not the majority of C-CURA. In our current there has been no instance or national assembly where a majority has voted in favor of the proposed resolutions on these issues."

Perez Borges also said he was radically opposed to any fusion with the CTV, which "depends 100% on imperialist support."

However, in another statement today, Perez Borges, Hernandez, and a number of other union leaders, on behalf of the MAREA Socialista current expressed their solidarity with Chirino. "Independently of the fact that we don't share some of the political positions that Orlando Chirino has defended in recent times, we defend his right to express himself, his right to work and to be recognized and respected as a trade union leader in our country," they wrote.

"It is evident that the decision to dismiss him is unacceptable as well being illegal and is the result of pressure, rumors, and intolerance that characterizes the Bolivarian Socialist Force of Workers, who are using their position in the Ministry of Labor to conspire in PDVSA for the unjust dismissal of this comrade," the statement continued.

The statement called for the direct intervention of Chavez into the matter to ensure that Chirino is reinstated. MAREA Socialista also said they would initiate a campaign alongside Chirino for his reinstatement. Chirino is also calling for international expressions of support.

ALERT: Union activist expelled by New Labour leadership



Tony Staunton: expelled from Unison for reading a leaflet

Should a leading activist with decades of service to the movement be expelled for downloading a leftwing leaflet on a union computer? That is the principle handed down in the Unison union last week.

The final expulsion of union activist Tony Staunton has angered many union members.

Tony had his appeal against his expulsion rejected, and the original sentence was confirmed.

He has been a trade unionist and political activist in the region for nearly 30 years. He is popular not only on the left but among very wide layers of the union movement.

Tony has also been a candidate in European and general elections for Respect.

He was the secretary of Plymouth trades council for nearly a decade. He also held numerous Unison positions.

The union has been unable to find any Unison member to speak against Tony during the 15 months of the disciplinary proceedings.

Some 25 supporters held a lobby of the first day of the appeal in Plymouth.

Tony was cleared of charges of false claiming of expenses and use of photocopiers for personal or political purposes.

The local Plymouth Unison branch and the trades council have stood in Tony’s support and branch secretaries of seven trade unions in Plymouth wrote in his defence.

Campaigning

But Tony’s outspoken campaigning and criticism of New Labour’s policies of privatisation and destruction of the welfare state have won him enemies in sections of the union leadership.

Tony was due to stand for election to Unison’s national executive, challenging the current chair of Unison’s national Labour Link when he was suspended and barred from standing.

The expulsion has raised fears that the Unison bureaucracy is increasingly anxious to impose the centralised domination of officers loyal to New Labour.

Tony was suspended from office following a raid by regional officials on the Plymouth Unison office in November 2006.

He was charged with misappropriation and use of union resources for factional and party political purposes, and expelled in July 2007.

A key issue during the hearing against Tony was whether the compilation of emails using a Unison computer constituted the use of union resources for party political purposes.

The identification of a Microsoft Word document with an article written by Socialist Worker editor Chris Bambery, alongside emails from members of Unison’s national executive, was enough to conclude misappropriation of union resources for party political purposes.

Tony argued that the document was raw material he had used for a union newsletter article about the proposed pensions deal in local government.

Incredibly, the article from Socialist Worker was used to prove, on balance of probability, that Tony had been using branch resources for party purposes.

The entire contents of branch computers with more than eight years of files – assembled from three generations of Unison equipment accessible by all Unison representatives – were searched for any content that referred to left wing organisations or parties.

Finally, the single Word document, plus a downloaded leaflet for a local SWP public meeting and the banner heading from the national Respect website were the complete exhibits offered as evidence of use of Unison computers for party political purposes.

In conclusion, Unison’s presenting officer for the prosecution advised the panel that even one party political document on a Unison computer could compromise the union’s legal status, and was sufficient for expulsion.

Throughout the union movement, certainly in Unison, activists send emails or download documents from left wing parties, the Labour Party, the Lib Dems, the SNP or Plaid Cymru.

Union officials certainly use Unison equipment for Labour Party purposes without filling in a form that this should be charged to the political fund.

It is as if the government suddenly decided that everyone who had been driving over 10mph on a motorway should be charged – but then only arrested leftwingers.

The ownership of computers and a mobile phone bought for Tony through his 12 years of voluntary service as elected branch officer in Devon and Plymouth continue to be contested.

With a variety of documents from both sides either confirming transfer of ownership or Unison’s continued possession, only a legal judgement can finally resolve the dispute.

Tony admitted that he and his children had used the computers, permanently based in his family home, in the belief, confirmed by the branch treasurer, that they had been gifted to him.

He had offered to hand the computers over if personal information could be deleted, but the investigation stated that any deleted files or tampering would be proof of guilt.

Unison gives no guidance on the proper use of mobile phones and computers by lay activists.

This expulsion raises important political questions.

The wording of some charges identified that membership or involvement with the leftwing grouping in Unison, the United Left, constituted a breach of democracy in Unison guidelines.

If that is the case, the decision to expel Tony paves the way for further political attacks from Unison’s leadership on any organised attempt to challenge the union’s current support for Gordon Brown.

Tony is fighting for reinstatement and has formally complained to the certification officer for alleged victimisation.

Sunday, September 17, 2006

Onehunga Community Picket a Big Success





WORKERS RIGHTS ARE HUMAN RIGHTS-
SUPPORT THE SIX HUNDRED!

Onehunga Community informational picket and
collection for 600 Locked Out workers
entering fourth week of lockout.

