Benutzereinstellungen

Neue Veranstaltungshinweise

North America / Mexico

Es wurden keine neuen Veranstaltungshinweise in der letzten Woche veröffentlicht

Kommende Veranstaltungen

North America / Mexico | Workplace struggles

Keine kommenden Veranstaltungen veröffentlicht
Recent articles by Ed Olsen
This author has not submitted any other articles.
Recent Articles about North America / Mexico Workplace struggles

Seize the Hospitals! ...But How? Aug 01 23 by BRRN Labor Committee

Vermont Labor Takes Sharp Left Turn: Van Deusen Elected Vt AFL-CIO Pre... Sep 17 19 by Working Class Revolt!

Shut it Down! Jun 14 18 by Kdog

From a Plow Driver: An Open Letter To Vermont Governor Peter Shumlin

category north america / mexico | workplace struggles | non-anarchist press author Saturday March 07, 2015 01:21author by Ed Olsen - Union Member Report this post to the editors

I personally make just over $17 an hour, while the average wage of a plow driver is $38,000 a year. And yet you have made it clear that you will not tax the wealthy (like yourself) who can afford it to cover the budget gap which you created. But I do not expect you to necessarily understand the hardships you are asking us to suffer, as I am told you are personally worth ten million dollars. Maybe you don’t understand that taking $36 a paycheck out of my wages (which on average you are proposing for all plow drivers) is the difference between making or missing a mortgage payment, a utility bill, or buying a pair of shoes for the kids. Maybe you cannot understand.

An Open Letter To Vermont Governor Peter Shumlin-Democrat;

To Mr. Governor Shumlin,

I am a hard working Vermont State employee for the Agency of Transportation, District 3 [and a Union member]. I plow the roads. As you may recall, we in AOT have endured many challenges in the recent past ....Including Tropical Storm Irene (2011), Pay Cuts and Pay Freezes (2008-9), Changes to our Health Insurance with Higher deductibles and less coverage (2014). And despite all these hardships and challenges, we still get up, as needed, at 3am (sometimes working 7 days a week) to make sure our roads are safe so Vermonters (including yourself) can go to work, so tourists can come here and spend their money, and so everyone’s kids can get to school.

Even so, I see and read the things you and the Legislature are proposing and I very much disapprove. You ask for pay cuts and threaten to lay-off 450 working class people if we do not suffer further by opening a Contract which we negotiated with you in good faith. You refuse to balance the budget by raising taxes on the wealthy (who are your campaign donors?) and instead want to take money out of my pocket to cover your failures. In a word, you want me and other plow drivers to open our contracts give back the 2.5% pay raise we all agreed to. On the other hand, have you demanded that the ski resorts open their leases with the State so they can share a small portion of their massive profits in order to maintain the services that they enjoy (like plowed roads for starters)? Have you considered a smarter use of our gas tax revenues, or an excessive wealth tax? I would venture to guess that you have not.

I personally make just over $17 an hour, while the average wage of a plow driver is $38,000 a year. And yet you have made it clear that you will not tax the wealthy (like yourself) who can afford it to cover the budget gap which you created. But I do not expect you to necessarily understand the hardships you are asking us to suffer, as I am told you are personally worth ten million dollars. Maybe you don’t understand that taking $36 a paycheck out of my wages (which on average you are proposing for all plow drivers) is the difference between making or missing a mortgage payment, a utility bill, or buying a pair of shoes for the kids. Maybe you cannot understand. Maybe you also don’t understand how hard we work for the modest pay we receive. Or maybe you don’t understand how dangerous our job actually is.

So with that said I invite you Mr. Peter Shumlin (and all State Legislators for that matter) to shadow my job as an AOT snow plow truck driver through just one storm. (I further invite you to live on $17 and change an hour.) Now you may have to get up early (many hours before the sun comes up), and you may have to work longer than you are accustomed to, and by the end I expect that your hands may hurt (as I assume you do not have any calluses), but I think when you consider taking food off a families plate, you should know what went into putting that food on the table to begin with.

