An Open Letter to Former Comptroller Scott Stringer…
Dear Scott:
Earlier this year, you filed papers with the New York City Campaign Finance Board to form an exploratory committee as you consider another mayoral run (I received an email from “Team Stringer” asking for a donation).
EMS Bills Spark Debate About ‘Plantation’ System At FDNY
By Bob Hennelly
Unions representing the mostly women and people of color who comprise the majority of FDNY EMS first responders in New York City tell Work-Bites efforts by the City Council to better protect the workforce from deadly attacks on the job only underscores the pay and benefit disparity between them — and the mostly white males who constitute the bulk of FDNY firefighters.
NYC Transit Workers Demand ‘Common Sense Solutions’ to On-the-Job Attacks
By Joe Maniscalco
Problematic policing in the subways and a chronic inability to care for emotionally disturbed New Yorkers in need of help are the major reasons why MTA employees are going to work fearing attack, according to those Work-Bites spoke to recently.
UAW Flies Flag in Solidarity with Anti-Smoking Casino Workers in Atlantic City
By Bob Hennelly
For years, with a surreal break during the COVID, Atlantic City’s casino workers have been forced to endure life-threatening secondhand smoke because New Jersey’s Democratic machine, the casino operators, and the largest union representing casino workers were all worried enforcing the state’s 2006 Smoke-Free Air Act would hurt business.
Bronx Landlords Back Off On Union Concessions; Demand Rent Hikes From Albany
By Steve Wishnia
A Bronx landlord trade group has decided that it will not reopen its contract with 32BJ SEIU and seek concessions from the building-service workers union.
New York City Council Staffers Cheer ‘Unimaginable’ Contract Wins
By Bob Hennelly
The Association of Legislative Employees (ALE) representing nearly 400 City Council staffers has reached a tentative labor agreement with the legislative body, the union and City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams announced Tuesday.
‘No More 24’ Advocates Vow to Surround New York’s City Hall
By Joe Maniscalco
New York City home health aides fighting to pass legislation ending mandatory 24-hour workdays “paused” their five-day hunger strike outside the gates of City Hall on Monday, promising to keep coming back before finally returning with enough outraged workers to encircle the local seat of government on May Day.
Watch: ‘Stop Trying to Hide,’ DSA Tells NYC Council Speaker Adrienne Adams
By Joe Maniscalco
In this Work-Bites video, Marian Jones, political educator coordinator with the NYC-DSA Socialist Feminist Working Group, calls out NYC Council Speaker Adrienne Adams' for blocking "No More 24" legislation, saying it's time to support caregivers and stop hiding behind the idea that the state alone should address mandatory 24-hour workdays.
Watch: NYC Council Speaker Adrienne Adams’ Ugly Legacy
By Joe Maniscalco
In this Work-Bites video, Ain’t I a Woman organizer Jihye Song talks about the ugly legacy NYC Council Speaker Adrienne Adams is creating for herself by ignoring calls to put the "No More 24" bill on the floor for a vote.
NYC Democrats to Speaker Adams: Demand the State Take Action on 24-Hour Workdays
By Joe Maniscalco
As recently as last week, New York City Council Speaker [D-28th District] Adrienne Adams was repeating her longstanding claim that she supports home health aides fighting to “improve their working conditions” — but that actually ending the 24-hour workdays they’re forced to endure is a state issue, and, therefore, out of her hands.
Bronx Building Service Workers Set to Strike!
By Steve Wishnia
Bronx residential-building workers voted March 21 to authorize a strike if the Bronx Realty Advisory Board landlord trade group reopens their contract and demands concessions.
“The BRAB, they’re crying broke,” 32BJ SEIU secretary treasurer John Santos told more than 200 workers at a rally outside the Bronx Supreme Court building. “Are we ready to roll back wages?”
It’s All Connected: NYC Workers See Link to ‘No More 24’ Hunger Strikers’ Struggle
By Joe Maniscalco
New York City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams can continue sitting on the “No More 24” bill and saying there’s nothing she can do to stop bosses from forcing home health aides to work around-the-clock — but working class New Yorkers are increasingly connecting the dots about what’s really going on here: lots of kowtowing to the bosses at everyone else’s expense.
Why is NYC Paying to Defend Eric Adams in a Sexual Assault Lawsuit?
By Bob Hennelly
At the end of New York City Mayor Eric Adams’ weekly media availability on March 19, decorum went out the window as photographers swarmed him in the hunt for the image that might capture the essence of what had just gone down during the high stakes press conference.
AFSCME’s DC 37 Retirees Hearing Didn’t Settle Anything…
By Joe Maniscalco
Nope. The hearing ostensibly called to decide if AFSCME President Lee Saunders acted appropriately in taking over control of the DC 37 Retirees Association and suspending its officers in February has only sparked more questions about the contentious action and the legitimacy of the subsequent hearing process itself.
Starbucks Threatens to Shutter its ‘Community Store’ in Trenton
By Bob Hennelly
Courtesy of InsiderNJ
It’s everywhere and impacting everything and yet we rarely discuss it because we have come to accept it as the natural order of things, a kind of Machina ex Deus conveyor belt to a “profitable” tomorrow no matter how miserable that future might be. Yet, we still have free will and when something isn’t working, or it could work better, we have to summon the character to act.
Bronx Landlords Threaten to Cancel Union Contract…
By Steve Wishnia
Seeking concessions from hundreds of New York City building-service workers, the trade group representing Bronx landlords has threatened to terminate its four-year contract with 32BJ SEIU — but it has agreed to delay doing so for 30 days beyond the original deadline of March 31
NYC Mayor: ‘My Goal is to Rectify and Correct’ FDNY EMS Pay Inequity
By Bob Hennelly
New York City Mayor Eric Adams this week reiterated his support for full pay parity between the FDNY EMS workforce, which is mostly composed of women and people of color — and the firefighting side of the department, which is mostly white males.
‘We Can’t Continue to Work Like This’ - NYC Transit Workers Demand Safer Conditions
By Steve Wishnia
Subway station agent Benjamin Welcome was working in the 2/3 line part of the Wall Street station on Feb. 16, the day Noreen Mallory, a station agent in the 4/5 line section, got her eye socket broken by an enraged man who punched her repeatedly in the face until passengers on an arriving train intervened.
“If the train hadn’t come in, she would have been on the tracks,” he told Work-Bites.
Mayor Adams Embraces Encryption to Protect NYPD; Cuts Out Press and Endangers EMS
'Operational Security’ Trumps the Right to Know
By Bob Hennelly
New York City Mayor Eric Adams this week dismissed concerns the NYPD’s encrypting of its radio communications will undermine transparency and the ability of the press to report on breaking news — but did say he would look into issues raised by the union that represents FDNY EMS officers about the initial rollout of encryption in Brooklyn North precincts.
NYC Retirees Stand Strong With Ousted DC 37 Officers…
By Joe Maniscalco
Angry municipal retirees do not care what AFSCME Retirees Director and newly-appointed DC37 Retirees Association Administrator Ann Widger says — the union’s decision to put the retirees chapter in receivership last month, they insist, is retribution for fighting back against ongoing efforts to privatize their health care.
Plain and simple.