CMS to Medicare Recipients: Don’t Worry About These New Prior Authorizations
By Joe Maniscalco
A few weeks ago, Work-Bites took a look at the white paper warning labor leaders about profit-driven Medicare Advantage plans and how they are just “another Wall Street privatization scheme of raiding public funds for private profit.”
NYS AFL-CIO: ‘We Stand with Texas’
By Steve Wishnia
Eight state labor federations, including the Texas and New York branches of the AFL-CIO, have joined together to protest President Donald Trump’s push to have Texas gerrymander its congressional districts to enable Republicans to gain five seats in the 2026 elections.
Chris Smalls Expected Home
By Joe Maniscalco
Amazon Labor Union co-founder Chris Smalls is expected to be coming home to Newark International Airport tomorrow morning after reportedly being seized and beaten by Israeli military forces while taking part in a humanitarian effort to bring baby formula and other aide to the starving people of Gaza.
Teamster Head At NYC Local Lauds Smalls’ ‘Bravery,’ Calls on Union to Press Trump for His Release
By Joe Maniscalco
The secretary-treasurer of IBT Local 808 in New York is calling on his union leadership to press for the release of Amazon Labor Union co-founder Christian Smalls after Smalls was reportedly seized and beaten by Israeli military forces this week while helping to bring food and other aide to the starving people of Gaza.
Farmworker Fear of a General Strike Sheds More Light On Trump’s Stranglehold on Migrants
By Joe Maniscalco
This week, California farmworkers protesting the recent death of 57-year-old Jaime Alanís García after he broke his neck fleeing militarized ICE agents in Ventura County on July 10, chose to observe the “Huelga para la dignidad,” or “Strike for Dignity.” Most, however, did not.
And the reason they did not has everything to do with Trump administration policies designed to perpetuate an unrepresented class of workers in this country consigned to a state of virtual slavery.
Farmworkers’ Lives Matter: Standing Up for Jaime
By Bob Hennelly
The tragic death of Jaime Alanis, a farmworker, who was frightened into hiding when federal ICE agents laid siege to a state-licensed cannabis farm in the agricultural area of Ventura County, needs to prompt more of a response from organized labor that registers nationally.
Phil Cohen War Stories: Rising Stars
By Phil Cohen
Editor’s Note: This is Part III of Phil’s bittersweet story of the Local 1077 Whiteville Choir. Read Part I here and Part II here.
Two weeks later I made my annual pilgrimage to the Great Labor Arts Exchange in Washington, this time accompanied by Melvin Chambers who was treated like a celebrity. One of the guests handed her song lyrics written by an anonymous composer during the recent Detroit Newspaper strike, explaining that the words were set to the legendary pop song, “Dancing in the Street.”
Phil Cohen War Stories: Paranoia Strikes Deep
By Phil Cohen
Editor’s Note: This is Part II of Phil’s bittersweet story of the Local 1077 Whiteville Choir. Part I is here.
A few weeks later I drove to AMI Recording in Burlington with the master and graphics in hand, making sure the owners understood I was going to be a significant, ongoing customer if they met my demands. I placed a rush order for five-hundred copies to be picked up in time for the choir’s new album to make its debut at the union’s Southern Regional convention in Atlanta on June 7. The cost came to $675 and including studio time and various miscellaneous charges, the project was only $300 over budget.
Phil Cohen War Stories: The Hottest Act in the Labor Movement
By Phil Cohen
Editor’s Note: This is Part I of Phil’s bittersweet story of the Local 1077 Whiteville Choir.
During April 1995, the North Carolina District of ACTWU held its yearly conference in Greensboro’s spacious union hall. The delegates and staff were blown away by the choir providing entertainment. The twenty-three singers and one electric keyboard player named Kenneth Stanley all worked at the Whiteville Apparel suit factory in Eastern North Carolina and were members of Local 1077.
Work-Bites Readers Spotlight: Know Your Past, Build Your Future
By Joe Maniscalco
Two minutes into any basic economics course and you learn labor exists as a cost at the bottom of the business ledger eating into the boss’s profits. A few pages into Peter Kellman’s slim but essential “Building Unions, Past, Present, and Future” history you understand that the laws of this land were written to favor the bosses in their endless quest to maximize those profits. The game is, in fact, rigged. And it has been from the very beginning.
American Desaparecidos: Trump’s War on Immigrants
By Steve Wishnia
More than 100 days after he was abducted from Maryland by ICE agents and shipped to El Salvador’s notorious CECOT prison, Kilmar Abrego Garcia is still in jail. After nearly three months of using lies and stalling to evade court orders for his release, the Trump junta brought him back to face highly questionable federal charges of human trafficking.
Walmart Workers Are Pressuring CEO Doug McMillon to Stand Up to Trump’s DEI Rollback
By Joe Maniscalco
Walmart, the largest employer of women and people of color in the nation didn’t exactly have a stellar track record on racial equity before the family-controlled operation decided to roll back its Diversity, Equity, Inclusion programs in the wake of the Trump administration’s DEI vendetta.
‘You Get Cooked Like a Microwave’: OSHA Considers Heat-Safety Rules—But Trump Team Is Opposed
By Steve Wishnia
“I’m somewhat surprised to see this hearing kept on the schedule,” Marc Freedman of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce told an Occupational Safety and Health Administration panel June 16, the first day of two weeks of hearings on federal heat-safety rules proposed by the Biden administration last year. President Donald Trump suspended consideration of all pending regulations in an executive order Jan. 20.
Yellow Vests, L.A. Protests, and the Imperative Necessity of a General Strike
By Joe Maniscalco
In 2018, my partner and I found ourselves in Paris, France on the eighth day of the burgeoning Yellow Vest Movement navigating the bonfires openly burning along Franklin Delano Roosevelt Avenue.