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A busted union leaves workers floundering

By Pete Donohue 

Until very recently, a friend of mine worked for a Manhattan-based company that didn’t contribute a dime towards its employees’ eventual retirement. It didn’t give across-the-board annual raises to the rank-and-file workforce - but reportedly was paid at least one top executive $1.5 million a year.The company regularly took bigger and bigger chunks out of employees’ paychecks for healthcare - up to $500 a month for an employee with a spouse and kids.

“It got so bad I thought I would walk into work one day wondering if they were going to charge me rent for my desk,” he said.

Welcome to corporate America unfettered by an adequately funded and well-organized union. It’s a purgatory that more workers, including public sector workers, may find themselves in. The U.S. Supreme Court is expected in June to prohibit pubic sector unions from compelling non-members to pay agency fees - even though they benefit from the union’s main activities: negotiating contracts with raises, healthcare benefits and work rules, and defending workers facing discipline or termination.

Most observers believe the five U.S. Supreme Court justices appointed by Republican presidents – Alito, Roberts, Scalia, Kennedy and Thomas – will form a majority and hand down an anti-union ruling. The case was brought to the Supreme Court by a conservative law firm, the Center for Individual Rights. The four justices appointed by Democratic presidents will likely write dissenting opinions favoring the unions’ position, including Elena Kagan, sister of former transit worker and top Local 100 staffer Marc Kagan, observers believe. (Marc Kagan was a top assistant to former Local 100 President Roger Toussaint before having a falling out with Toussaint in 2002.)

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Citibike bikes on display
Citibike bikes on display

TWU LOCAL 100's Bike Share Expansion In The News

In the web magazine "Next City," reporter Josh Cohen profiles TWU Local 100s growing representation of bike share workers with the newest unit formed in Jersey City, N.J.

Here's the article: 

Around the same time last week that Portland was grabbing bike-share headlines with an announcement that the city had partnered with Nike to launch a system this summer, Jersey City bike-share workers were quietly taking newsworthy action of their own: On Jan. 8, they voted 8-3 to join the Transport Workers Union Local 100. The vote makes them the fifth bike-share program in the U.S. to unionize.

Citi Bike Jersey City launched last September with 350 bikes at 35 stations. Though its management, staff and finances are independent of New York City’s Citi Bike program, memberships are reciprocal, meaning a Jersey City member’s key fob works in NYC and vice versa. Jersey City contracted with Motivate (formerly Alta Bike Share), which provides the bikes, docking stations, mechanics, station re-balancers and other operations staff. The largest bike-share company in the U.S., Motivate also operates systems in New York, Washington, D.C., Boston, Chicago, Seattle and elsewhere.

“The same company is running it. The equipment is the same. All of those things are integrated. The Jersey City workers are being trained by New York workers. From our perspective it is almost the same set up … so we started organizing right away,” says Nicholas Bedell, TWU Local 100’s director of education.

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"I was half way up the staircase, and I heard someone screaming..."

Station Agent Ralph Johnson, coming in early for his shift at Franklin Avenue as the West Indian Day Parade was getting underway, was heading up to get some jerk chicken when he heard someone screaming that there was a lady on the tracks. Running down to the platform, he saw a huddled figure and jumped onto the track bed. An incoming train was just a few car lengths away. S/A Johnson received a proclamation from Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams for his act of heroism -- which he called "just another day at the MTA." Click for the video of the presentation, along with remarks by newly-elected VP for Stations Derick Echevarria.

Transporters Hockey Team Fights in Championship Game

Transporters Hockey

The Transporters ice hockey team, sponsored by TWU Local 100, made it all the way to the championship game last Sunday in the skating rink at Eisenhower Park on Long Island. Although we did not triumph, all who attended had a great time watching this hardscrabble team take the fight to the Arrows. Enjoy our slides and get ready to support our team next season! Pictured is team member Nick Gallo with LES Officer Sherlock Bender.

Motorman Robert Leake, On the '66 Strike

TWU Local 100 Retiree and former Motorman Robert Leake, 88, was interviewed at the Union's Mass Membership Meeting on December 12th. He describes the tough, but necessary fight under Mike Quill-- and the health benefits that have kept him and so many others alive and in good health.

In Jersey City, TWU Notches Another Bike Share Win

Workers at Jersey City Bike Share voted to select TWU Local 100 as their collective bargaining representative in an election held on January 8th. Bike Share's parent company, Motivate, filed with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) to contest the workers' right to vote, but the NLRB let the election proceed. Our lead organizer Joe DeManuell-Hall, "motivated" our members to choose to unionize. Congratulations to our new Brothers and Sisters at New Jersey Bike Share -- now TWU Local 100's fifth bike share property under representation.

