Listen: NYS Pol Weighs in on Stock Transfer Tax Rebate! And More!
By Bob Hennelly
On this episode of the Stuck Nation Labor Radio Hour, we welcome Jonathan Smith, president of the New York Metro Area Postal Union, Judy Danella, president of the United Steelworkers Nurses Local 4-200, and New York State Assemblyman Phil Steck to talk about the UAW contract, the ongoing nurses strike in NJ — and getting our money back from Wall Street!
Striking NJ Nurses to Governor: RWJ Bosses are Trying to Break the Union
By Bob Hennelly
Just before the Thanksgiving holiday, New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy and his chief of staff Diane Gutierrez-Scaccetti held a zoom session with the leadership of the United Steelworkers Nurses Local 4-200 that’s been on strike for safer staffing at Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital. It was the first such meeting with the union that represents 1,700 nurses that have been out since Aug. 4.
Here’s What Sweden’s Tesla Strike and Sinatra Teach Us About ‘Secondary Boycotts’
By Steve Wishnia
Swedish postal workers are refusing to deliver mail or packages to Tesla facilities in order to support a strike by mechanics at the company’s service centers there. It is one of many solidarity actions by Swedish unions that would be illegal under U.S. law.
Be Thankful for Striking Nurses…
By Bob Hennelly
While most all of the nation is at home enjoying the joys of their families at Thanksgiving, members of United Steelworkers Nurses Local 4-200 will be out on the picket line in front of the Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital in New Brunswick, New Jersey on strike for safer staffing as they have been since Aug. 4.
These 1,700 dedicated healthcare professionals have been stripped of their healthcare coverage by RWJBarnabas, which is self-insured. The multi-billion dollar “non-profit” hospital chain paid its CEO $17 million in the second year of the COVID pandemic, and has shelled out well over $100 million to pay replacement nurses in their full court press to break the union, according to the union.
Listen: NYC First Responders Say it’s Time to Make Wall Street Pay
By Bob Hennelly
On this week’s edition of the Stuck Nation Labor Radio Hour, we zero in on two prolonged strikes in New Jersey, as well as New York City’s ongoing struggle to deliver basic services. The average response time for a city ambulance to answer a life-threatening emergency now exceeded ten minutes. It’s time to start collecting the Stock Transfer Tax — is it also time to strike, too?
Calls For Gaza Ceasefire Fill the Streets - But Not the Workplace…
By Joe Maniscalco
More Americans are taking their demand for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza to the streets — but it continues to be a different story in the workplace where many are feeling pressure from their their bosses — and sometimes, their unions — to keep their heads down and their mouths shut.
How Long Can NYC Council Speaker Adrienne Adams Say ‘Modern Day Slavery’ isn’t Her Problem?
By Joe Maniscalco
Advocates pushing for passage of the “No More 24” bill in the New York City Council put 200 or more people in the streets outside City Hall on Thursday, Nov. 16, loudly demanding Speaker Adrienne Adams stop blocking the measure or step down. They promise to be back and be even louder — next month.
Merry Christmas, Feliz Navidad, and Shèngdàn Kuàilè, indeed, Adrienne!
‘Welcome Back, 1970s’ - Austerity Adams Hopes You Enjoy Your Return to NYC…
By Bob Hennelly
New York City public sector unions are blasting Mayor Eric Adams’ mid-year budget cuts aimed at closing a $7 billion dollar budget gap Hizzoner says was created by a confluence of addressing the migrant crisis, the ending of federal COVID aid and the slowing of tax revenues.
Under the Gold Dome: Jersey’s Power Imbalance Shows at the Polls
By Bob Hennelly
Courtesy of InsiderNJ
As expected, this last election voter turnout was abysmal and I suspect that in New Jersey, where elected officials have been known to look to get their family members into office, the power structure likes to keep it that way.
This Ideology is Killing the Labor Movement…
By Joe Maniscalco
Underneath the fight municipal retirees are waging in New York City and other places around the country to save their traditional Medicare benefits from the onslaught of privatized Medicare Advantage plans lies a systemic defect in today’s labor movement that if not finally corrected guarantees some harder times ahead — for retirees and active workers alike.
Listen: UAW Contract/Nurses Strike Updates - Plus…Where’s All the Money Going?
By Bob Hennelly
On the latest episode of the Stuck Nation Labor Radio hour we look at both the UAW deal, as well as the ongoing United Steelworkers Nurses Local 4-200 strike for safer staffing at Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital in New Brunswick, NJ. Plus, we take an up close look at military spending and the Move the Money campaign…
Is This What ‘Getting Stuff Done’ in NYC Looks Like??
