UFT Head Says NYC Retirees’ Lawsuit ‘Spreads Harmful Misinformation’
By Joe Maniscalco
UFT President Michael Mulgrew may have officially backed out on the City of New York’s ongoing campaign to push 250,000 municipal retirees into a profit-driven “Medicare Dis-Advantage” health insurance they do not want—he still insists it doesn’t pose the threat opponents say it does.
Union: Law360 Flouts Labor Law and Hoards Profits!!
By Bob Hennelly
Chants of “What do we want? A fair contract! When do we want it? Now!” boomed throughout the concrete canyons around 230 Park Ave. in mid-town this week as 250 members of Law360’s unionized staff hit the bricks in an unfair labor practice strike against their highly profitable employer.
Atlantic City Casino Workers: ‘We Have Rights Like Every Other Person in New Jersey’
By Bob Hennelly
Courtesy of InsiderNJ
This Labor Day workers who hoped the state’s court system would end Trenton’s exemption for Atlantic City’s casinos from the state’s 2006 Smoke-Free Air Act that entitles workers to work in a smoke free environment were dealt a real disappointment by a judge who sided with the casino industry to keep the oppressively toxic exemption in place.
‘We Need to Break Them Down!’ Uber, Lyft Drivers in NYC Call 24-Hour Strike Against Lockouts
By Steve Wishnia
Some 500 Uber and Lyft drivers rallied near City Hall September 4, announcing that they will go on strike October 23 if the app-cab companies don’t stop locking out drivers to avoid having to pay them minimum wage.
Sure, ‘Modern Day Slavery’ in Home Care is Bad—it Still Costs too Much to Abolish it
By Joe Maniscalco
Congress Member Yvette D. Clarke [NY-9th District] this week became the latest high-powered figure to denounce—as modern day slavery—the round-the-clock shifts older immigrant women of color are still being forced to work in New York City’s home care industry.
Facing Strike, Buffalo Nursing-Home Owner Signs Contract He’d Reneged On
By Steve Wishnia
A strike at two Buffalo-area nursing homes has been averted after the main owner agreed Aug. 26 to sign a contract he’d previously reneged on
Buffalo Nursing-Home Workers to Strike After Owners Renege on Contract
By Steve Wishnia
Workers in two Buffalo-area nursing homes have scheduled a one-day strike for August 28, after management refused to sign a contract it had agreed to in early July.
Helmy’s Noxious Elevation in NJ: Politics as Usual
By Bob Hennelly
Gov. Phil Murphy's appointment of George Helmy, his former chief of staff who left his job to work for RWJ Barnabas Health in the midst of a bitter nurses strike over staffing, is a graphic example of the insular and self-dealing nature of our state’s politics.
Emails Show CPC Influence Helped Spike Labor Dept. Wage Theft Probe, NYC Home Care Worker Advocates Say
By Joe Maniscalco
Advocates for New York City home care attendants forced to work punishing 24-hour shifts widely condemned as “modern day slavery” or at the very least “unfair”—say they have emails suggesting an alliance between one of the most influential Asian American social services organization in the nation and the New York State Department of Labor [NYSDOL] to kill a major probe exposing wholesale wage theft in the industry—and they want Attorney General Letitia James to investigate.
NYC Taxi Union Plans Strike Against Uber and Lyft to End Lockouts
By Steve Wishnia
Calling the deal Mayor Eric Adams’ administration reached with Uber and Lyft to voluntarily reduce locking drivers out of their apps a toothless sham, the New York Taxi Workers Alliance plans further protests, leading up to a possible one-day strike soon.
‘Don’t Trust the Trust’—NYCHA Residents Warn of ‘Slow Exodus of Black and Brown People’
By Joe Maniscalco
The ongoing destruction of what New Yorkers used to count on as “good city jobs” is a certain kind of egregious and boneheaded attack on working class families across the five boroughs—one that’s exemplified by the ongoing campaign to push municipal retirees into a profit-driven “Medicare Dis-Advantage” health insurance program. The privatization of public housing, however, is another.
‘Protocols and ‘Processes’ are Robbing NYC Retirees of Their Healthcare
By Joe Maniscalco
“Protocols” and “Processes.”
Having already reported on the “protocol” within the New York City Council that gives one person—the Speaker—sole power to determine what the rest of the 50 other members get to vote on, we couldn’t help but also take note recently of another colossally-undemocratic and grossly authoritarian “process” governing the lives of everyday working class people in this town.
‘The Best Person At the Helm’ Remains Fixed On Pushing NYC Municipal Retirees into Medicare Advantage
By Joe Maniscalco
Forget what New York City Mayor Eric Adams told municipal retirees in the Bronx opposing the Medicare Advantage push earlier this week—a profit-driven Medicare Advantage plan is, indeed, part of his administration’s “comprehensive approach” to remaking retiree health care before he leaves office.
An Open Letter to NYC Mayoral Candidate Brad Lander…
By Harry Weiner
Dear Brad -
As a retiree from City Service (31 years with NYCHA) and a member of the NYC Organization of Public Service Retirees, I feel that your announcement to seek the mayoralty brings hope to our three year struggle to preserve our health insurance benefits.
Retirees Fighting Medicare Advantage ‘Fed Up’ With More NYC Council Inaction!
By Joe Maniscalco
New York City municipal retirees still looking for a champion inside the City Council to reintroduce a bill protecting their existing Medicare health insurance benefits from the onslaught of so-called Medicare Advantage and privatization are gonna have to keep on searching.
Action to Save NYC Hospitals—Stat! Just What the Doctor Ordered
By Joe Maniscalco
Earlier this month, New York City physicians working under an expired contract since last summer showed up on Mayor Eric Adams’ Gracie Mansion doorstep to remind Hizzoner that there is a retention and recruitment crisis going on inside the municipal NYC Health + Hospitals system and that he really needs to get off the pot and sign a new pact with them before things get much worse.
NYC Council Member Calls on Colleagues to Listen to Retirees Battling ‘Immoral’ Medicare Advantage Scheme
By Joe Maniscalco
UFT President Michael Mulgrew’s recent decision to pull out of the campaign to push 250,000 New York City municipal retirees into a profit-driven Medicare Advantage plan represents a “golden opportunity” for Speaker Adrienne Adams to “reignite” the conversation about retiree healthcare, Council Member Shahana Hanif [D-39th District] told Work-Bites this past weekend.
Listen Up, Eric: ‘Doing it Right’ Means Signing a Pact With NYC’s Doctors!
By Bob Hennelly
Dozens of attending physicians with Doctors Council SEIU made the trip up to Gracie Mansion this week to deliver a petition signed by over 1,000 of their colleagues to Mayor Eric Adams, warning that a lapsed contract is undermining recruitment and retention of staff.
Striking Workers at Silgan Containers Need Our Support
Editor’s Note: John Hsu is a former congressional candidate from New Jersey’s 6th District
By John Hsu
Since April 22, over 100 workers from Silgan Containers, makers of steel cans for food products such as soup and dog food, have been on strike at the company’s 135 National Road location in Edison, N.J. after failing to come to terms on a new contract. The workers are unionized with United Steel Workers (USW) local 6129.
Undoing the Undemocratic Machine Messing With Workers And Retirees…
By Joe Maniscalco
New York City municipal retirees and home care workers heroically fighting for what they’ve already earned know the deck has been heavily stacked against them—so, why aren’t some of their staunchest allies willing to do anything about the systemic conditions underpinning that institutionalized inequity?