Fighting union busting and the attempt by a multinational
to starve them back to work.
More info at-
www.shelfrespect.org


Just to let people know the picket was great. Comrades from Socialist Worker, the local Latin American Community Centre, Radical Youth and Luke from the NDU faced up to an early call of "'ll get the police on you- this is private land" and "You guys are too young to be in a fucking union" by a visibly disturbed fat, old, bald and grumpy store manager. We told him to go call them, telling him we would contact Councillor Robyn Hughes across the bridge, and have it out as to who owned the footpath.

IN the meantime we distributed over a thousand leaflets explaining what the lockout was about, with the 0900 number for donations. We collected $270 in donations in the Workers Charter bucket, giving every contributor a copy of the new paper with the No Surrender cover and the big centre spread jammed with pictures and workers voices. The cops came, but knew the manager had no leg to stand on. An imaginary line about a metre from Foodtown's entrance became the new demarcation line between public and private space, and a lot of checkout workers laughed as the manager became even more irate. We stayed on for another half hour, before going up to the picket in Favona and giving the bucket of cash into Big Joe and the welfare crew up at Progressive's gates.

The genorosity of Foodtown shoppers is amazing, and their disgust at the company is palpable. Many told us they would switch stores for the duration of the lockout. Community pickets can help win people to the boycott, spread good info about the strike and raise sorely needed funds and support for the workers. I'd recommend any crews out there to get one on as soon as possible.

Kia kaha
Joe C
Solidarity Union
www.solidarityunion.com

Thursday, September 07, 2006

No Surrender! Victory to the New Unionists





by Joe Carolan

NO Surrender! is the battlecry on the picket lines of Auckland , Christchurch and Palmerston North, as 600 brave workers from the NDU defy Australian owned multinational Progressive's attempts to smash their union. And the stakes are high-

""In Auckland , the picket lines have been really staunch" said NDU organiser and Workers Charter supporter Luke Coxon. "Although the company is trying to starve the workers into submission, they are resolute and determined to fight on. What started off as a 48 hour stoppage in pursuit of one national agreement and equal pay for the same work done in all cities, turned into a Lockout when Progressive issued suspension notices. They said workers could only return to work if they submit to company demands, which now are attacking conditions already won. This is a huge showdown between Capital and Labour in this country, and the outcome will have a huge effect on all unions power and confidence for years to come. And people throughout Aotearoa know this".

"There has been massive solidarity from other workers and left organisations. Over $50,000 dollars has come in in donations in the last week, and trade unionists from MUNZ, Unite, the SFWU, the EPMU, the RMTU, SolidarityUnion and many many more have stood shoulder to shoulder with us. The honking of cars in support never stops. The community drops off food and other donations. There is huge public support for us and people want to see us win".

"Flying pickets have turned trucks away and confronted scabs, defying police and management intimidation. Customers leafleted have been overwhelmingly positive, with many boycotting Progressive stores and shopping elsewhere for the duration of this struggle. Most stores are now losing $55,000 a day- this is costing the company millions. And supermarket workers have been amazing- they see through the attempts by management to drive a wedge between their pay campaign and the distribution workers."

"The company was only offering NDU supermarket workers a derisory 2.6% this year. Union members voted to campaign for 7%. And they are holding strong, despite company attempts to bust the union by offering non union members pay rises, and threatening any supermarket worker who takes action with suspension and lockout".
The 2006 Lockout is shaping up to be this generation's 1951, as a decisive battle is fought between big business and the emerging, militant new unionism that has swept across Aotearoa in the last few years. Workers Charter wants to see our side win.

Boycott Progressive stores- Foodtown, Countdown and Wollworths.
Make a $20 donation by phoning 0900 5625 688 (0900 Lockout).
Support the picket lines and the flying pickets. Bring food and koha.
Victory to the NDU and the new Union movement!

Thursday, August 24, 2006

SOLIDARITY- New Union launched


More Pay
More Say


You know how much your pay has
fallen behind the cost of living over
the years.
You are now facing rising costs for
petrol & diesel, power, rent & rates, food
and most other necessities of life. The gap
between the rich and the poor is growing
wider than ever.
That’s because so many workers have
been shut out of unions for the last 15
years. If workers are not organised
together in a union, they go backwards.
Workers who were around 15 years
ago, when the union movement was
much stronger, know they also enjoyed
more rights at work back then. Like job
delegate rights.
Most workers have had enough. They
want to see big improvements in their
pay and their rights. They know this
requires a strong workers’ union.
Solidarity Union is on a crusade for
More Pay and More Say for workers.

Our strategy is simple but effective:
■ Recruit all non-union industrial
workers on your street (and nearby)
into the Solidarity Union.
■ Elect union delegates on different jobs
who will form a strong Workers
Council in your area.
■ Negotiate a single union collective
agreement with different employers in
your area which gives you More Pay
and More Say.
Solidarity Union will soon be at your
jobsite to talk with you and your mates.
We want you to join our union.

Go union! That’s the way workers
will get More Pay and More Say.

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Beat the Brands!




After months of recruitment and planning, Unite
union’s drive to organise low paid workers in the
fastfood industry announced itself with the World’s
first Starbucks strike on the 23rd of November 2005.
Less than four months later, the union succeeded in
signing a historic deal with Restaurant Brands,
winning more pay and better conditions for workers in
Starbucks, Pizza Hut and KFC. During these months of
struggle, a new approach to trade union organising was
tried and tested, one that may prove useful to union
activists in other industries and nations. As Unite
gears up for a massive fight with McDonalds
management, Joe looks over the first six
months of SupersizeMyPay.Com, and how a tiny New
Zealand union beat the brands.



