Tuesday, November 04, 2008

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Labor issues you care about in streaming video.

IAMpodcast


America's Edge


The Face of Foreclosure
October 21, 2008 - As lawmakers work to find a solution to the US foreclosure crisis, thousands of working class Americans, including some IAM members, struggle to keep homes in the midst of this economic downturn.

NWA/Delta Merger: A Future Bailout?
October 15, 2008
- In one of the most volatile financial times in history, it seems wrong to many that a possible airline merger is still being considered.

A Fresh Look At Healthcare
October 12, 2008 - With the presidential election just weeks away, Americans are taking a serious look at the issues.  As always healthcare is close to the top of the priority list.

Retirees Take On Raytheon
September 26, 2008 - After 26 years, IAM member Dave Lillie retired from Raytheon.  At the end of his more than two decades as a tool and die maker, he believed retirement would be bliss.  Raytheon saw it another way.

Closing Day for the 37th ConventionSeptember 12, 2008 - Welcome to the closing day for the IAM's 37th Grand Lodge Convention.  It's been a busy week but alot has been accomplished.

Freedom Of ReligionSeptember 11, 2008 - No matter how, when or why you do it, every person in the U.S. and Canada has the right to Freedom.  "Freedom of Religion" was the theme on the fifth day of the 37th Grand Lodge Convention.

Freedom From Want
September 10, 2008
Freedom from want is another one of the four freedoms Franklin D. Roosevelt spoke about more than 60 years ago.  "Freedom From Want" was the theme on the fourth day of the 37th Grand Lodge Convention.

New Dues Structure
September 10, 2008
More than 32 years ago, union delegates gathered in a room like this, changed the financial structure of the IAM.  Today, that decision was again in front of this year's delegaes who voted o amend the current financial structure.

HRC Becomes Honorary IAM Member
September 8, 2008 - Nothing seems to bring the Machinists to their feet like Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton.  She spoke at the the 37th Grand Lodge Convention where she became an honorary lifetime member of the IAM.

Freedom From Fear
September 8, 2008 - In some of the most famous words ever spoken, President Franklin D. Roosevelt said "the only thing we have to fear is fear itself."  "Freedom From Fear" was the theme on the second day of the 37th Grand Lodge Convention.

Opening Day for the 37th Convention
September 7, 2008 - Today the IAM opened its 37th Grand Lodge Convention.  This week promises a nod to the past as we look for solutions to the problems of the future.

Legally Protecting Our Green Jobs
August 28, 2008 - US manufacturing has lost millions of jobs due to outsourcing. But can you keep that from happening? Some labor advocates are ready for a radical pro manufacturing political agenda, and they want it applied to America’s next economic craze, “Green” energy.

A Plan For Greatness
August 13, 2008 - For years the Machinists have told anyone who would listen that this country's in trouble.  Unfortunately, many times these warnings fell on deaf ears.

Spirit Aerosystems: A Conversation With IP Tom Buffenbarger
July 2, 2008 -
IP Tom Buffenbarger discusses unique wage negotiations at Spirit Aerosystems.

Hawker Beechcraft: A Conversation With IP Tom Buffenbarger
July 2, 2008 -
IP Tom Buffenbarger discusses the latest developments at Hawker Beechcraft.

IAM College Graduating Class of '08
July 2, 2008 -
Last weekend 11 Machinists graduated from the National Labor College in Silver Spring, Maryland.

The GAO Says No!!!
June 26, 2008 -
A few months ago, the United States Air Force awarded a U.S. Military Contract to a foreign owned company.  Machinists jumped on the issue and the government heard us loud and clear.

Around The Globe June 25, 2008 -
A historic event took place recently at the Winpisinger Center when 37 women from 25 different countries gathered to change the future.

An Agenda For Education
June 18, 2008 - According to recent polls, Americans want to see more training for middle class jobs but the government doesn't seem to be getting the message.  The IAM is hoping to help change that.

To All Who Would Listen
June 4, 2008 - It's one thing to talk something and a whole other to take action.  That's exactly why Machinists at this year's Legislative Conference took their issues to Capitol Hill, talking to all who would listen.

Mergers, Tankers and Fairness
June 2, 2008 - IAM Members from around the country gathered in Washington D.C. to let the politicians know they aren't going to be silent on the issues that matter most.

The Recession Question
May 28, 2008 - All around the country economists are trying to answer whether or not the United States is in a recession.

