|
Washington Peace Center 1801 Columbia Road NW Suite 104 Washington, DC 20009 Ph. (202) 234-2000 Fax (202) 234-7064 Email: wpc@igc.org Web site: www.washingtonpeacecenter.org The Washington Peace Letter is published monthly for the social justice community of the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area. Its purpose is to support local, national and international struggles against oppression. It seeks to present a radical analysis of current events, covering information not readily available in the corporate media. The Peace Letter welcomes submissions of calendar announcements, articles, letters to the Editor, and artwork from the progressive community. Articles may be from 300-1200 words, but may be edited for space considerations. Preference is given to materials that cover actions or organizing campaigns in the D.C. metropolitan area. We reserve the right to select or reject any submission. Except as noted, Peace Letter items are copyright free and may be reproduced. Please give credit and send us a copy if you do use something. The Washington Peace Letter is a project of the Peace Talks Working Group of the Washington Peace Center. If you are interested in joining us, call! |
Today I spoke with a woman from Bolivia. She has a 10-year-old daughter still living there, while she works as a housekeeper here in Washington. She's a member of the Hotel & Restaurant Employees Union, Local 25, and with her union job she sent money to her daughter every month until September's tragedy left her laid off and stranded in a city whose hospitality industry has a heart that barely beats. Now she can no longer send money to her daughter. In fact she doesn't even have the money to pay for October's rent. She and I could barely understand each other because of our language barrier, but I could see the desolation in her eyes as they welled up with tears. She told me that she doesn't understand why this is happening...that she watches TV and still it doesn't make sense to her. I know what she means, although my own story isn't nearly so poignant. I'm not worried about my next meal or my heat being turned off...I'm just trying to help a portion of over 4,000 Local 25 members who are. Soon after September 11th, I became a union researcher-turned-social worker. Since then I've been answering phone calls and receiving visits all day, everyday, from desperate members who say they can no longer afford their rent or mortgage. Others worry they won't be able to put food on the table for their families. And some are just downright mad that, after so many years of hard work, they have to borrow money from family members or face landlords who threaten eviction or cut-off notices from PEPCO, Verizon and Washington Gas. Enter Labor's own Community Services Agency- United Way Agency inside the Capitol Region. Within three weeks of the tragedy, Jacqueline Barnes and Kathy McKirchy, and their team successfully appropriated over $140,000 to Local 25 members alone. After aiding 270 members, their subsidy had run out and, as Barnes put it, the Agency is 'anticipating other contributions.' Back at the Local 25 offices members continue to come in droves, in need of financial assistance and food. Charities such as the Capital Area Food Bank have provided food that my coworkers (the Research and Organizing Departments) and I pick up and stack on the 6th floor of our K St. office. We keep a list of those in need-our prioritization process being one simple question: how many children do you have? Today we had warmed hearts upon giving away food to a household containing two women and seven children. Meanwhile, some of us are stuck on the phone chatting with the authorities, attempting to make time for our members whose bills are now three weeks late, but we get little response. 'These bankers, landlords and utility companies are the same people we've always dealt with,' said Local 25's Executive Secretary-Treasurer John Boardman at the union's most recent membership meeting. 'They haven't changed as a result of the tragedy, and we're going to have to force them to understand that they're going to give relief to these members who are out of work by no fault of their own.' It's unfortunate that so many landlords and creditors have turned down our requests for leniancy for workers since the tragedy. It's also unfortunate that the story of these workers has oozed out into the mainstream as slowly as molasses. But what is most unfortunate is that laid off workers are receiving such a slap in the face in a city where they provide the backbone for the entire tourism and hospitality industry, the sector by which Washington brings in most of its funds. Enter D.C. City Council. First issued was the disappointing B14-0363, in which Council members agreed to give extensive aid to local businesses for disaster relief while passing over workers. Local 25's Director of Research, Henry Moses, gives perspective on this bill, which some thought would aid business and workers alike. 'If there are no guests in the hotels, no one gets called back from lay-off,' he said. 'So any aid to the hotels and restaurants would not help the workers, because in no way would this aid translate into more customers. All it did was keep businesses afloat.' In the midst of this critical moment, John Boardman and Metro Washington Council AFL-CIO President Josh Williams went out to drum up support for new legislation that unanimously passed in the Council on October 16. 'This is the first time this Council has ever voted unanimously on any labor legislation,' Boardman noted at the membership meeting. The bill, tediously titled 'Unemployment Compensation Terrorist Response Temporary Amendment Act of 2001,' promises several hopeful amendments to current unemployment insurance measures: No more one-week waiting period; no D.C. taxes on unemployment checks; increasing the maximum amount from $309 to $359 per week; a retrograde to September 9; and a promise to provide 75 percent of wages were all part of the Bill-the first in the country to legislate aid specifically to workers hurt by the attacks. But Local 25 members and staff alike are still left wondering how this will aid members who have to pay a rent or a mortgage that surpasses what unemployment aid can give. Even before the tragedy, rents were going up all around DC. 'We're going to have to make a plea to the public to call greater attention to the people who were secondarily impacted by September 11th,' Henry Moses said. 'People are saying that workers will be affected for the next six months-they need to get through the winter-we need the general public to be generous, and the creditors to be understanding.' This nation we live in may not be the 'well of generosity' that the mass media tends to show us. Firefighters, police officers, teachers, and others highlighted as heroes during this tragedy are all working people. And many are members of unions. I give thanks to all who have aided us in our struggles thus far, but I believe it's time for our political leaders and corporations to be generous to those who they know to be the beating heart of this nation. But if they won't, they will have to remember that unions have fought for justice since the dawn of the Industrial Revolution. Workers are used to fighting and they will fight some more...as Local 25's motto states: As Long As it Takes. Stay up to date with current legislation by visiting the council's website, www.dccouncil.washington.dc.us, or contact Rick Powell at the Local 25 office, (202) 737-2225. Volunteer for the The Community Services Agency of the Metropolitan Washington Council, AFL-CIO by calling Kathy at (202) 857-0480. Local 25 is also in need of donated food for their in-office food drive -call Kristen at (202) 639-5699. Kristen Arant has worked for Local 25 since September of 2000. |
||||
|
|
|||||