I first heard about the Unite fast food recruitment
drive reading Indymedia NZ on the web one evening down
in Hamilton. I had been a trade unionist and a
socialist for over a decade, but in recent years had
been more active outside the worksite in the anti war
and Global Justice movements. These massive
movements often followed major international events,
ebbing and flowing like the tide coming in and out,
but had given a lot of confidence to a new left.
However, the real difficulty of turning this new found
energy, this “Spirit of Seattle”, to build something
solid in the community or the trade union movement had
long eluded activists, leading many to become
disillusioned or cynical again. Here, on the other
side of the world, Unite’s bolshie recruitment looked
to me like the answer.

The article on Indymedia told how the young Unite
organisers had signed up over three thousand fast food
workers to their union, and how they were going to
launch a campaign for better pay and workplace rights.
I congratulated the author, telling them how they
were doing the work of James Connolly and Jim Larkin,
organising the “unorganised”. Within a month, they
had convinced me to stay in New Zealand and help as an
organiser with the SupersizeMyPay.Com campaign.

I had always been a member of a union all my working
life, and as a rank and file delegate had organised
community workers and language teachers in Ireland.
Back home, most socialists had until recently refused
to take up full time positions with unions, as many
were either controlled by right wing bureaucrats who
wedded workers to partnership programmes with bosses
and the government, or were adjuncts of the “afraid to
be a pale shade of pink” neoliberal Labour Party. A
socialist would probably never be offered an
organising position by these kinds of leaderships in
the first place.

But there was another tradition of organising unions-
the tradition of New Zealand's own Red Feds, the American
Wobblies, the Irish TGWU of Larkin and Connolly that
all reminded me of Unite. Unions whose organisers had
no privileges, who were on the average industrial wage
(or less) and who stood for a fight and for change led
from below, by workers themselves. The first few
months was all about learning how to organise and help
workers, and as I found myself around a new city, I
learned how to organise from comrades such as Mike
Treen, Matt McCarten, Piripi Thomson and Simon
Oostermann.

Most rank and file workers know our own workplace and
union branch, but moving beyond this to organise a
whole city sector was a new experience for me. Simon
took me round visiting the Starbucks stores- I had
never been inside one in my life. In a zone that anti
capitalists and socialists had encouraged people to
boycott, he showed me how we could bring the spirit of
the Global Justice fight inside to workers in the
stores. Expecting hostility, I was impressed with the
spirit of solidarity and camaraderie he struck up with
Starbucks workers- it was a revelation to me.

I went out on the bike with Piripi to the KFCs and
McDonalds. Piripi was a great organiser, a young
Maori working class fighter who had had his share of
injustice and hard knocks, but channelled his anger at
the state of the world into building up an
organisation for the working poor. Piripi was
dedicated, devoted and non stop, out on the road
recruiting from six in the morning till 3.30 am.
Workers all over Auckland still remember his passion
as a champion for their rights- he was always standing
up to unjust managers and bosses, fighting for union
members. He helped build up the workplace army that
he unfortunately never would see in battle. He died
only two weeks before the first strikes in Auckland,
out on the road, about to take his first break in
months. The workers movement was robbed of a great
natural leader, and his Tangi at Unite was massive.

Looking back, Piripi’s death was kind of a moment of
truth for Unite. It brought people in the union
together very strongly, and strengthened our resolve
that the work he had begun would be finished as
honourably as we could. Delegates from all the
stronger stores prepared to take action- we would
start with Starbucks, and then move onto KFC and Pizza
Hut.

The first wave
The K Road Starbucks strike was brilliant, especially
when started by the wildcats in St Lukes, Newmarket
and the City Centre. Picking them up on the Workers
Charter Freedom Bus was exhilarating. The media work
done by Matt, Kirsty and Simon was superb, and we won
the initial shots of the propaganda war. But the feel
on the picket line was something else- colourful
placards, loud music, free fair trade coffee,
solidarity spread through a sexy website, flashmob
texts and emails- the techniques of the Global Justice
movement at last harnessed by its trade union cousin.
We knew after that first picket that
SupersizeMyPay.Com was onto a winner.

Every strike after that had its own character and
lesson. The first KFC strike at the flagship Balmoral
store was electric, with even more workers and
supporters turning up in solidarity with a strike led
by possibly the world’s youngest strike committee.
Balmoral provided a model and a process for how a
staunch store goes from high membership to action.
The strike vote meeting and the strike committee were
huge confident boosters for those preparing to strike,
and the solidarity on the day from other union members
and our allies made workers feel the community was
behind them. Strike leader Laurent recounts the
experience-

"When Unite came to KFC Balmoral we were itching for
action. Instantly most of the store was signed up. We
now just had to wait six months until negotiations had
finished.

The whole store was really in to the union with talk
about it constantly happening on shifts. This
familiarised new staff with the union and gave them
the ability to make a decision about it before we
asked them to join. Most did join. The two delegates
Briar and I attended the world’s first Starbucks
strike. It was fricken choice! We talked with the
union, had a stop-work strike committee meeting and on
December 2nd KFC Balmoral led the KFC's in to strike mode.

The KFC Balmoral strike lasted two hours and we were
joined by heaps of brilliant supporters and some staff
from the Die Hard Lincoln Rd store. During the strike
we all had great fun. The initial guts in your mouth
passed really quickly once we got in to it. After the
strike a number of staff made comments that they now
felt empowered or had a voice."