Off-Setting the Economy
May 8, 2008 - Owen Herrnstadt, Director of the IAM'S Trade and Globilization Department talks about the topic of offsets.

You Are Not Forgotten
April 29, 2008 - For twenty years the IAM has been observing Worker Memorial Day, honoring those men and women who gave the ultimate sacrafice to the job.

Equal Pay for Equal Work
April 29, 2008 - In a union, workers share the same contract and therefore, the same pay and benefits.

More Broken Merger Promises
April 29, 2008 - Last week the IAM's International President Tom Buffenbarger headed to Capitol Hill to tell Congress that the proposed merger between Northwest and Delta Airlines is going to do much more harm than good.


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Get Out and Vote Today

A nationwide effort by union members to man phone banks, participate in labor walks, leaflet plant sites and talk to fellow members culminates today in one of the largest voter get-out-the-vote efforts in labor history.

“After eight years of the disaster that was the Bush Administration, Americans today will speak with a loud voice for change,” said IAM President Tom Buffenbarger. “Our members have answered the call to get informed on the issues and support candidates with the best record for working families. Now it’s time to for one last task – show up and vote.”

Machinists Prevail at Boeing

After 57 days on the picket line, Machinists at the Boeing Company voted by 74 percent to ratify a new contract that far exceeded the company’s “last and final” offer and assured all 27,000 members at Boeing a place of honor in the history of hard won union victories.

“This contract gives the workers at Boeing an opportunity to share in the extraordinary success this Company has achieved over the past several years,” said Aerospace Coordinator Mark Blondin, who served as lead negotiator. “It also recognizes the need to act with foresight to protect the next generation of aerospace jobs.”

Among the issues that led to the strike was Boeing’s attempt to eliminate thousands of IAM-represented positions by securing contract terms that would expand the use of outside vendors in the workplace. In its initial proposal, Boeing also proposed to close the traditional pension plan to new hires and sharply cut health care benefits for retirees.

In addition to a 15 percent increase in wages, pension improvements and significant lump sum payments, IAM members' share of medical costs will remain unchanged. Among the many job security gains in the new accord, the IAM won scope of work jurisdiction over previously unprotected bargaining unit work. More than 5,000 jobs at risk under the company’s initial proposal are protected under the current accord.

“This Union has delivered what few Americans have - economic certainty and quality benefits for the next four years,” said District 751 President Tom Wroblewski. "After 57 days of striking, we gained important and substantial improvements over the Company's offer that was rejected on September 3.”

The new four-year agreement covers IAM members at Boeing facilities in Washington, Oregon, Kansas and California, and ends a strike that began on September 6, 2008.

A Decision in Black and White

Political pundits have predicted that traditional blue-collar voters in battleground states will not vote for Barack Obama. But in this letter published in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette from a woman who grew up in Western Pennsylvania, voters may defy the conventional wisdom this election day.

Northwest/Delta: What's Next?

Now that the Department of Justice has approved the merger of Northwest and Delta Air Lines, workers at both carriers are asking: “Now what?”

While superficial changes, including new employee numbers, new signage and management changes have already begun, Northwest’s IAM members’ collective bargaining agreements will remain unchanged and in full force and effect. Employment terms and conditions for Delta workers will continue to be determined by Delta management.

While there is no specific timeline for union representation issues to be resolved, the process is well established and could take several months or longer to complete.

Under federal labor law, elections to determine union representation can take place only after the National Mediation Board (NMB) issues a “single carrier” ruling - a formal determination that the combined carriers constitute a single transportation system.

A union must also provide a “showing of interest” from at least 35 percent of each combined classification before the NMB will schedule an election. Separate elections are held for each classification, and they are not required to take place at the same time. The 35 percent threshold can be met by adding signed authorization cards from Delta employees to current IAM membership numbers in each classification at Northwest.

For an election to be valid, 50 percent plus one of the combined classification must vote. Under NMB rules, if fewer than 50 percent plus one participate in the election, all employees in the combined classification would become unrepresented, and Delta would be free to rewrite wages, work rules and benefits. Seniority integration would not be resolved until after union representation is determined.

IAM policy states that seniority will be integrated by an employee’s date of hire into the classification, regardless of which airline they worked for pre-merger. In the absence of a collective bargaining agreement, Delta would be free to integrate seniority in several ways, including methods that eliminate decades of earned seniority.