The truth is, if me and my fellow AOT drivers did not do our job for even one day (during a storm) the entire State would shut down. And all those high paid CEOs, bankers, and lawyers that you refuse to raise taxes on would not be able to make it to their boardrooms and corner offices. In fact you (or rather your State employed driver) would not be able to get to your 5th floor office in Montpelier in order to attend to your $150,000 a year job. Point being, Vermont works because we work. And we do this because we are proud to serve the public and because we also need to support of families. I suggest you stop seeking to put more burdens on the backs of Vermont’s working men and women.

In conclusion I will say this… My job is no-less important than your job. The difference is I have done and will continue to do mine. But from where I sit, your job was to balance the budget, raise adequate revenue from those that can afford it, and you failed (and continue to fail) at this. But before you try and put your hand in my pocket to fix your mistakes, at least be man enough to know what it is like to sit in the driver’s seat at 4am when it is 20 below, it’s snowing, visibility is 20 feet, and you are making a quarter of the wage that is paid to the office of Governor. On that note, I look forward to hearing from you, and I look forward to having you along next snow storm. Otherwise, I look forward to remembering who stood with and against working class Vermonters when I enter the booth during our next General Election.

Sincerely

Ed Olsen,
Vermont AOT Employee in the Mendon Garage,
& Member of the Vermont State Employees’ Association
Proctor, Vermont

 #   Title   Author   Date 
   Shumlin vs. plowdriver     seajay christopher    Mon Mar 16, 2015 23:51 
   Native Vermonter     Terral Croteau    Wed Mar 18, 2015 07:44 
   Plow driver     mylacey    Wed Mar 18, 2015 23:03 
   RETIRED BRICKLAYER     PHILL HATCH    Thu Mar 19, 2015 05:12 
   Wife of Plow driver     Pen Pal Farm    Thu Mar 19, 2015 06:32 
   plow driver     Raymond Follmer    Thu Mar 19, 2015 07:51 
   State of Vermont     W C H    Fri Mar 20, 2015 20:30 
   State of Vermont     W C H    Fri Mar 20, 2015 20:30 
   mr snow plow driver     another working vermonter    Sat Mar 21, 2015 06:13 
 10   Plow Driver is Right!     WantsToStayInVT    Wed Mar 25, 2015 02:27 


Number of comments per page
  
 
This page can be viewed in
English Italiano Deutsch

North America / Mexico | Workplace struggles | en

Thu 18 Apr, 20:40

browse text browse image

dvdavidvandeusentheriseandfallofthegree4.png imageVermont Labor Takes Sharp Left Turn: Van Deusen Elected Vt AFL-CIO President, Adie Executive Vice Pr... 05:59 Tue 17 Sep by Working Class Revolt! 1 comments

On September 15, 2019, in South Burlington Vermont, former Green Mountain Anarchist Collective-NEFAC member David Van Deusen was elected President of the Vermont AFL-CIO. Former ISO member, and union nurse, Tristin Adie was elected as Executive Vice President. Van Deusen and Adie were part of the larger progressive United! slate which swept into leadership positions capturing 14 of the 15 seats on the Vermont State Labor Council’s Executive Board. This marks a sharp turn towards the left for Organized Labor in Vermont. Let’s see what comes next!

palikari_nibs_poster_1.jpg imageA free film screening 20:59 Mon 13 Apr by MACG / Melbourne Antifascist Initiative 0 comments

The documentary Palikari: Louis Tikas and the Ludlow Massacre (2014, Nickos Ventouras) narrates one of the “bleakest and blackest” chapters in American labor history, the Ludlow Massacre.
A 101 years earlier, on April 20, 1914, in Ludlow, Colorado, USA, a strike for basic labor rights by exploited miners and their families, mostly immigrants, was violently ended by state militia. In the fight, the strikers’ tent colony was machine-gunned and burned to the ground, leaving over twenty people dead, including women and children.

textDays After Settlement, Pickets Return to Insomnia Cookies 21:08 Sun 16 Mar by Jake Carman 0 comments

Picket lines have returned to Insomnia Cookies, less than two weeks after the company settled with four workers who struck in August of 2013. On Friday March 14, two dozen union members and supporters rallied in front of the Boston location of Insomnia Cookies, demanding the reinstatement with back pay of union organizer and bicycle delivery “driver,” Tasia Edmonds. On March 9 the company suspended Edmonds without pay for a month, alleging insubordination, while the union maintains she was disciplined for her union-building efforts.

