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San Diego Free Press

Grassroots News & Progressive Views

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The War on Public Sector Unions is a War on Progressive Politics and Democracy Itself

September 11, 2017 by Jim Miller

As the Trump circus keeps people focused on daily scandals along with assaults on immigrants, transgender folks, and a myriad of other battles, the right is busy trying to quietly win the long war.  Last week in my Labor Day column, I noted how the upcoming Janus v. AFSCME decision will help make it possible to gut public sector unions and the labor movement as a whole in order to change the power structure of the entire country and rig American politics in favor of the interests of the rich and our corporate oligarchy.  

While many progressives take comfort in the fact that Trump’s incompetence and perpetually dysfunctional administration have made big legislative accomplishments difficult even with Republican majorities in both houses, it is important not to forget what a big win getting a Supreme Court majority was for right-wing interests long term.  It sets the stage for a coming battle royal once the Janus decision hits.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Labor, Under the Perfect Sun

Dolores: Rebel. Activist. Feminist. Mother. | Video Worth Watching

September 5, 2017 by Staff

Q: What do Angela Davis, Luis Valdez and Gloria Steinem have in common? A: They all appear in the movie “Dolores”, about labor organizer and civil rights icon Dolores Huerta. While surfing the interwebs today I came across a Democracy Now! segment that featured Amy Goodman interviewing Dolores about the current DACA situation. In the course of the interview Amy mentioned that there’s a new film out about her and that piqued my curiosity. With a little more research I discovered that “Dolores” is a Carlos Santana production written, directed and produced by Peter Bratt and it’s just been released!

The film’s website shows that Dolores Huerta will be appearing in person at the Ken Cinema on Friday, September 22th for a Q&A at 4:45 pm and for the screening at 7:10 pm. Other members of the Huerta family, including Maria Elena Chavez and Rick Chavez, will be attending in person on Saturday, September 23rd for the 7:10 screening.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Labor, Video Worth Watching

What Good is a Union in 2017?

September 4, 2017 by Jim Miller

What is there to celebrate this Labor Day for the average American?  We live in troubled times and many of us in the United States are increasingly anxious or angry as we see the American Dream slipping away right before our eyes as the middle-class shrinks and the gap between the very rich and the rest of us continues to grow.

Of course things weren’t always so discouraging for working folks and, as recently as the middle of the twentieth century, what Robert Reich has called the “great compression” helped build the American middle class to its historic zenith as people saw their wages increase, their educational and economic opportunities expand, and their political power grow as the government responded to increasing pressure from below and employers felt the need to compromise with rather than put the screws to their workforces.  

While many people have a vague nostalgia for the times before the great unraveling of economic security for most Americans, many have forgotten what helped make the good old days for the middle class good: unions.     [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Labor, Under the Perfect Sun

Studs Terkel: ‘Labor Day’s coming up!’ | Video Worth Watching

September 4, 2017 by Staff

Maybe it’s because he authored a book titled “Working”, maybe it’s because he was employed by the Works Progress Administration in his early years, maybe it’s just because he so obviously loved the work he did, but for me Studs Terkel personifies the idea of a labor of love, and of the good, caring and kind aspects of work. So, on Labor Day, here’s a brief clip of Studs relating with his disarmingly charming delivery, an anecdote with a Labor Day theme.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Labor, Video Worth Watching

Union Town by Tom Morello: The Nightwatchman | Another Video Worth Watching

September 3, 2017 by Staff

A little more music for the weekend, this selection in the spirit of the Labor Day holiday: Union Town by Tom Morello: The Nightwatchman. Don’t think there are any clips of San Diego in this video, so for us this may be aspirational rather than descriptive, but we’re working on it …   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Labor, Video Worth Watching

Labor Solidarity – Despite Our Differences

July 24, 2017 by Peter Zschiesche

For those who read Jim Miller’s recent articles recounting the unfortunate splits in the local Labor movement, it may seem they result from just personal differences among labor leaders. Jim reported the events that led the AFL-CIO, the parent organization of the Labor Council, to take over the council and restore it to functioning as it should.

However that came about, that is what the AFL-CIO as the parent organization is supposed to do. It will be hard work.