Preparations for the merger began many months ago, but it is now moving into its final stages. Visit the District 143 website, www.iam143.org, for the latest news on the merger.

Labor Department’s Double Standards

A recent report from the Center for American Progress highlights the anti-union ideology that has permeated a key department of the federal government under the Bush administration.

Beyond Justice,” documents how the Labor Department’s Office of Labor-Management Standards (OLMS) used its authority under the Landrum-Griffin Act to harass, discredit and weaken the U.S. labor movement, while ignoring illegal union avoidance practices by large U.S. corporations.

In addition to dramatic and aggressive enforcement practices against labor unions, OLMS has become a hotbed of regulatory activism in an administration otherwise known for loosening regulations in areas ranging from food safety to environmental protection and sound banking practices.

As part of its overt anti-union crusade, OLMS drafted new regulations to greatly increase the reporting requirements on officers, employees, and in many instances ordinary union members. In order to comply with OLMS requirements, one union saw the size of its annual reports jump from 125 pages to more than 800.

OLMS is a case study in how the management of even the more obscure niches of government under the Bush administration has fallen into the hands of people who have little regard for the programs they are charged with administering or the laws they are expected to enforce.

Bush Judicial Appointee Allows Foreign Ship Components

A judge appointed by the Bush Administration ruled against the AFL-CIO Metal Trades Department’s challenge of the use by a U.S. shipyard of large sections of tankers manufactured in South Korea and still claim the ships qualify under the Jones Act as “wholly built” in the U.S.

The Jones Act is designed to ensure the U.S maintains a domestic shipbuilding capability. The Metal Trades Department (MTD) has been in a long dispute with the U.S. Coast Guard over its practice of importing major sections of ships and claiming the ships are still U.S. built.

“It’s disgraceful that a U.S. flag is flying over ships that are essentially manufactured in South Korea,” said MTD President Ron Ault.
Judge Gene Pratter was nominated to the U.S District Court by President Bush. Pratter ruled that vessels can be tagged as “built in the U.S.” as long as “major components” of the hull or superstructure are fabricated domestically. Other components can be built elsewhere, but must be installed in U.S. shipyards. Pratter left it up to the Coast Guard to determine what constitutes major components.

In an analysis of Judicial appointments by President Bush, the non-profit group Alliance for Justice has noted the Bush administration has “pursued a widely acknowledge and largely successful campaign of packing the courts with conservative judges” and that Pratter’s record in employment law decisions “illustrate a “bias against employees seeking redress for workplace grievances.”


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2008 IAM Newsletter & Website Contest Awards
Newsletter Award entries are judged on Layout & Design, Best Feature and General Excellence. Local lodges and Districts are judged separately.



The goal of the USA is to create an outdoor hunting and fishing club exclusively for union members and their families. TRCP Launches Union Sportsmen’s Alliance



IAM members can now purchase union gear online at the IAM Store.


IAM Journal
Fall 2008


During the days of the Republican-controlled Congress, GOP-insiders replaced the open debating and crafting of legislation with midnight votes and backroom deals.



The 2008 Convention website is online.
The site features updates, travel tips, convention news reports, info for the media, and official convention gear. Check it out.


Union Plus
IAM Member Benefits
mean money-saving discounts for IAM members and their families.



Your union source for Sharp® and Océ® copiers, high-speed duplicating and archiving equipment, fax machines and Hasler® postage equipment, along with over 35,000 items you can order online.



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Enter member ID PS16626766 when ordering online or call 1-877-289-9437. When ordering, you must reference code: PS16626766 to receive your union discount.



See who works for you, how the IAM is structured, and what services the IAM offers.
Go to: IAM2007



Read the International Metalworkers' Federation magazine 'Metal World'


FlatRateTech is an organization “created for and by Ford and Lincoln Mercury service technicians solely to speak as one loud voice rather than 50,000 smaller voices.” according to their website The fast-growing site offers forums for Ford customers, technicians and dealers to exchange information.


IAM
Executive Council


Tom Buffenbarger
International President


Warren L. Mart
Secretary-Treasurer

 

Lee Pearson
GVP Western Territory

 

Dave Ritchie
GVP Canada

 

Robert Roach,Jr.
GVP Transportation

 

Lynn Tucker
GVP Eastern Territory



Robert Martinez
GVP Southern Territory



Richard Michalski
GVP Headquarters


Philip J. Gruber
GVP Midwest Territory