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Battling Concessions: Tough Fight, Right Decision
Phyllis Walker, president of AFSCME Local 3800, delivered the following
speech in Detroit Sept. 12 to hundreds of labor activists attending a
conference organized by the publication Labor Notes. AFSCME Local 3800
represents nearly 1800 University of Minnesota clerical workers, 93% of
whom are women. As we go to press, Local 3800 has announced its intent
to strike against a concessionary contract proposal.
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Phyllis Walker, President of AFSCME Local 3800,
speaks to the press on October 20th to announce that U of M clerical
workers will strike the next day, October 21st.
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Sisters and brothers,
Greetings and solidarity from AFSCME Local 3800, a union of 1800 clerical
workers at the University of Minnesota.
Tonight the topic is fighting back in hard times. As is clear from the
presentations tonight, if we have leaders with a willingness to fight,
flexible tactics, root our strategy in the membership and support the
struggles of other unions, we can fight back and win. If, like all too
many in the labor movement, we sit back and moan about the state of the
world, we can expect concessions, bad contracts and more and more people
losing confidence in what unions can do for the working people of this
country.
I am happy to report, hard times in our local got us to dig deep within
ourselves, to organize our membership and to take the first strike vote
in our local’s history.
Our local, which is 93% women, was organized in 1990. Over the years,
our local has fought many battles with the employer and won many victories.
Several years ago, AFSCME Local 3800 started a two-year long livable wage
campaign. We packed hundreds of members into regents meetings and public
hearings. In the end, we forced the regents of the University to adopt
a policy setting the minimum wage at $12 per hour.
Now the University of Minnesota is the only educational institution in
the country with a starting salary of $12.00. And our union made that
happen.
I am happy to report our [negotiating] committee is strong and united
against concessions. Our staff negotiator is one of the original organizers
of our local and shares our vision. We entered negotiations determined
to not only fight concessions but also win gains in contract language.
We are facing a university employer who is attempting to drive up our
health care costs, take away our annual step increases and freeze our
wages. The employer is mounting this attack under the guise of the so-called
budget crisis. But our message is clear - there is no budget crisis, there
is a distribution crisis. The employer has millions to spend on buildings
and administrator salaries, but tells frontline workers they must “share
the pain”. In response to this attack, we are mounting a vigorous fightback.
In Local 3800, our contract expired on June 30. Management was demanding
concessions, so we began telling our members we need to strike.
After we made the decision to fight, we had the best week of negotiations
ever. After a long discussion at the beginning of the week, our committee
unanimously concluded that we would not accept the employer’s offer, and
we came to that decision days before they even handed it to us. Other
local unions represented by AFSCME at the university agreed to the concessions,
and their membership will vote to ‘accept’ or to ‘reject and strike’ in
the next few weeks.
But we were the only union local who left negotiations with smiles on
our faces! Even though we picked a tough fight, we knew that we made the
right decision. I am proud to say that even with all the Teamsters and
other AFSCME bargaining units on campus, it is my local, the clerical
workers, the women on this campus, who are leading the fight for justice
against this huge employer.
Now we are sending teams of member-organizers into the workplace to convince
the membership to reject management’s final offer and to strike for the
first time in our local’s history.
In carrying out our fight, we draw on some good examples of unions in
the Twin Cities and around the country who have been fighting back in
these tough times.
Nationally, the Yale workers are an inspiration to us all with creative
tactics and militant strikes.
Locally, SEIU Local 113 led a series of one-day strikes this spring against
several Twin City hospitals. They made impressive gains despite high unemployment,
despite the threats of the employer, and despite the fact that their membership
had never been asked to fight like that before.
Local 17 of HERE in the Twin Cities linked the struggle for immigrant
rights with the struggle of hotel workers organizing and a contract campaign.
They impacted the debate on immigrants’ rights and working conditions
on a national level and mobilized thousands of workers and supporters.
We joined with the Welfare Rights Committees in Minnesota and progressive
unions like UFCW Local 789 to demand “tax the rich” to save social programs
and funding for education.
However, the majority of unions adopted the ‘Take Back Minnesota’ campaign.
Despite its rhetoric, ‘Take Back Minnesota’ means building an infrastructure
to elect Democrats; it means subordinating the interests of workers to
the fate of Democratic party officials who want, more than anything else,
to get re-elected.
In the end, the Democratic leadership in the Senate predictably gave
in to almost the full package of cuts to university financing, welfare
benefits and health care spending. This is an example of what we see over
and over again - unions putting party loyalty ahead of their own interests
and independence. If the entire union movement had embraced the ‘Tax the
Rich’ campaign, fought the cuts and held the Democrats accountable, the
result would have been far different.
Right in our own AFSCME council, we have an example of fighting back
in hard times - because what can be harder than taking 18,000 state workers
out on strike in the emotionally charged atmosphere surrounding September
11, 2001?
In 2001, our 18,000 sisters and brothers in AFSCME Council 6 knew they
would have a tough fight, but they did not know quite how tough it would
be. After strike notice had been given, the attacks of September 11 hit.
Many expected the union to fold, but instead they stayed strong. Many
commentators suggested it was unpatriotic to strike after September 11.
The union aggressively countered that idea and brought union firefighters
from New York to speak at strike rallies. Our local’s members enthusiastically
supported the strike, setting up picket lines at offices near the University.
For Local 3800, the hard times we face have made our decisions easier.
We must fight back. The alternative is only a freefall to the bottom.
As I have found in my own local, the harder we fight back, the stronger
our union is. More and more members are getting involved; our union is
far more relevant to the lives of our members when we are standing and
fighting. A willingness to fight and a willingness to be creative in how
we respond to the attacks against us is the formula for a stronger labor
movement. And by supporting our sisters and brothers in their struggles,
we all become much stronger. Local 3800 of AFSCME joins with all of you
here tonight at Labor Notes and thousands of others around the country
in building the stronger unions that working people everywhere need.
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