By Bob Hennelly
New York City’s dual homelessness and migrant crisis could be poised to get much worse as the Adams administration presses ahead with mid-year austerity measures as federal COVID aid dries up and tax revenues lag.
Listen: Retirees! Nurses! Editors! Different Fights - One Working Class Struggle!
By Bob Hennelly
On this episode of the Stuck Nation Labor Radio Hour, Retired FDNY EMT Marianne Pizzitola, president of the New York City Organization of Public Service Retirees updates listeners on her group’s campaign to prevent the Adams administration and the heads of the MLC from forcing 250,000 retired civil servants off traditional Medicare and onto a predatory Aetna Medicare Advantage Plan.
Noted labor historian Joe Wilson, who also joins the discussion, notes how tens of thousands of city employees who worked in lower paying titles like FDNY EMS, rely on their existing retiree healthcare to get by.
‘If I Hear the Damn Stabilization Fund One More Time - I’m Going to Scream!’
By Joe Maniscalco
“If I hear the damn stabilization fund one more time, I'm going to scream,” New York City Organization of Public Service Retirees recently told Work-Bites.
Pizzitola was reacting to CWA Local 1180 President and Municipal Labor Committee trustee Gloria Middleton’s recent assertion that the Covid depleted New York City’s Health Stabilization Fund — thereby ostensibly leaving privatization and Medicare Advantage the only viable way for the City of New York to cover the health care costs of its municipal retirees.
15 Million Readers are Watching: Scholastic Workers Walk Out in NYC
By Steve Wishnia
Frustrated by management’s rejection of their proposal for annual pay increases after more than a year of contract talks, workers at Scholastic’s Magazines+ division held a one-day strike Nov. 1.
“We’re here about wages. There’s a hypocrisy involved,” production editor Alison Colby told Work-Bites as about 30 workers picketed outside the back entrance to Scholastic’s Soho offices, circling on the sidewalk between an inflatable Scabby the Rat and a banner of Clifford the Big Red Dog hanging from above the children’s publishing company’s bookstore.
An Open Invitation to NYC Mayor Eric Adams…Go See This Film
By Joe Maniscalco
Hi, Mayor Adams. If you haven’t already seen it, we’d like to invite you to Thursday night’s encore performance of “Honorable But Broken - EMS in Crisis” at Cinema Village over on E. 22nd St. We saw it this past weekend as part of the Workers Unite! Film Festival and you’ve gotta see it, too. We know a guy there, and can probably get you in for nothing.
80% of Workers Suffer from the ‘Sunday Scaries’ - Here’s How to Beat ‘em
By Ryn Gargulinski
“Deck the halls, my ass.” That used to be my attitude toward the holidays, and I was lucky enough to find another person who felt that way. So we’d get together in December and mope.
Then she mentioned how the thought of moping all December made her depression creep into November. So we started commiserating even earlier.
Teamsters Set Up Brooklyn Picket in Solidarity with Fired Amazon Strikers
By Steve Wishnia
Under a gray sky on Brooklyn’s Red Hook waterfront, several dozen Teamsters picketed Amazon’s new delivery station Oct. 30 in solidarity with striking workers in Southern California.
The 84 drivers and dispatchers from Amazon’s DAX8 delivery station in Palmdale, north of Los Angeles, have been on strike since June. Amazon refused to recognize a contract that their union, Teamsters Local 396, had reached with Battle-Tested Strategies, a “delivery service partner” the company hires to deliver packages for the “last mile” to customers.
Listen: Fresh Calls to Cut $100B from the US War Machine
By Bob Hennelly
Say what? We are in the midst of an unprecedented global climate crisis — so, how is it that U.S. military spending continues at an obscene rate with a wanton disregard of the consequences for the planet and every living thing on it?
On this week’s episode of the Stuck Nation Labor Radio Hour, we speak with John Braxton, a longtime Philadelphia-based labor and peace activist, who has launched Veterans and Labor for Sensible Priorities, a national grassroots movement campaign in support of HR 1134 — legislation sponsored by Representatives Barbara Lee and Mark Pocan to cut the Pentagon budget by $100 billion, or roughly 11 percent.
Hey, America - You’ve Got a Nursing Crisis on Your Hands
By Bob Hennelly
Courtesy of InsiderNJ
America’s hospitals are in the throes of a workforce crisis that’s driven by the lack of safe nurse to patient ratios that’s forced tens of thousands of veteran nurses to flee the profession and one in five new nurses to leave in their first year, according to witnesses who testified before a field hearing convened by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) on Oct. 27, on the New Brunswick’s Rutgers University campus.
As a consequence, even though hospitals are scrambling to find nurses, over one million nurses are opting to stay sidelined with just half of New Jersey’s 140,000 licensed nurses choosing to work in the state’s hospitals.