In many stores there was a subtle (and not so subtle)
division used by management between different ethnic
groups that our union needed to take head on. A lot
of stores have problems with the multicultural divide
and rule games that bosses and managers play- e.g.
most brown workers in the union, most Chinese workers
loyal to the Chinese shift managers. Oftentimes we
needed to win unity between workers of different
backgrounds on the store floor first before moving on
to fight the boss. So on December 17th, placards in
German, French, Spanish, Chinese, Arabic, Maori,
Samoan and Tongan were held up by workers from Asian,
Indian, Pasifika and European backgrounds, graphically
demonstrating the wide range of nationalities and
races that the campaign united. Eight days before
Christmas in the pouring rain, the workers of the
world united on strike outside Pizza Hut in Royal Oak.

"You'd better be clever..."
As Christmas approached and the economic pressures of
the period piled on, there was increasing pressure
coming on us to hit the companies with a spectacular.
Many stores were up for action and strikes on
Christmas Day, New Years Eve and New Years Day that
would have hit the company really hard, both
financially and brand wise. The Irish resistance to
the British Empire had a saying- “If you’re not
strong, you had better be clever”. As a union
representing low paid workers, we knew that many could
not afford to be on strike for days or even weeks at a
time. But when a company pays a worker minimum wage,
it actually supplies her with a weapon. A strike for
a few hours on one of those days might only lose the
worker ten or twenty dollars, but cost the company
thousands. Our weapon was unpredictability, a form of
industrial guerrilla warfare- the no warning,
Lightning Strike.

“If multinationals won’t give us secure hours, then
they shouldn’t get them, either!”
The first Lightning Strike hit the Lincoln Road KFC
branch on the 21st of December. The Lincoln Road
Unite crew were hardcore- they struck in solidarity
with every single strike throughout the Supersize
campaign with Restaurant Brands. A staunch Maori
leadership headed up by the courageous Susan Tainui,
Lincoln Road had a multicultural membership that was
standing up to intimidation and bullying all the time.
A certain ham fisted and clumsily provocative manager
was to act as the villain of the piece- a fast food
version of the Pinkerton Union Busters of old, but a
bully whose own petty mindedness and vindictive
cruelty made him our greatest recruitment officer.

"Our store becoming a strong store led some in
Restaurant Brands to try to stamp out the union. A new
area manager and store manager were brought in and
both tried their hardest to obstruct the union
movement. This made it really hard to recruit new
staff but also made the core of our stores union far
more united." (Laurent, KFC)

Excellent media work from Kirsty and Simon got the
story over on all major TV Channels and print media,
arguing that 2008 was “Far too late!” for a $12 an
hour minimum wage. KFC had been trying to brand
themselves “Kiwi For Chicken” up until then, but after
that day they were forcefully rebranded as hiring
“Kiwis For Cheap”. By this stage, the company was
beginning to cotton on to the fact that we were aiming
for their Brand identity by high profile, media savvy
actions, and to their credit, began to realise that it
would be in their long term interest to minimise the
damage. If anyone with any intelligence in McDonalds
management reads this piece, they should realise that,
from an early stage, the Restaurant Brands management
realised full well why we had named the campaign
SupersizeMyPay.Com. Morgan Spurlock’s documentary
“Supersize Me” had cost the fast food company millions
by rebranding the food on offer as unhealthy and
dangerous. In the popular mind, we were rebranding fast
food management practices as anti worker, supporting a
regime of poverty wages and super exploitation. After
all, it was the truth.

Restaurant Brands management offered a fresh round of
negotiations just before Christmas, begging us to call
off the high profile Lightning Strikes lined up for
Christmas and New Years. Many workers had doubts
about the Yuletime ceasefire, especially with the
momentum we had built up in the weeks previously. But
we were committed to bargain in good faith with RB,
and so we suspended the actions. We went back to the
tables and back consulting our delegates and strike
committees, building up our numbers and support for
the second phase of the fight.

"I attended almost all of the big strikes and some
smaller ones. They were exciting, courageous, up
lifting in the sense that people were working together
for what they knew was right and just. Afterwards
people held their head high because they gained power,
hope, and unity. Friendships were built, minds were
changed, and learning was in place so they know their
rights for the future.

I think that after strikes workers need to know their
rights, too many times managers have tried to give
warnings to the workers. This is unjust. Workers
shouldn't be afraid to stand up for their right to
strike.

I recommend strikes because they are a powerful
thing. When bosses don't expect the people they take
advantage of, to go on strike, then the bosses realise
that they can't go on treating people like they do"
-Jennifer Carmichael, Starbucks Strike leader and
Unite volunteer organiser.

Ceasefire
The suspension of action over the Christmas period
allowed us to do two main things.
First was to properly build support with groups
outside of the union for off site actions, in
particular working out a political as well as an
industrial strategy to achieve our campaign goals.
Green MP Sue Bradford’s bill to abolish youth rates
was picked out of the parliamentary hat at the time,
so this provided the impetus to get a united front
assembled around Supersize’s core demands. The
Teacher’s union, the PPTA, was first to step up.
Second was building up our rank and file democracy,
strengthening our strike committees and delegates.

