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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.

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Welcome to NYC Mayor Eric Adams’ Shadow Workforce and Bloomberg 2.0

By Bob Hennelly

New York City Mayor Eric Adam’s awarding of a $432 million dollar no-bid contract to handle the city’s influx of undocumented migrants last spring to DocGo, a for-profit medical services company, is just the latest example of municipal government outsourcing its response to a crisis — even as it cuts or leaves vacant tens thousands of civil service jobs.

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LISTEN: NJ Nurses Press Strike; Radioactive Water in the Hudson River!

By Bob Hennelly

On this episode of the Stuck Nation Labor Radio Hour, we revisit the United Steelworkers Nurses Local 4-200 strike against the Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital in New Brunswick, NJ as it enters its third week. The union is pressing its demands for an accountability mechanism for staff to patient ratios. Local 4-200 Union President Judy Danella and Debbie White, RN, president HPAE, New Jersey largest nurses’ union, talk about legislation pending in Trenton which would create a state standard for nurse staffing that would put patients ahead of hospital profits.

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Profits over People at NJ Hospital

By Bob Hennelly

Courtesy of InsiderNJ

As the nurses’ strike at New Brunswick’s Robert Wood Johnson University entered its second week, sources say the major sticking point is what sort of enforcement mechanism can be relied on to ensure the hospital maintains whatever levels of staffing that it commits to.

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A Win for ‘Every American Across This Country Being Lied to About So-Called Medicare Advantage’

By Bob Hennelly

Within hours of a New York State Court decision “permanently” enjoining Mayor Eric Adams from forcing 250,000 retired civil servants into the for-profit Aetna Medicare Advantage Plan, one of the New York City Council’s most powerful members announced his support of legislation [Intro-1099] that would further protect retirees’ traditional Medicare coverage.

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More Rank & File Power at the Bargaining Table

By Robert Ovetz

Open bargaining is becoming more widespread as more unions like one of my own adopt it. As it does, we should not take for granted that conservative leadership is willingly going to allow the rank and file to obtain more power at the bargaining table. Open bargaining, which allows the rank-and-file to participate in bargaining sessions,  is a threat to both conservative leadership and the boss.  

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LISTEN: Nurses Continue to Battle Healthcare Inequities

By Bob Hennelly

On the latest episode of the Stuck Nation Labor Radio Hour, Judy Danella, RN, and president of United Steel Workers Nurses Local 4-200, updates us on her union’s strike at the Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital in New Brunswick, New Jersey. New York State Nurses Association [NYSNA] President Nancy Hagans is also on hand to discuss her union’s new contract agreement with New York City’s Health + Hospitals Corporation, which promises a $32,000 a year pay boost over the next five-and-a-half years.

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Retirees Cheer As NYC Backs Off On Sept. 1 Medicare Advantage Deadline

By Bob Hennelly

New York City’s 250,000 municipal retirees recently got a form letter from the Office of Labor Relations announcing Mayor Eric Adams’ administration is no longer abiding by its September 1 deadline for the implementation of its Aetna Medicare Advantage Plan, which the New York City Organization of Public Service Retirees [NYCOPSR] has been successfully fighting in court.

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