by Richard Mellor
Afscme Local 444, retired
I attended last nights “solidarity” rally with BART workers in Oscar Grant/Frank Ogawa Plaza in Oakland. Amalgamated Transport Union 1555, the union that has done the most organizing for it and that had initiated it, had the most members present from what I could see. I shot some video as you can see above but couldn’t stand listening to the speeches for long. While many of the workers there attending such an event for the first time would naturally feel inspired and hopeful, I have heard it all before and if we take time to think about what was said form the podium we see clearly it amounts to empty rhetoric.
I attended last nights “solidarity” rally with BART workers in Oscar Grant/Frank Ogawa Plaza in Oakland. Amalgamated Transport Union 1555, the union that has done the most organizing for it and that had initiated it, had the most members present from what I could see. I shot some video as you can see above but couldn’t stand listening to the speeches for long. While many of the workers there attending such an event for the first time would naturally feel inspired and hopeful, I have heard it all before and if we take time to think about what was said form the podium we see clearly it amounts to empty rhetoric.
I
was also at the first planning meeting for the rally when Chris Finn, ATU
1555’s Recording Secretary talked of the need to “get our message out to the public” but when I rose to ask him what
that message was, he was reluctant to open up a discussion on the subject. In
fact, there was no message to the public except to announce repeatedly that an
attack on BART workers is an attack on all of us. From the podium last night
the president of the ILWU whose officials remind us time and time again of
1934’s General Strike struck the same message telling the crowd that “An injury to one is and injury to all”
and other speakers including the actor Danny Glover continued in the same
vein. I could stand it any more as no
one raised what we must do to win this historic struggle between capital and
labor that is taking place before us.
We
are only two days away now from another strike and the war being waged against
the BART workers in the 1%’s press is heating up as I write. The main offensive
is to turn the public against the BART workers through their media. Today’s San
Francisco Chronicle attacks the BART workers because of their benefits. “Most
public employees in the Bay Area contribute far more for their medical insurance
and pensions than do BART workers..” the Chronicle reports, adding that
they, “…pay nothing toward their pensions and a flat $92 a month for medical
care for workers and their families.” .
Why would we oppose that? We need
to be defending it and extending it and more, to all workers. It is not in
workers’ interests to help the 1% attack those of us that are somewhat better
off, have higher pay and better benefits or benefits at all. We want to raise
us all up not help the 1% push us all down.
Making
the 1%’s arguments like a good propaganda outlet should, the Chronicle whines
about how medical insurance costs have increased and how pensions have risen
126% in the last 8 years. “This next
contract must address the skyrocketing cost of employee benefits…” says a
mouthpiece for the agency, “…and we have
to have employees share in some of that risk.”
Many
workers have chosen to seek the easy life, the line of least resistance as
workers throughout the country have had their wages and benefits savaged over
the past period. The auto-workers went from $28 an hour to $14. The US is becoming attractive as a low waged
economy and we reported on this blog about the Caterpillar factory that shut its
doors in London Ontario and moved production to LaGrange Illinois where wages
are 50% lower. The US “has become much
more efficient, making it more attractive for global manufacturers.” the Wall
Street Journal reported.
We must
not kid ourselves, the bosses are serious about crushing the public sector and
the Bay Area is in the eye of this storm.
The
bosses have brought in Tom Hock who is president of labor negotiations for
Veolia transportation. Veolia is the largest operator of private public transit
in the world and a major privatizer. Its is also connected with MV
transportation, the private outfit that operates transit for the disabled. The Teamsters represent these workers and
where were they yesterday? These workers earn less with fewer benefits than
MUNI or BART. They need to be brought in to this struggle to strengthen it and
raise their wages and benefits to the higher level. Hock has been on a 10-day vacation as
negotiations have continued. He is expected to return to the bargaining table
Tuesday, which is an indication of the contempt the bosses have for the workers
and the public and further illustrates their strategy which is to force the BART
workers in to striking, isolating them from the public making their defeat
certain.
Veolia’s
has its origins in the French water company Vivendi Universal that had a third
of its directors under investigation for corruption in 1996. It has been
notorious for corruption, fraud and putting profit before the public in its
global privatization spree.