There was huge preparation for our union’s Quarterly
Meeting, held in the Auckland Town Hall. MPs from the
Greens and the Maori Party spoke in support, as did
other union leaders from the CTU, SFWU and the NDU.
Banners from all major unions and campaigns draped the
balconies, with the distinctive Workers Charter banner
pride of place. The NZ Pop Idol, Rosita Vai, herself
a former KFC worker, joined Pasifika hip hop group
Olmecha Suprema and a ska band fronted by Starbucks
strikers, Geneva, live on stage. Left wing comedians
ridiculed the greed of the corporations we were
fighting. Most impressive of all at the Town Hall was
a session led by the young fast food strikers
themselves- workplace activists such as Briar, Nick,
Laurent, Claire, Hayley and Susan got up in front of a
packed town hall to speak out against low wages and
bullying in the workplace. It was exhilarating. From
this we developed a campaign leadership that fused a
strike committee of delegates and organisers operating
parallel with a campaign forum where a mixture of
members, supporters, allies and organisers would be
welcome.

Restaurant Brands delegates held a separate strategy
meeting where the companies Christmas offer was
rejected. McDonalds workers were rostered off so they
would be unable to use paid stopwork time to attend
the Town Hall meeting. Staunch delegates in Queens
Street McDs defied company threats that they would be
sued for conducting an illegal strike if they took
action. On Feb 10th 2006, Potu, Ini and Rachel led
New Zealand’s first McStrike. Two days later, up on
the Town Hall stage, in front of hundreds of workers
and supporters, delegate after delegate spelled it out
loud and clear- it was time to spread the strikes far
and wide.

We moved fast. Valentines Day saw a strike in Botany
Downs KFC, under the slogan “Make Love not Profits”.
Customer support for the young strikers was massive-
51 out of 58 cars refused to pass the drive through
picket. On Feb 17th, pickets went up outside KFC in
far north Whangarei. The day after, Starbucks was
rocked to its core in Auckland city centre, with most
stores taking action and both Queen St and K Road
branches completely shut down for two hours.

A youth rates day of action on Feb 22nd saw a rolling
strike disrupt business at KFCs Manukau, Massey,
Lincoln Rd and Balmoral, with the Workers Charter
Freedom bus jammed full of young flying pickets.
Again most customers refused to cross picket lines of
young minimum wage workers on strike, much to the
consternation of KFC managers. One threatened us with
the police and courts.

"As an anticorporate activist for about 10 years I've
seen my share of pickets outside fast food
multinationals like McDonalds and KFC. However
joining the KFC workers on the picket line was a
novel, inspiring and educational experience. It was
incredible to see these young people, many of them
high school students, so fired up about fighting for a
better deal and so confident that their actions could
make a difference.

The Unite strategy of organising a 'solidarity bus'
to carry the willing workers from each picket line to
support the next striking workplace meant that
numbers, excitement and energy levels built up
noticeably through the day. The day of action ended on
an amazing high as the sun went down and I felt truly
honoured to have been part of the day’s strikes and
the SupersizeMyPay.com campaign."
-Danny Strype, Anti Capitalist activist

Before they could draw breath, the companies were hit
again with a whole series of firsts- the first Burger
King strike at Lincoln Rd, the first strike in
Wellington at KFC Porirua, and the first of many
strikes at Restaurant Brands’ Achilles Heel, the Pizza
Hut/KFC call centre. The Westies led the first
Regional strike in West Auckland and in the process
invented the Hooning Pickets- drive throughs picketed
by mobile carloads of strikers, honking and cheering.

"At the start of our Porirua KFC strike all the workers
came out onto the footpath. Somebody mentioned that
there was one worker left inside who wasn't allowed
to come out. So me and Grant Brookes decided to go in
and confront the 10 or so managers. (The lower North
Island were having a managers dinner and they had been
tipped off about the strike so they all decided to
turn up).

We approached the area manager and said "there is one
left and we're leaving nobody behind". The area
manager quickly approached the counter yelling
"Natasha, Natasha you have to go outside".
The worker came out and all was well."
-Kathryn Tucker, Unite’s Wellington Organiser

It was palpable that management was losing control of
its workforce, and that the mood for strikes was
spreading like the Spanish flu. McDonald’s continued
to harass and intimidate union members and delegates
throughout, and in many ways were more viciously anti
union than Restaurant Brands, despite the latter
getting the full two barrels of the union shotgun
during this period. However, there was no real
attempt to bargain by McDonalds- delay and dragging
out the negotiations was their strategy, as they have
done for decades before in other countries. But when
they coupled this with genuine full frontal assaults
on members, paying non union members 75 cents more per
hour, we knew that we had to open the second front.

The 3rd of March was McD Day. “What’s disgusting?
Union Busting!” echoed throughout Auckland, as Golden
Arches in Point Chev, Royal Oak, Manakau, Wairau, Glen
Innes and Glenfield went out on strike, joined by
solidarity action in Starbucks Parnell, 220 Queen St
and the Restaurant Brands call centre. All strikes
converged at McDonalds flagship Queen Street store,
where striking workers are greeted by over a 150
fellow pickets and supporters. Organisers now begin
to realise that the anger is so strong that it could
be time to call people onto the streets to demonstrate
politically. The issue is now one that the community and trade
union movement itself had to get behind.

