While Many Wonder ‘Where’s the Plan?’ NYC Presses Medicare Advantage Fight With ‘Marching Orders’ in Hand
By Joe Maniscalco
The City of New York, like other places around the country, is plowing ahead with its long, laborious campaign to push municipal retirees into a for-profit Medicare Advantage program. The Municipal Labor Committee [MLC] — the umbrella organization representing public sector unions in the city — is set to present members with a “side-by-side comparison” between what retirees already have and “summary of the proposed contract” on Thursday, March 2.
Listen: What Happened to MLK’s Vision? Plus - Rail Safety Off the Rails!
By Bob Hennelly
On the last Monday of Black History Month, it’s important for the labor movement to reflect on the sad reality that in the half a century since the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. America's vast racial wealth divide has endured and, in some regards, gotten worse.
Listen: ‘Got Your Back?’ Or ‘Shoot You in the Back?’
Work-Bites.com
On this inaugural episode of the “Iron Bill” Hohlfeld Show, we jump right in and confront the issue of union member malaise in the post-Covid era economy with Gina Liberti, adjunct professor and president of the Rockland Community College Adjunct Faculty Association in New York.
NYC Grapples With Hospital Pricing Roulette…
By Bob Hennelly
A New York City Council bill that aims to bring transparency and accountability to NYC’s opaque hospital pricing via a consumer-friendly website is a step closer to consideration by the full body after a Feb. 23 hearing.
Listen: Inside the Harper Collins Win; Organizing Minnesota Physicians
By Bob Hennelly
On this episode of the Stuck Nation Labor Radio Hour, we get an update from Doctors Council SEIU President Dr. Frank Proscia and Allina Mercy Hospital physician Dr. Amber Galarowicz about the campaign to organize physicians in the state of Minnesota.
In the second half of the show, we hear about two recent labor wins here in New York and New England…
DC 37 Contract Deal Gives 3% Annual Raises, But No Details on Retirees’ Health Care
By Steve Wishnia
The city has reached a tentative contract deal with District Council 37, the union representing more than a quarter of the municipal workforce, Mayor Eric Adams announced Feb. 17.
‘There Should Have Been a Playbook on This’: Emergency Expert Critiques Ohio Train Disaster
By Bob Hennelly
While the abused residents of East Palestine, Ohio packed their local high school gym on Wednesday night to sort through the contradictory messaging from officials, freight trains with vast quantities of toxic chemicals rumbled through equally vulnerable and unprepared corridor communities across America.
Marianne Pizzitola for U.S. Secretary of Labor!
By Joe Maniscalco
The prospect of Bill de Blasio succeeding Marty Walsh as U.S. Labor Secretary immediately sparked incredulous feelings of horror and hilarity amongst working class New Yorkers who know the former mayor’s record best.
Listen: Discrimination Inside the FDNY; NYSNA Looks For Another Contract Win
By Bob Hennelly
On this episode of the Stuck Nation Labor Radio Hour FDNY firefighter Regina Wilson — president of the Vulcan Society, the fraternal organization that represents Black firefighters, EMS, fire inspectors and civilian employees — discusses what’s been accomplished and what’s left to do after the City of New York’s 2014 settlement of a federal racial discrimination lawsuit.
The Worst Thing Biden Could Do: Replace Labor Sec. Walsh with a ‘Political Hack’ or ‘Absolute Loser’
By Bob Hennelly
Speculation in the New York Post that former Mayor Bill de Blasio and former Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney were both angling to succeed outgoing U.S. Secretary Marty Walsh was received with a mix of laughter and outright disdain during an informal survey of several New York City union leaders.
Will New York Protect Working People From Freezing Cold & Stifling Heat?
By Steve Wishnia
State Sen. Jessica Ramos (D-Queens) and Assemblymember Latoya Joyner (D-Bronx), the chairs of the labor committees in their houses of the Legislature, have introduced a bill to require employers to take measures to protect their workers against extreme heat and cold.
Listen: ‘The Iron Bill’ Hohlfeld Show Preview
Work-Bites.com
Husband, father, author, educator, Ironworker - Bill Hohlfeld has been all of these things and more in his life. Now, he continues his trade union activism as host of his own podcast for Work-Bites.com.
‘Workers Know the Truth’ About the Derailment Disaster - Why Are They Being Ignored?
By Bob Hennelly
Throughout the recent hazardous chemical freight train derailment in Ohio and the four-day ordeal that followed while the flaming wreck was stabilized, the one perspective that was consistently missing from the reporting was that of the union railroad workers. It didn’t matter if it was the New York Times, the Washington Post, or the Associated Press , the reporting relied on interviews with local, state and federal officials as well as statements from the Norfolk Southern, the rail carrier but not the perspective of their union workers.
Watch: ‘This Is Working Ep. 7 - Being a Pet Care Provider Will Break Your Heart…
Special to Work-Bites.com
Being the leader of the pack certainly has its perks. But as the protagonist of Jennifer Bateman Grace’s latest installment of ‘This Is Working’ relates, it can also tear your freakin’ heart out and trample it on the ground — especially around the holidays. But it’s all in a day’s work for the working class. Enjoy!
Listen: Racism Makes Us Weak; NYC Teachers Press Fight for New Contract
By Bob Hennelly
Here are the full show notes for this week’s edition of the Stuck Nation Labor Radio Hour:
Bosses Profit while New York’s Nursing Home Nightmares Continue…
By Steve Wishnia
SALAMANCA, N.Y.— Sandra Lamacchia, a licensed practical nurse at a nursing home in Salamanca, about 60 miles south of Buffalo, says she wishes her employer would hire temporary laundry workers.
NYC Has Retirees’ Best Interests At Heart - So, Where’s The Blue Ribbon Panel On Healthcare?
By Joe Maniscalco
New York City Mayor Eric Adams, when he announced his support of a plan to push municipal retirees into a privatized Medicare Advantage program last year, said “the city has had, and will continue to have, your best interests at heart.”
Why then does convening a Blue Ribbon Panel where those interests would be directly represented by retirees themselves appear to be the last thing Hizzoner wants to talk about?
MLC Leader On Medicare Advantage: ‘We’ve Got The Contract Written Up’
By Bob Hennelly
The deadline for the City Council to change its Administrative code that covers how the city provides healthcare insurance for its active-duty workforce and retirees came and went last month without the Council opting to act after a marathon Jan. 9 public hearing where scores of city retirees blasted the proposal.
Part II: U.S. Supreme Court Poised to ‘Weaken Workers’ Power’
By Steve Wishnia
Editor’s Note: This is part two of a two-part Work-Bites report
If the Supreme Court’s far-right majority wants to rewrite labor law, it can’t simply do it by fiat. Even “if they don’t care about stare decisis,” the general principle is that to overturn an established precedent, they have to establish that it was “egregiously wrongly decided,” explains West Virginia University Law School professor Anne Lofaso, a former National Labor Relations Board attorney.
Listen: NYC Fire Safety, The Child Day Care Center Crisis, And More
By Bob Hennelly
Here’s a quick look at this week’s Stuck Nation Labor Radio Hour - listen to the entire show below!