Inside the Supreme Court Case That Could Chill A U.S. Strike Wave
By Steve Wishnia
The Supreme Court is about to consider whether employers can sue unions for perishable goods lost during a strike by claiming they’re intentional property damage.
New Year’s Surprise: NYC Council Member De La Rosa Introducing Bill to Help Push Retirees Into Medicare Advantage
By Bob Hennelly
New York City Council Member Carmen De La Rosa, chair of the Council’s Civil Service and Labor Committee, will introduce a bill to change the city’s Administrative Code that’s been sought by Mayor Adams and the Municipal Labor Committee [MLC] to clear the way for its 250,000 retirees to be enrolled in a for-profit, privatized Medicare Advantage plan.
Overworked, Underpaid And Understaffed: EMS In Crisis As NYC Faces Tridemic
By Bob Hennelly
New York City’s 911 EMS daily call volume has reached 4,500 on multiple days this month, and FDNY EMS unions warn current staffing is so inadequate three years into the Covid pandemic it puts their members at greater risk while degrading the essential service they provide the public.
NYC Retiree Voices: Medicare Advantage ‘Breaches’ Covenant With Workers
By Joe Maniscalco
There are a lot of things about the campaign to push New York City municipal retirees into a scandal-plagued, for-profit Medicare Advantage insurance plan that stinks to workers who’ve risked everything — from 9/11 to Covid-19 — to help keep their city running.
Boos For NYS Governor Kathy Hochul’s ‘Anti-Union And Anti-Worker’ Court Pick
By Bob Hennelly
Labor opposition to New York State Governor Kathy Hochul's selection of Judge Hector LaSalle to become New York State’s top jurist continued to intensify over the Christmas holiday. With no signs of either side backing down, the controversy was poised to devolve into a bruising battle exposing the Democratic State Senate caucus along its ideological fault lines once it reconvenes early next month.
Listen: Money For War; UAW In Revolt; CHARAS In Decay
By Bob Hennelly
The Stuck Nation Radio Labor Hour for the week of 12/26
Part I: What’s the lost opportunity cost of a $1.7 Trillion Omnibus federal spending bill that spends $858 billion on the military? Shailly Gupta Barnes, policy director of the Kairos Center and Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis, director of the Kairos Center, as well as co-chair of the Poor People’s Campaign, reflect on the moral failure of the Congress in not renewing the expanded child tax credit but giving the Pentagon billions more than the President Biden asked for.
NYC Retiree Voices: ‘Medicare Advantage Is A Complete And Total Sellout’
By Joe Maniscalco
“Medicare Advantage is a complete and total sellout,” 78-year-old retired Highway Transportation Specialist Fred Newton told Work-Bites earlier this week.
Listen: NYC Comptroller Warns of ‘Vacancy Crisis’
By Bob Hennelly with Joe Maniscalco
While other major cities in America including Boston are moving to confront an alarming shortage of municipal workers, New York City Comptroller Brad Lander this week warns the Stuck Nation Radio Labor Hour “rather than taking an aggressive approach to fill vacancies — we’ve really done the opposite as part of an effort to balance gaps in the city budgets. We’re just leaving positions vacant regardless of whether they are really critical or not.”
Watch: NYC Doc Breaks Down Real World Impact of Medicare Advantage On Retirees
Dr. Donald E. Moore is an attending physician at NY Methodist Hospital, as well as a teacher at Weill Cornell Medical College, NYU and Hunter College. He is also a board member of the New York Metro chapter of Physicians for a National Health Program.
Giving ‘em Hell For The Holidays…
By Joe Maniscalco
New York City Mayor Eric Adams and the heads of the Municipal Labor Committee [MLC] can expect to catch a lot more hell from municipal retirees refusing to be pushed into a for-profit, privatized, Medicare Advantage plan.
Listen: Why Is Louie DeJoy Still the US Postmaster? NY Metro Postal Union Prez Sounds Alarm Again!