"Supersizemypay.com campaign was great to be a part
of; there was an incredible atmosphere that if people
worked hard enough, then anything could happen.
Strikes, pickets and marches all made people feel like
something was actually happening, that people were
learning how to take action and create change. I
remember one night when McDonalds went out on strike
and a about 100 of us cruised up and down
Queen Street chanting slogans and singing songs, and
this English backpacker came up to me and was like,
"Fuck, Yeah this is wicked." And then he picked up a
placard and got really involved in it. I think
rebuilding a youth union movement in Aotearoa in the
way supersizemypay has is one of the top priorities
for social justice activists. I hope that
Supersizemypay was just the beginning."
-Omar Hamed, Radical Youth

To the Streets

Our side always has the best songs, and the 18th of
March saw over a thousand workers and supporters mix
politics with music and join together for the Big Pay
Out. McDonalds had rostered off as many union members
as it could, knowing the union meant business from all
the posters and stickers that had covered every
lamppost, wall and notice board in Auckland. So we
went recruiting in stores early that morning, and four
workers who had been in the union for less than an
hour led the strike at McDonalds Downtown, sparking
off a huge march (and charges!) down Queen Street.
There are direct action sit downs and blockades in
front of all major restaurants, with hundreds chanting
“3, 5, 7, 9- Never cross a picket line!” The Union
threw a huge concert in Myers Park, with reggae, hip
hop and hardcore acts like 8 Foot Sativa playing.

The Big Pay Out itself organises hundreds of young
students within the Radical Youth network, ably led by
a new generation of outstanding activists such as
Meto, Nesta, Joe, Sam, Jack and Ming Tsu. They ask
Unite to help provide busses for a massive action they
are planning on March the 21st. On the day, the
Radical Youth Schools strikes pull out another
thousand people on Queen Street, this time mostly
young workers under 18 who leave their colleges. Heavy
handed policing results in two arrests, but the
majority of public opinion swings behind the young
students following statements of support from Unite
Union, the Green Party and the New Zealand Congress of
Trade Unions. The issue is now headline national
news on both NZ TV networks and the major papers.
Commentators make the links between the protests in
Queen Street and the youth uprising that is
simultaneously shaking France.

What began with one Starbucks striker walking off the
job had now become a generational movement, one that
has given hundreds of young people a positive
experience of a union as an organisation that fights
for them. I have no doubt that these will be the
union leaders of tomorrow.

Breakthrough

On the back of the Big Pay Out and the School Strikes,
hundreds more activists are brought into the campaign,
and plans to escalate action nationally were advanced.
It is at this time that we are contacted by
Restaurant Brands, and a serious deal is put on the
table. A deal that the vast majority of delegates and
campaign leaders think is a major breakthrough.

All adult workers at KFC and Pizza Hut get a raise of
just under 8%, with Starbucks workers getting a 75
cents an hour increase across all scales, with another
similar raise locked in for 2007. The call centre
workers get between 11.5% and 14.9%. Shift
supervisors also win an increase on top of this.
.
The company accepts that paying young workers less can
no longer be justified, and commits itself to
abolishing youth rates. As a first step, they move
the pay scale for those under 18 to 90% of the adult
rate. Some young workers get a pay rise of 34%.
Supervisors under 18 get the full adult rate- a 17
year old supervisor can now earn $14.68, an increase
of $3 an hour.

There is a clear commitment to end casualisation, as
the company agrees to give its workers more secure
hours. When additional hours become available in
stores, existing workers will be offered these hours
before new staff are employed. Break times move from
ten to fifteen minutes, and overtime rates are re
introduced for those who work over eight hours per day
or forty hours per week. The union extends these wins
not only to its membership, but to all 7000 workers
employed by Restaurant Brands. In recognition of this
decision Restaurant Brands has agreed to pay every
union member a lump sum equal to 1% of their quarterly
earnings every three months. Effectively it pays the
union fees for Unite members. Union rights to notice
boards, stop work meetings and delegate development
are enshrined. On top of the pay rise, Unite wins
over 20 improvements in conditions for workers. For a
second time in a week, Unite makes front page news in
the New Zealand Herald. Media commentators and
pundits call the deal “historic”.

"The important fact is that workers, who have never
done anything like this before, worked together with
one goal in mind, getting a better deal. My advice to
those who want to follow is to get yourself and your
work mates excited about their futures, to get excited
about how they are going to change their futures for
the better, that they should believe in themselves,
that they have that kind of power. I really think
that we could have saved (campaign) costs by having a
large scale strike. Closing some larger stores down
for a couple of hours would be awesome. Getting on the
news would be great. Any way, I believe that the new
RBL contract is very significant to now, we could have
gotten more, but it is a step in the right direction.
I congratulate all workers who worked towards this
goal. It is a fantastic effort."
-Jennifer Carmichael, Starbucks Strike leader and
Unite volunteer organiser.


"One thing I can add from my own perspective in Lower
Hutt is the change in workers' attitudes towards the
union after the breakthrough deal. Apart from one
fairly solid KFC store, Lower Hutt was not a really
militant region. There are 6 Rest Brands outlets in
Hutt City, plus 2 McDs. During the strikes, some
workers were inspired to join but others just didn't
want to know you as aunion organiser.
They wouldn’t talk to you. After the deal was settled,
most of these people suddenly became
more positive and open. The shift was quite dramatic.

One guy stands out. A KFC cook, he was a union
delegate in the mid-90s in a fish processing plant.
When we signed the breakthrough deal, he joined up and
talked with me for the first time. He said he got a
hammering as union delegate before, and was forced out
of his job. He never abandoned his support for trade
unionism. But only now, I think, does he feel it's
safe to express it again.

