Triangle Factory Fire Revisited: Have U.S. Bosses Learned Nothing?
By Bob Hennelly
This year’s commemoration in lower Manhattan of the Triangle Factory Fire on March 25, 1911, which claimed the lives of 146 mostly young immigrant female garment workers, drew a larger, younger, and more energized crowd than it has in previous years.
Now or Never: NJ Nurses and NJ AFL-CIO Issue Code Red
By Bob Hennelly
Courtesy of InsiderNJ
Three years after New Jersey was upended by the COVID virus, a coalition of New Jersey’s healthcare unions are warning that without a legally enforceable nurse to patient ratio, nurses will continue to leave the state’s acute care hospitals already facing a skilled nursing shortage.
NYC Retirees’ Struggle to Save Traditional Medicare is a National Fight
By Joe Maniscalco
Cross-Union Retirees Organizing Committee [CROC] member Julie Schwartzberg was right on the money a few weeks ago in New York City when she called the ongoing campaign to strip municipal workers of their traditional Medicare health benefits and push them into a profit-driven Medicare Advantage program a “national issue.”
Not 1 Voice in Favor of Medicare Advantage During Nearly 4-Hour Public Hearing…
By Bob Hennelly
Dozens of outraged New York City retired civil servants dialed into a teleconferenced public hearing convened by the city’s Office of Labor Relations on March 21, a legal perquisite to advance the controversial $200 million Aetna Medicare Advantage contract being promoted by the Adams administration and the Municipal Labor Committee [MLC].
Listen: Catching Covid On-the-Job, and the ‘Dire’ Situation Facing Working Women…
Work-Bites
On this episode of the Stuck Nation Labor Radio Hour, host Bob Hennelly welcomes NYCOSH Executive Director Charlene Obernauer and “Democracy Hits Home” host Dr. Harriet Fraad to talk about the state of working women and their families both here in New York State and across the country.
NYC Municipal Retirees Crash Aetna Meeting!
By Steve Wishnia
A group of seven New York City municipal retirees protesting NYC’s plan to privatize their Medicare coverage slipped into the Conrad Hilton hotel today in Battery Park City where the Aetna insurance company was about to hold a session to prepare union staff on how to tell retirees about the company’s Medicare Advantage plan.
Listen: We Just Checked - Jesus is Down for a General Strike…
On this episode of the “Iron Bill Hohlfeld Show” Bill talks with Clayton Sinyai, executive director of the Catholic Labor Network about “Cathonomics” and what that’s really all about…
NYC Council Speaker Rejects Legislative Effort to Protect Traditional Medicare for Retirees
By Bob Hennelly
City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams said that City Council will not take up legislation proposed in a letter from the New York City Organization of Public Service Retirees to prevent the city’s retirees from being forced into a controversial Aetna Medicare Advantage plan that was approved earlier this month by the Municipal Labor Committee.
It’s Your Public Duty, Brad: ‘Betrayed’ Union Retiree Urges NYC Comptroller Lander to Probe Medicare Advantage Contract with Aetna
Editor’s Note: Harry Weiner is lifelong New Yorker who devoted more than 30 years of his life working for the New York City Housing Authority. As as an IBT Local 237 member, Harry feels his union betrayed him when it voted in favor of stripping NYC municipal retirees of their traditional Medicare benefits and pushing them into a profit-driven Medicare Advantage plan with Aetna.
This is his open letter to NYC Comptroller Brad Lander urging him to investigate the Municipal Labor Committee’s Medicare Advantage contract with Aetna.
NYC Retirees and the Nightmare of Profit-Driven Health Care…
By Joe Maniscalco
Retired New York City librarian Dana Simon was in an Aetna managed care plan back in 2007 when the night before she was scheduled to have her cochlear implant replaced — she received a call from the for-profit health insurance company warning her to cancel the surgery because they weren’t covering the operation.
Listen: We’re Talkin’ Pay Equity and Union Careers for Women
By Bob Hennelly
On this edition of the Stuck Nation Labor Radio Hour we mark week 2 of Women’s History Month we welcome Dalvanie Powell, president of the NYC United Probation Officers Association; Bev Neufeld, the co-founder of PowHer NY, a non-profit advocacy pressing for gender pay equity; and Celeste Kirkland, vice-chair of TWU Local 100’s Power Division and vice-president of the NYC chapter of the Coalition of Union Women.
Listen: Iron Bill Talks to ‘Troublemaker’ Frank Emspak
Work-Bites
On this episode of the “Iron Bill” Hohlfeld Show, Bill talks with legendary labor activist Frank Emspak about making trouble — the kind of trouble that empowers working class people, overcomes oppressive bosses, and improves working conditions for everyone.
New York City Retirees: ‘We Have to Change the MLC’
By Joe Maniscalco
The Municipal Labor Committee’s [MLC] ability to legitimately represent public service unions across New York City is openly being called into question this week following Thursday’s weighted vote helping Mayor Eric Adams’ administration strip civil service workers of their traditional Medicare health benefits and push them into profit-driven Medicare Advantage program run by insurance giant Aetna.
Extreme Chutzpah! Authoritarians Launch Existential Attack on Fla. Unions
By Steve Wishnia
The Florida legislator who recently introduced a bill to ban the state Democratic Party — on the grounds that it supported slavery before 1865 — is now taking aim at its public-sector unions.
NYC Correction Captains’ Association Pres. Says Medicare Advantage is ‘Definitely Not a Better Plan’
By Joe Maniscalco
New York City’s Municipal Labor Committee [MLC] may be poised on Thursday to endorse an agreement with Aetna to privatize health care for hundreds of thousands of city employees — but it’s hard for Patrick Ferraiuolo, president of the Correction Captains’ Association, to comprehend why any union would be endorsing a profit-driven scheme like Medicare Advantage.
Listen: Women’s History Month Special
By Bob Hennelly
This is the first Monday of Women’s History Month. Last Women’s History Month, a woman still had the reproductive rights that were enshrined in the landmark Roe. Vs Wade decision that affirmed a woman’s constitutional right to an abortion. On June 24, 2022 the US Supreme Court took that away.
Listen: Why the RWU Says it’s Time to Nationalize the Railroads
Work-Bites.com
On this episode of the “Iron Bill” Hohlfeld Show, Bill talks to retired locomotive engineer and Railroad Workers United [RWU] member Mark Burrows about the unfolding train derailment disaster in East Palestine, Ohio — and why members of the RWU say it is time for public ownership of the nation’s railway system.
New York City, MLC Heads Try Going Nuclear on Retirees…
By Joe Maniscalco
To no one’s surprise, but to the absolute horror of many — Mayor Eric Adams’ administration and the heads of the Municipal Labor Committee [MLC] have gone ahead and thrown back the blast doors on the nukes pointed at traditional Medicare health insurance in New York City and started the countdown to launch.
In NYC, TWU Mechanics Lift Up the Subway; Third Party Contractors Flounder
By Bob Hennelly
It came as no surprise to Maurice Walls, a proud TWU Local 100 elevator mechanic, that a recent City Council analysis found the MTA and its union workforce did a much better job keeping its escalator and elevators operating than the contractors doing that work for sites where real estate developers are responsible for their operation.
PSC Seeks More ‘Salary Equity’ From CUNY
By Steve Wishnia
Better pay and job security, especially for adjunct and lower-paid full-time staff, are among the main priorities for the Professional Staff Congress as it prepares to negotiate a new contract with the City University of New York.