This work will pay off if San Diego’s Labor Council is restored to the level it maintained for over two decades beginning in the late 1990s when it helped union families leverage their collective strength in improving wages and benefits, as well as playing a key role in local elections. It can be said definitively that the lives of hundreds of thousands of people improved in this region because San Diego had a strong, unified Labor Council.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Labor, Readers Write

Official Neglect Fosters Wage Theft In San Diego

July 11, 2017 by Doug Porter

Study: Nearly 40,000 workers shorted on paychecks. 

What happens if voters approve an increased minimum wage ordinance and government can’t be bothered? Short answer–people get ripped off.

A study by the San Diego State University Department of Sociology, the Center on Policy Initiatives, and the Employee Rights Center of San Diego estimates employers in San Diego and Imperial counties have failed to pay the legal minimum wage to 39,900 local workers.

One year ago today the San Diego Earned Sick Leave and Minimum Wage Ordinance became law and established a local minimum wage (currently $11.50 an hour) applying to all work done within City limits.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Labor, The Starting Line

Trump and His Baja Resort Fiasco: ‘Just a Giant Hole in the Ground’

July 10, 2017 by Frank Gormlie

Artist's vision of Trump Baja tower project

Ever since Donald Trump announced he was running for president, reports began circulating in the press about all the various failures of his businesses.

These include the bankruptcy of his Atlantic City, New Jersey, casinos, the defunct Trump University here in San Diego where students successfully sued him, and, particularly, the troubles of his Trump Towers.

For instance, in the saga of the Trump Tower in Tampa, Florida, Trump sold the use of his name to developers of the $300 million condo project for $2 million. According to Rolling Stone, the developers collected down payments from investors but after the project went south in 2008, the snookered buyers sued Trump for misleading them. Trump did settle the suit, but plaintiffs lost hundreds of thousands of dollars.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Business, Government

‘Sharecroppers on Wheels’ Walk Off the Job at Southern California Ports

June 20, 2017 by Doug Porter

California’s port truckers make it possible for the both the old and new retail economies.of the world to function. This week they’re calling strikes and staging picket lines at ports on the West Coast, including San Diego.

This work stoppage is about more than wages and benefits; it’s about an economic nightmare akin to involuntary servitude enabled by corporations like Toyota, Walmart, Target, and Amazon.

Companies like XPO Logistics, Inc.–the target of this week’s actions– are illegally misclassifying workers as independent contractors, forcing them into a debt peonage system of the sort most Americans think vanished a century ago.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Labor, The Starting Line

Faulconer’s Proposed Tourism Tax Increase: Perpetuating the Hourglass Economy

June 7, 2017 by Lori Saldaña

I’ve been reviewing various reports about the proposed ballot measure and special election that seeks to increase the Transient Occupancy Tax (TOT). Proponents tell us this is needed to fund a Convention Center expansion, pave our streets, and provide shelter for homeless people- wow!   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Economy, Labor

‘My Way Or the Highway’ Isn’t a Rallying Call for Activism

May 15, 2017 by Doug Porter

In a not-so-improbable dystopian future, forces loyal to fearless leader Donald Trump will have rounded up local labor leaders, only to be surprised to learn of a faction demanding a separate firing squad…

A breakaway group –the San Diego Working Families Council– led by deposed Labor Council President Mickey Kasparian includes seven local branches of some big-name unions.

Today, the San Diego Free Press offers up three perspectives of what this split means for local activists.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Labor, The Starting Line

What’s the Matter with Labor in San Diego?

May 15, 2017 by Jim Miller

labor

…there is no great philosophical debate over principle at stake here in San Diego. In fact, principle or coherent strategic thinking has nothing to do with the current state of affairs at all.  

By Jim Miller

In one of my first columns of the year, I made a plea that San Diego labor should not allow itself to be distracted by the trials and tribulations of Labor Council President Mickey Kasparian.   

With everything from a looming anti-labor shift on the Supreme Court and at the National Labor Relations Board, to “right to work” legislation in Congress along with a host of other perils, I argued that the Trump era simply holds too many dangers for labor to get bogged down in the petty drama surrounding one leader…   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Labor, Under the Perfect Sun

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