In his late twenties, that cook is a bit older than
the typical KFC worker. I had a long battle to get
trusted by workers at the Hutt Central store, where
the manager is extremely hostile to Unite. But the
next visit after the deal was signed, three workers
joined. They also started talking about problems on
the job with the manager, which was a first in my
experience. So in my region, I think winning the deal
has been a boost to confidence and a launch-pad for
workers to unionise and start tackling problems
they've been unhappy about for a while."
-Grant Brookes, Unite volunteer organiser, Wellington


"Maybe one day these young workers and other like them
will run the restaurants themselves and the
anti-corporate campaigns I've been part of will be
replaced with consultation with the workers
collectives to change socially and environmentally
problematic practices directly. Till then all power
to the fast food workers in their struggle for a
better deal, much respect to the organisers at Unite
and to all those campaigning for a world free of abusive corporations
and the social system that creates and supports them."
-Danny Strype, Anti Capitalist activist

Ready to fight "forever".
Now the battle moves onto McDonalds in earnest. That
multinationals refusal to bargain now looks miserly
and mean in the eyes of their workers who can see the
improvements the union won in KFC and Pizza Hut. The
attempts at intimidation and union busting have
strengthened the resolve of workplace delegates and
organisers. Unite has promised that it will fight
McDonalds “forever” until a decent collective contract
is agreed, and now looks to the wider community to
support these minimum wage workers. Last words to a
brave delegate from McDonalds who served legal papers
on McDs management, scuppering their discriminatory
union busting payments-

"As far as I stand I think that the out come with the
Restaurant Brands Limited was a good one. We achieved
great things, and that the workers should be proud for
what they have achieved. As for strikes, I think that
these young workers including myself, should have the
right to strike. They are only fighting for what is
rightfully theirs. I support it in every way.

These so called Office Executives (white collar
Pricks) can't be putting a figure on the amount that
these workers do, when they have never done the jobs
given to us.
Most of these workers are young, first jobs ever. But
they wear their hearts on their sleeves; put all their
sweat into it. They receive nothing for it, no
gratitude or recognition. But all I can say really
is, because my fight has yet to start with
McDonalds, it's really up to us, to do something. I
do not blame workers for making a stand for what they
truly believe in and what is theirs. WE HAVE EVERY
RIGHT! I’LL TRY MY BEST!"
-Heni Moeke, Unite Delegate at Point Chevalier
McDonalds

Workers like Heni need all the support they can get-
she has had her hours slashed and was told that if she
didn’t like it, she could get a job somewhere else.
Whatever happens, there will be an almighty fight for
the rest of 2006, and the eyes of the world will be
on Aotearoa. Solidarity from unions across the
globe, from Europe, Venezuela, Australia and the USA
will be there, as organisations that represent
hundreds of thousands of workers internationally get
behind the workers of the Unite Union. Be one of them
today, and do what you can to support the
SupersizeMyPay.Com campaign….

The workers united, will never de defeated.

Thursday, May 11, 2006

Buiding a union in McDonalds, New Zealand




Our union is a small, activist union that recently led the world's
first strikes at Starbucks, and has since won a substantial
pay deal and improved conditions for our members there
and at KFC and Pizza Hut as well. Details of our
campaign and victory can be found at our campaign
website, www.supersizemypay.com

However, we are also faced with a major challenge in
the next few months with a concerted offensive from
union busters McDonalds, who have threatened to "smash
the Unite union". Our members and delegates have
experienced severe victimisation and bullying, many
workplace leaders having their hours cut, rosters
changed to unsocial hours, or asked to find another
job "if you don't like it here". Recently, they
employed the services of a Kiwi arch union buster,
who embarked on a policy of paying non union members
more money in an attempt to destroy our membership
on the shop floor.

Our members in McDonalds, bouyed by the victories we
won at KFC, Starbucks and Pizza Hut, have now resolved
to fight hard in the next few months. At the moment
we have over 900 members in McDonalds stores in
Auckland alone. But most of these trade unionists are
on minimum wage, and are highly vulnerable. In this
David and Goliath battle, they know full well they
stand against a powerful multinational with billions
of dollars in reserve, and a media, legal and
advertising corps per excellence.

However, we also know that there are millions of trade
unionists around the world who will be inspired if we
can win this fight against McDonalds. It will truly
inspire workers in so called "McJobs" everywhere that
change is possible. As such, key Unite organisers
have gone to the corners of the earth to spread the
word- Senior Organiser Mike Treen to Venezuela and
Bolivia, and Education Officer Chrissy Holland to the
LaborNotes Conference in Detroit. I am visiting
interested trade unions and campaign groups in both
Ireland and Britain, and can be contacted at
solidarityjoe@yahoo.com if you would like to meet up.

I am in the UK meeting General Secretary Mark Serwotka
of the Public and Commerical Services Union on May
16th, and will be meeting other trade union leaders
and groups until the 18th of May. I have a short 15
minute compilation of rushes from an upcoming
documentary being made about the SupersizeMyPay.Com
campaign to organise the unorganised in the fast food
industries. The campaign has been colourful and
energetic, and we want to spread its message through
union websites, publications and branches.

Any help and solidarity
you can give to our small union in this organisational
life and death fight for us would be greatly
appreciated.

Solidarity
Joe Carolan
www.unite.org.nz

Starbucks: Union busters leave a bitter taste




From Socialist Worker 12.04.2005 - 25.04.2005 #240 www.swp.ie
Starbucks to open in Dublin:

By Joe Carolan

THE recent closure of Bewleys saw workers treated like disposable plastic cups, given their notice days before Christmas. So much for ‘traditional’ Dublin. It begs the question; what would Jim Larkin have done? Now, what marketers call the ‘empty emotional space’ is to be filled by the infamous Starbucks chain, who had their windows smashed during the Battle of Seattle. Why all the froth about what some call ‘the McDonalds of Coffee’?

