For Immediate Release
Top AFL-CIO
Leaders Forge New Ground in Organizing
and
Fighting for Working
Families’ Top Priorities in Meeting
Today
AFL-CIO Executive Council Announces Formation
of
First Industry Coordinating Committee Covering
the
Arts, Entertainment, Media and Telecommunications
Industries
United Transportation Union
to Rejoin AFL-CIO
(Washington, October 6) -- The 46-member
AFL-CIO Executive Council, meeting for the first time today since the
federation’s July convention, acted on one of the most sweeping reforms included
in the AFL-CIO Winning for Working Families plan by announcing a request by 10
unions in the Arts, Entertainment, Media and Telecommunications industries to
create a new Industry Coordinating Committee (ICC). The ICC will build more power for
workers in these industries in the face of rapid media consolidation and massive
technological shifts. The creation
of the new ICC is subject to the approval of the leadership groups of each of
the 10 individual unions.
The ICC is the first announced since the convention,
which drew up plans for ICCs to bring together unions that represent workers in
an industry, employer, occupation, or region and develop an organizing plan as
well as contract standards.
“Those professionals who work in the arts,
entertainment, media and telecommunications industries need a strong, united
effort to address their issues in the face of ownership consolidation and
unprecedented changes -- and today, they’re one big step closer to winning more
power,” said AFL-CIO President John Sweeney. “The AFL-CIO is 100% committed to
supporting efforts to help the millions of workers in these industries improve
their lives through unions.”
“For the first time, all of the major AFL-CIO unions in
these sectors will work together to devise joint organizing and collective
bargaining strategies in conjunction with their long-standing collaborative work
on legislation and public policy,” said Paul Almeida, President of the
federation’s Department for Professional Employees.
The Arts, Entertainment, Media and Telecommunications ICC will
build power for working people in this industry by undertaking collaborative
initiatives in four principal areas -- organizing, collective bargaining,
contract standards and public policy.
The 10 unions that are part of the new ICC are: Actors’ Equity
Association (AEA), American Federation of Musicians (AFM), American Federation
of Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA), Communications Workers of America
(CWA), International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE),
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW), National Association of
Broadcast Employees and Technicians (NABET-CWA), Screen Actors Guild (SAG), The
Newspaper Guild (TNG-CWA) and the Writers Guild of America East (WGAE). Combined, these unions represent nearly
one million workers in these sectors.
In other news, the AFL-CIO Executive Council approved a
charter for the 60,000 member United Transportation Union (UTU) to rejoin the
AFL-CIO. It is the first union
officially to join the AFL-CIO since the federation’s convention in
July.
The Executive Council heard a report on
continuing efforts to keep the grassroots labor movement intact following the
disaffiliation of a number of unions.
They discussed ongoing negotiations with the disaffiliated unions over
the terms of Solidarity Charters, a unique solution which allows locals who are
part of disaffiliated unions to remain part of AFL-CIO state and local
bodies. Four local unions - - SEIU
Local 560 in New Hampshire, SEIU Local 52 in
North Dakota, and SEIU Local 513 in Kansas, and ICWUC – UFCW Local 427C in North Carolina - -
have all been awarded Solidarity Charters, and several dozen local unions are
actively considering applying for such charters.
The Council approved criteria for awarding support from
a new solidarity fund set up at the convention to: 1) state federations and
central labor councils who could realize a loss of membership; 2) national
unions who could face raids by independent unions, and 3) trade and industrial
departments who would see a loss of affiliates. The Council adopted a resolution calling
for increased affiliation among AFL-CIO unions with state and local
bodies.
The Council also reviewed federation finances
and budget options following the disaffiliations; the Executive Committee, which
has decision-making authority over the budget, will consider a revised budget
this Fall.
The Executive Council discussed its new national
campaign -- Rebuild America: Good
Jobs and a Just Economy -- an
action plan to push for investment in the right priorities in New Orleans and the nation
in the wake of the Katrina catastrophe.
The plan calls for good jobs, transparency and accountability in the
efforts to rebuild New Orleans and the Gulf Coast, and also lays out a campaign for
standing up for good jobs, health care and other working family priorities
across the nation. Unions reported
on the massive union efforts to get both immediate and long-term aid to Katrina
survivors and the Gulf. A full
description of union relief efforts can be found at
http://www.aflcio.org/aboutus/katrina_news.cfm.
The union leaders also pledged to support a massive
mobilization to defend workers’ freedom to form unions on December 10,
International Human Rights Day; reviewed the union grassroots mobilization in
the California, New
Jersey, and Virginia elections and discussed next steps in
diversifying union leadership at all levels.
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