Veolia
settled out of court when sued under the Clean Water Act for dumping more than
10 million gallons of wastewater and untreated sewage over a 5-year period into
the San Francisco Bay after creating an inadequate improvement project. You can
read
more about Veolia here.
This
struggle is about privatizing our public transit system. We have written
numerous pieces about this strike over the last week or two and I recommend
people read them. But let’s keep the
right perspective here. The Chronicle doesn’t remind the public day in day out
of the massive increase in corporate property values due to the BART system
that is a publicly built and funded system.
Less than 5% of BART’s revenue comes from property taxes but corporate
property and real estate values have sky rocketed thanks to BART. I have given numerous examples of other
sources of waste and funds. We know in our gut that there is plenty of money in
society and plenty of thieving at the top.
The
trade union leaders involved have asked the BART Board of Directors to
investigate Hock and threatened a lawsuit if Hock is not removed. And here is where I have to be blunt as the
stakes are so high. We cannot win by
asking the very forces that are in the forefront of the war against us to
help. We have suffered defeat after
defeat, setback after setback not because we are weak, but because of the
failed and what have become, catastrophic policies of the heads of organized
labor that have led to these defeats. Individual
locals are left fighting what amounts to global capitalism alone. We cannot win that way. The labor officialdom is asking the Board of
Directors to help them? They are
appealing to the courts? This doesn’t
scare the 1%. They own the courts and the judges and the politicians in the two
Wall Street parties represent their interests not ours. The power of workers to
stop their system from functioning is what will bring them around. Force
matters.
The
problem is that the bosses don’t fear us because they know that the labor
leadership from the top on down will not bring the power of labor and the
working class as a whole to the table. We explained that if we want to win the
unions must put on the table issues that affect the public. In the interests of
space I won’t repeat it but I commented on this here. The Unions must fight for the public, not
talk in abstract phrases about us all being in this together and how we need to
have solidarity. Solidarity around what
issues? What is the union movement offering the public concretely for their
support?
At
yesterday’s rally as our flier said, instead of empty phrases the union
leadership should have been announcing the formation of a joint strike
committee including members of the public and community and youth
organizations. It is my guess that the
AC Transit bus drivers who are also in ATU but different local will not strike
with the Train Operators. This is a huge mistake and the reason for it is the
leadership does not want to wage a real war.
They are terrified of a victory as they have, like all of them, built a
relationship with the employers based on cooperation and Labor peace. They see nothing
but chaos coming out of a real victory that will inspire their members to get
more and question the obscene salaries and perks that the heads of organized
labor receive.
I
was at the board meeting when AC Transit drivers, station agents and train
operators packed the room and the feeling of unity and fighting together was
strong. But the leadership refuses to lead. But a strike can be won; we have
the power in the workplace and the community.
ATU 1555, SEIU 1021, ATU 192 representing AC Transit drivers, AFSCME
representing supervisors and the Ferry operators should all come out
together. Mass meetings should be held
to discuss tactics and build the strike for a victory. People can be sent out
to other workplaces like the city of Oakland and other corporation yards and
encourage workers to get involved, whole families should get involved around
offensive demands, jobs, free transportation, 24 hour trains etc. Mass meetings
can be held in the communities. The line against their austerity offensive can
be drawn here in the Bay Area.
It
was clear from the speeches at the rally that the present leadership as is
always the case has no intention of launching a real fightback, the bosses know
this which is whey they are so confident and are taking the opportunity to
crush the BART workers. We don’t need
solidarity in the abstract in this situation; we need concrete and militant
direct action, not letters to our Congressperson. They only listen to us if we
hurt their bottom line.
Brothers
and sisters that pay the dues in the unions, you cannot sit idly by and allow
the leadership of these organizations that were built over a century and a half
of sacrifice to continue their disastrous concessionary policies of cooperation
and appeasement, of calling a defeat a victory because we lost slightly less
than the boss wanted. The days of us paying dues and them producing the goods are over. We have no alternative but to fight. We owe it to our ancestors, to our children and to
ourselves to drive back this offensive of the 1% with an offensive of our own.
The money’s there, we know that in our hearts.
We are dealing with some ruthless people but we have been in worse
situations before.
It’s time to seize the time.
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