Coffee is coffee, no matter where it is drunk. Starbucks, however, try to brand an experience of drinking it as a cosmopolitan, broad minded, urbane experience, a ‘Friends’ Central Perk culture. A contemptuous commercialisation of new age backpacker chic sees young Urbz sip their Costa Rican Venti Latte in comfy sofas whilst listening to World Music from Burundi or Bahia. Starbucks presents the world as a sensual feast for narcissistic Western consumers to experience, but behind this de-contextualised globalisation lies a reality of ruthless competition, exploitation and union busting.

Globalisation has led to huge drops in commodity prices for cash crops, with coffee growing farmers in East Timor losing 35% of their income since Seattle 1999. In Mexico, it has halved. Reacting to the anger of the anti capitalist movement, and to save money on the glazier bills, Starbucks now attempt a ‘greenwash’ by having a Fair Trade coffee morning once a month. That would mean, logically, that the other 30 days are unfair trade morning, evening and nights.

In the Global North, Starbucks workers call themselves Baristas, a name that echos solidarity with their Southern Zapatista and Sandinista comrades. Baristas are permatemps, workers who suffer from the twin evils of flexploitation- low pay coupled with long, unscheduled hours.

McJobs that do not give you enough hours to have the rights of a full time worker, yet rely on you applying for more shifts because you cannot make ends meet on 5 cents above the minimum wage.

Danny Gross and Anthony Polanco were two baristas who stood up to Starbucks in New York last October, organising a union in the 36th and Madison branch of Starbucks as half a million protested Bush and the Republican Congress outside on the streets. Following a complaint from Starbucks management, they were arrested by cops at a union rally outside, and were sent through the New York courts. Now they have emerged victorious, with Starbucks being found guilty by the NY Labour Board of bullying, harassment and attempting to intimidate union organisers. The IWW (James Connolly’s Wobblies) is now organising baristas nationwide. Irish workers should log into www.starbucksunion.org for inspiration.

Bewleys may be gone, but Globalisation wants to colonise what it sees as an emotional vacumn in public urban meeting space. Before we succumb to the ‘Friends’ brand identity, we should remember the baristas and the coffee campensinos fighting back. Boycott politics is well and good but organising a union there would make millionaire owner (and Zionist) Howard Schultz really smell the coffee.

Would you like a rise with that?




Unite’s Supersizemypay.com campaign to unionise young workers in the fast food multinational chains has taken hold of a generation’s imagination, in a way I haven’t seen since the big pre-war mobilisations of Feb 15th 2003. Make no mistake, this new trade unionism is a social movement of the young, the brown, the immigrant and the poor, and in store after store, we are getting 100% per cent votes for strike action.

I’ve just returned from a night’s visting, recruiting and balloting, meeting workers on the graveyard shifts all over South Central Auckland. In the KFC in Balmoral, same as the Pizza Hut in Royal Oak or the McDonald’s in Greenlane, there’s one sentence I keep hearing from our members and delegates- “when’s it our turn to strike?”. Young workers are flaunting company rules, proudly wearing their Unite union badges and $12 an hour stickers on their uniforms at work, and you can even see them walk differently. Stroppier, taller, more confident- staunch. Itching for their turn to take action in what promises to be Auckland’s Hot Summer.

The Starbucks strike was awesome- when Vicki Salmon, CEO of Restaurant Brands, scoffed on National Radio that there were only three workers going on strike at the K Road store, she ignited the anger of our other Starbucks delegates and members citywide. 35 Starbucks workers took wildcat action, and the Workers Charter Freedom Bus ferried the wildcats down to the rally. Nick, the 16 year old Starbucks worker from St Lukes, spoke at the KFC strike ballot meeting two days later in the Balmoral store. His energy ignited the anger of the workers there, who voted 100% for strike action on December 3rd, the first strike action in New Zealand led by a strike committee made up in the main of teenagers, furious at the discrimination they suffer under youth rates. Teenage kicks aimed at KFC- Kiwis for Cheap...

At times, you feel like the Bolsheviks during the July Days. A premature uprising runs great risks, especially up against the enemies that we face. This is a David and Goliath battle. But what makes you realise that this is a movement for social justice and not just an exercise in collective bargaining, is the energy, creativity and thirst to have a go at the multinationals that you find in every store. Elements of the anti capitalist movement might have been misguided in their calls to boycott these chains- all along, we were really needed inside them organising young working class people.

Socialists and Workers Charter activists have been at the heart of this uprising, and at the time this article was written, were building flat out for a solidarity rally with the 30 brave KFC workers striking at Balmoral. In the weeks to come, the strikes will spread out to Lincoln Road, Royal Oak, and into the centre of the city and Queen Street. At the Unite strategy meetings, we often talk about Farrell Dobbs and the Teamsters rebellion in Minneapolis- and how a small group of dedicated socialists could build a massive citywide union movement. Hopefully this summer we will have our Fastfood Rebellion, and we hope thousands of low paid workers in petrol stations, supermarkets and video stores go on to follow our example.

Now, would you like a rising with that? Super size my pay dot com!

Joe Carolan
November 2005

Also see Starstruck- David and Goliath
http://www.indymedia.ie/newswire.php?story_id=73204

and Union Busters leave a bitter taste
http://www.swp.ie/socialistworker/2005/sw240/SW-240-web.pdf