Pedestrian Menace

BY PETE DONOHUE

JANUARY 11 -- Pedestrians are a menace – to themselves. Not all the time, but more often than you might think. “Dangerous pedestrian choices,” including crossing the street against the signal, are the primary cause in 31% of the city’s pedestrian fatalities, according to a two-year study. Pedestrian actions are a contributing cause in another 16% of pedestrian fatalities, according to the city Department of Transportation study.

In other words, pedestrians have at least some culpability in nearly half - 47% - of the traffic accidents in the city that result in a pedestrian being killed. 

Pedestrian behavior is most problematic in Manhattan where sidewalks and streets are more crowded. It's the primary cause in 43% of pedestrian fatalities in the borough and a contributing cause in another 13% - more than half of the accidents, 56%.  Those statistics, which were tucked inside the Vision Zero Pedestrian Safety Action Plan that Mayor de Blasio’s administration released last year, are striking. Yet, you never hear about them. Some safety crusaders only want to talk about the city not redesigning streets fast enough and cops not cracking down hard enough on drivers. In their eyes, anyone with a set of car keys is a Mad Max maniac.

The DOT gives pedestrian safety talks in public schools and senior centers, according to its website. But I’ve never heard a city official speaking harshly or at length about pedestrians carelessly and recklessly putting themselves in harms' way.  The role of pedestrians certainly hasn’t been given equal weight to other aspects of the problem.  If anything, the city report at times manipulates figures to keep the focus on drivers.

State Sen. Jose Peralta (D-Queens) and Assemblyman Michael DenDekker (D-Queens) dared raised the issue of "distracted walking" during a December press conference two days after a 17-year-old boy was killed crossing Northern Blvd. by a hit-and-run driver. Peralta said the city should create a public awareness campaign about the perils of texting while walking, along the lines of those targeting drivers. Seems reasonable enough.  DenDekker talked about his proposal to issue $25 fines to pedestrians who text in crosswalks. They were overwhelmingly ignored by the media and vilified by one zealous advocacy group’s blog. Peralta and DenDekker “mostly blamed the victims of dangerous driving,” the blog stated.

It’s nonsense, of course. It's a fact that people are constantly darting or sauntering through intersections against the signal, crossing midblock far from the relative safety of a crosswalk, texting with their heads down. We all do it. Only tourists from the Midwest, or from countries with a more obedient populace, seem to wait patiently on the curb. The city’s statistics quantify the dangerousness of our impatience and inattention. It would be reckless to ignore them.

How About, "Best on the Planet!"

Forget about “We Move New York.” How about, “TWU. The best on the planet.” That’s what Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Friday morning at the culmination of a rousing speech at the New York City Transit Museum.

Cuomo came to the Brooklyn museum with MTA Chairman Tom Prendergast to announce plans to bring the subway and bus system into the 21st Century with modern technology, including Wi-Fi on every bus and USB charging ports on hundreds subway cars. Thirty subway stations will be rebuilt under the plan, which Cuomo said was part of his statewide infrastructure efforts that include building a new Tappan Zee Bridge, expanding the Jacob Javits Center and building a new Penn Station.

 “We are New Yorkers,” Cuomo said. “We don’t take no for an answer. The New York workforce is the best on the planet. TWU is the best on the planet. We’re going to rebuild New York better than ever before.”

Pres. Samuelsen with the Governor as photographers jostled for position
Pres. Samuelsen with the Governor as photographers jostled for position

TWU Supporting Governor's Penn Station Overhaul

As Governor Cuomo prepared to unveil a new $3 billion plan to transform Penn Station into a state-of-the-art transportation hub, Local 100 President John Samuelsen was among the labor leaders invited to attend. We also sent a contingent of transit workers, taking their place with building trades members to show unified support for this key element of economic development for New York State.

The Governor's plan is flexible, but would include linking the Farley Post Office with Penn Station to create additional capacity for transit and a new, bright, illuminated look for the transit hub. In a statement to the media, President Samuelsen said: “It was an honor to stand with Gov. Cuomo today to show our wholehearted support for his vision for the new Empire State Station on the site of the current Penn Station.  A modern, well funded transportation network is vital to our City’s economic development and societal mobility. The positive, cascading economic effects of the new Empire State Station will be tremendous. Every dollar invested in public transit pays massive dividends for society. A new Empire State Station will bring up real estate values, expand the economy, put more money into the city’s coffers and more money in working families’ pockets.  Gov. Cuomo’s initiative shows real leadership. It’s good for the economy.  It’s good for transit workers.  And it’s good for all New Yorkers."

President Samuelsen and Local 100 members posed for a group shot immediately after the press conference and roll-out of the transportation plan.IB Image

Retired Car Inspector Bill Quinn: "That Strike Made Us"

In the second installment of our Voices of the 1966 Strike series, retired Car Inspector Bill Quinn, interviewed at our December membership meeting, shares his recollections of Mike Quill and the TWU's first citywide strike.

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