By Bob Hennelly with Joe Maniscalco
We’ve already reported extensively on the curious case of Postmaster Louis Dejoy and why he’s still has the job after, you know, trying to systematically dismantle the entire United States Postal Service. You can check out some of that earlier reporting here.
On the latest episode of the Stuck Nation Radio Labor Hour, NY Metro Postal Union President Jonathan Smith [APWU] discusses what he says is a growing disconnect between national union leaders and local unions regarding Louie DeJoy.
9/11 Betrayal: Lots of Money for War While First Responders Get Short-Changed
By Bob Hennelly
The last-minute decision by Congressional leaders, including Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, to take the $3.7 billion in funding for the 9/11 WTC Health Program out of the $1.7 trillion Omnibus spending bill is being blasted as a betrayal by 9/11 WTC civilian survivors and the unions that represent essential workers that continue to lose members to WTC diseases.
Listen: NYC Retirees Leader Dismisses Arbitrator’s Filing; Vows to Press Fight Against Medicare Advantage
By Bob Hennelly with Joe Maniscalco
Last week, an arbitrator named Martin Sheinman delivered a 60-page opinion in favor of the Adams’ administration’s campaign to push municipal retirees into a privatized, for-profit Medicare Advantage healthcare plan.
Medicare Advantage Is a National Scandal - How Thick Could New York City’s Information Bubble Be?
By Joe Maniscalco
Collusion.
That’s what the campaign by New York City Mayor Eric Adams and the heads of the Municipal Labor Committee [MLC] to push municipal retirees into a privatized for-profit Medicare Advantage healthcare program looks like to the many thousands who’ve spent more than a year trying to stop the plan.
The Next Episode of ‘This Is Working’ is Here - ‘Cover Your A$$!’
Special to Work-Bites.com
Somehow, you just know when your temp job involves toxic waste things are not gonna go well. In this episode of “This Is Working” artist Jenner Bateman Grace interviews a worker who’s on-the-job experiences are both horrifying and hilarious…happy holidays! [WATCH IT NOW]
U.S. Rep Calls Railroad Worker Sick Time ‘The American Thing to Do’ - Anticipates Executive Order
By Bob Hennelly
Courtesy of InsiderNJ
While the issue of Congress imposing an unpopular rail contract on the nation’s 115,000 workers that lacked paid sick time to precent a strike may have faded from the headlines, a series of high energy union rallies across the country on Dec. 13 are adding pressure on President Biden to issue an executive order mandating paid sick days for rail workers.
All Aboard The Bad Medicine Train…Listen How For-Profit Healthcare Hurts Our Families
By Bob Hennelly with Joe Maniscalco
Take a hard look around at some of the most incendiary labor struggles taking place in the nation right now — rail workers fighting the bosses over sick days; the demise of the Expanded Child Tax Credit; public sector workers watching their hard-fought contract gains vanish before their eyes — look closer and you’ll find the prohibitively high cost of healthcare is never far from the mix.
NYC’s Mayor Has No Answer For Homelessness - He Should Ask Frontline Workers
By Bob Hennelly
On Nov. 29, New York City Mayor Eric Adams declared at a press conference that his “compassion” driven response to the city’s homeless crisis would be to enhance the state’s existing authority to involuntary commit the mentally ill in their ranks to ensure people “in desperate need” were no longer allowed “to slip through the cracks.”
‘This Is Working’ In America Today…
By Joe Maniscalco
Jennifer Bateman Grace has thought a lot about working — the nature of work, what it means to work, and what our work means to us. Those deep meditations have now resulted in an ongoing series of whimsical YouTube video shorts about working in America today — and they’re every bit as insightful as they are fun to watch.
Memo to President: Working Sick Kills – See COVID
By Bob Hennelly
Courtesy of InsiderNJ
It’s been a week since President Biden and a Democratic Congress took the draconian step of imposing a labor pact that most of the nation’s 125,000 rail workers voted down because it lacked more than one sick day per year. The last time this happened was in 1992 when President George W. Bush did it.