“The protests across the industrial core of our nation have captured international attention. But what has received very little notice is their diversity,” said Wisconsin District 10 Directing Business Representative Russell Krings. “Teachers and painters, state employees and steel workers, service employees and machinists, sheet metal workers and musicians are all playing a part. And their ethnic, racial and gender diversity reflects how All-American these protests really are.”
“Expanding these protests is the next step,” said Wisconsin District 66 Directing Business Representative Rick Mickschl. “Students whose college tuitions are rising, jobless American whose unemployment benefits have run out, seniors whose Medicaid and Social Security is the next right wing target, the forgotten poor for whom no one speaks – all must be embraced.”
“With one-fifth of America’s workforce idled by this Grave Recession, we need jobs,” declared Ohio District 54 Directing Business Representative Dean Wright, Jr. “We cannot balance local, state or federal budgets without more revenue – the revenue that comes from full employment. JOBS Now must be our rallying cry.”
“Collective bargaining rights must be preserved, for this generation and the next,” said Cleveland, OH-based Continental Airlines Flight Attendant Sheryl Kee. “It’s inspiring to see so many members, from so many different unions, who understand the importance of this basic civil right.”


