Names Carved Into Light and Metal: Triangle Fire Memorial Dedicated
By Steve Wishnia
“A hideous little bundle was slowly lowered from a window of what had been the ninth floor of the scab shop the Triangle Waist Company,” Carrie W. Allen wrote for the New York Call, a socialist newspaper, on March 28, 1911. “It swirled and flapped grotesquely in the wind as it made its lonely journey to the street. Spinning round and round, it kept up a goblin dance as it went down, down, down, and finally lay in eternal quiet upon the ground.”
Triangle Factory Fire Reflections: We All Suffer When Women Workers are Ignored
By Bob Hennelly
This week, a permanent memorial at the site of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire in New York City will be dedicated to the mass casualty event that killed 146 mostly young immigrant women garment workers on March 25, 1911 and sparked a national movement for workplace safety and worker rights.
Scholastic Workers in NYC Can’t Wait Any Longer For a Contract!
By Joe Maniscalco
Was there ever a sweeter day in grade school than when somebody from the principal’s office walked into class holding a cardboard box and announced the Scholastic books everybody ordered were finally here?
The roughly 80 Scholastic Union workers who’ve now spent a solid year trying to bargain for a living wage sure wish the “world’s largest publisher and distributor of children’s books” would get off the pot and extend some of that sweetness to them — right away!
Staffing Crisis Sparks Largest Health Care Strike In U.S. History
By Bob Hennelly
The day before close to 85,000 Kaiser Permanente workers in several states hit the bricks in the largest healthcare strike in American history, the Washington Post reported the results of an explosive year-long investigation that revealed the country’s life expectancy was cratering in large measure thanks to premature deaths due to chronic illness.
Regulatory Fixes are Fine - But We Need Labor Leaders Who’ll Take on the Boss
By Robert Ovetz
The August Cemex ruling by the National Labor Relations Board has stirred up hope among the labor movement. After 40 years, the board finally responded to employer union-busting by requiring that the company recognize the union and begin bargaining.
BREAK TIME WITH RYNSKI: How to Deal with Coworkers Who Drive You Nuts!
By Ryn Gargulinski
Krissie was easily Boss Man’s most favorite employee – and by far my least. We worked side-by-side at a New York City ice cream shop in the early 1990s. She was blond, perky and went to NYU. I was gruff, brunette and went to the bar. I also had dirt under my nails and liked to wear ripped-up tank tops to work.
The Looming Shutdown:‘Political Theater’ Showing Total Contempt for Essential Workers
By Bob Hennelly
Hundreds of thousands of federal workers and contract workers are on edge this week with just a few days to go before a possible federal government shutdown engineered by former President Donald Trump’s most ardent partisans in the House of Representatives.
Dead Planet Blues: What’s a Poor Working Person to Do?
By Joe Maniscalco
One night, just before Halloween, Rachel Rivera heard an alarming crack come from her 4-year-old daughter’s bedroom. She immediately raced in, scooped up the child in her arms and got out quick — right before the ceiling fell in on their Brooklyn apartment. Hurricane Sandy killed some 50 New Yorkers in 2012. Rivera and her daughter Marisol just missed being counted among the deceased.
UAW Strikers: Turning the Clock FORWARD for the First Time Since Reagan?
By Bob Hennelly
The United Auto Workers strike against the nation’s big three automakers is a high stakes gambit that comes at a time when an increasing number of Americans support the union movement but the percentage of them actually in one is at an all time low.
Bosses Already Challenging New Rule Making Unionizing Less Difficult
By Steve Wishnia
A National Labor Relations Board [NLRB] decision expanding when employers must recognize unions might be a landmark with far-reaching effects — but it is already being contested in the federal courts.
The Toxic 9/11 Cloud That Still Lingers Even West of the Hudson
Courtesy of InsiderNJ
By Bob Hennelly
On Sept. 11, 2001, 749 residents of New Jersey perished in the attack on the World Trade Center. Today, over 10,000 first responders and survivors from the state are enrolled in the World Trade Center Health Program as a consequence of their exposure to the air in lower Manhattan and portions of western Brooklyn.
In the Fight Against The Big Three…the UAW Can Win Even Bigger - For All of Us
By Joe Maniscalco
Let’s be honest, wherever you’re working today — behind a computer, up on an I-beam, in front of classroom or the back of a delivery bike — how much time have you actually spent thinking about auto workers and their impending strike against the Big Three automobile manufacturers?
Listen: How Do Working People Confront the Threat of AI?
Work-Bites Network
Artificial Intelligence is here. But despite some lofty talk about the supposed potential benefits of AI for working people — what we, and every striking WGA and SAG-AFTRA member, now understands — is how multi-national corporations are using AI to maximize profit and minimize — or eliminate — one of their most irksome business liabilities: the people they employ.
‘Death Star’ Law is Struck Down in Texas!
By Steve Wishnia
AUSTIN, Tex.—On Aug. 30, at the end of a summer in which the temperature in Austin topped 100° for a record 45 consecutive days, a local judge ruled unconstitutional a new state law intended to nullify local ordinances that require water breaks for construction workers.
‘The Man Who Changed Colors’: A Multi-Layered Working-Class Suspense Thriller
Courtesy of People’s World
By John Bachtell
In The Man Who Changed Colors, storyteller Bill Fletcher Jr. offers readers a many-layered political suspense thriller that had me enthralled from cover to cover. The story, told through the eyes of David Gomes, an undaunted reporter for the Cape and Islands Gazette, is set in Cape Cod, Mass., in the late 1970s and unfolds amid the dynamics and tensions of the Portuguese and Cape Verdean communities, the latter of which Gomes is a part.
Listen: Striking NJ Nurses Have National Importance; Inside the Teamsters UPS Contract
By Bob Hennelly
It’s the Strike Summer Edition of the Stuck Nation Labor Radio Hour as we talk with U.S. Sen. Cory Booker on why the nurses' strike at Robert Wood Johnson University in New Brunswick, New Jersey is of national significance in the battle over safe staffing that puts people ahead of profits.
Tracking Software Ruined My Life (Or At Least One of My Jobs)
By Ryn Gargulinski
The worst boss I ever had was a robot. Well, not a robot in “The Terminator” sense that would blow your head off if you didn’t hand in an assignment on time. But a robotic time-tracking software that recorded and shared my every single move.
Inside the GOP Presidential S#/t Show: Teachers More Dangerous Than UFOs!
By Steve Wishnia
Sometimes I see my role as a journalist as being a forensic scatologist: What kind of s—t is falling towards us? Whose butt is it coming from? What pathogenic bacteria does it contain?
This is How the Next Great American General Strike Happens…
By Joe Maniscalco
The next great general strike to captivate the United States will not be organized — it’ll be organic. And it could be the most transformative general strike this country has ever seen
Strikers to Corporate Bosses: ‘What Do You Wanna Do - Wipe Out the Human Race?’
By Steve Wishnia
It was not an AI-generated crowd scene. It was all humans.
This week in New York City, hundreds of striking actors and screenwriters, joined by supporters from numerous other unions, packed two blocks of Tenth Avenue, across from the offices of HBO and Amazon in the plutocratic slab of Hudson Yards. It was part of a national day of solidarity with the strikes by SAG-AFTRA and the Writers’ Guild of America.