Workers, community allies, and others rallied in front of the store imageDylan's Candy Bar Workers Rally for Better Hours, Pay, & Respect 02:09 Sat 02 Nov by Stephanie Basile 0 comments

Dylan's Candy Bar workers staged a lively rally outside the store's flagship location Wednesday night.

portland.jpg imageSolidarity networks spread as a new alternative to ‘alternative labor’ 01:04 Tue 29 Oct by Shane B 0 comments

Here is a look at the new campaign of the Portland Solidarity Network, and how their organizing format provides a new avenue for alternative labor.

porter.jpg imageAnarchists and Wobblies Support Striking Refuelers at Toronto Island Airport 22:33 Wed 27 Feb by Paul M 0 comments

The IWW and members of Common Cause Toronto have been hitting the picket lines in support of striking refuelers employed by Porter Fixed Base Operations (FBO) at the Toronto Island airport. The strike has been bravely fought by a mere 22 workers fed up with unsafe working conditions and low wages.

textReport From Right To Work for Less Protest in Michigan 04:00 Sat 22 Dec by David 0 comments

I started the day feeling pessimistic about what would happen and even though on the whole, people came, yelled and then went home, I was a lot more encouraged by the days events than I thought I’d be.

That said, let me be clear that this is an accounting of the days events and not any sort of feeling of victory or satisfaction with the business unions’ approach or their marriage to the democratic party. This is an attempt to describe what I was seeing glimpses of, piece that are present, just below the surface in spite of the unions’ backwards ways.

This bill is only possible because most of the unions have not been organizing, have been acting in the interests of the bosses as much as in the interests of workers and have wed themselves almost completely to the democratic party, who hasn’t really given them a thing in several decades. I don’t dispute any of that and have had my share of experiences with unions that make me sick to my stomach. That said, I think it is incorrect to write them off as obsolete, having run their course or irrelevant. The hundreds of thousands of people who participate in their unions, despite their problems don’t think so and I think it is a mistake to dismiss those sentiments and commitments. That was demonstrated pretty well in what I saw on Tuesday.

domino.jpg imageSolidarity Callout - Domino's Pizza Drivers Dispute 12:59 Mon 27 Aug by Dominos Workers Solidarity Campaign 3 comments

September 15, 2012 north american Day of Solidarity with Aussie Dominos Pizza Drivers.

apmadison.jpg imageArizona set to abolish public unions 19:40 Mon 06 Feb by John Jacobsen 0 comments

Arizona state employees’ unions were caught off guard this week with news that the state’s Republican-controlled Senate was passing a series of bills which, amongst other provisions, would completely ban unions from engaging in any negotiation which affects the terms of a person's employment with State, county or city government. [Italiano]

mayday.jpg imageWorkers Solidarity Alliance - On Labor Day 23:15 Sat 03 Sep by W.S.A. Labor Commission 0 comments

W.S.A. Labor Commission US Labor Day Statement

more >>

imageSeize the Hospitals! ...But How? Aug 01 by BRRN Labor Committee 3 comments

In May of 2023 several Black Rose / Rosa Negra (BRRN) militants organizing in the healthcare sector attended the Health Autonomy Convergence (HAC) in Durham, North Carolina. This is their collective reflection on and analysis of the event and of the prospects for radical labor organizing in healthcare more generally.

imageShut it Down! Jun 14 by Kdog 0 comments

But what will it take to win against this Death Star of a corporation? We need a direct action workers movement, directly controlled by its members, willing to spread the struggle beyond the shackles of labor law, and beyond the confines of the contract.

image“Sharing the pains, indignities and anger” Mar 10 by Miriam 1 comments

This is an interesting interview with our comrade Miriam (M1 Detroit) on her history of “Industrialization” with her organization at the time the Revolutionary Socialist League. “Industrialization” was the term that the Left used to describe the strategy of getting mainly University and counter-culture youth activists to commit to point-of-production organizing in factories as part of the working-class. It was different than what is today known as “salting” – as “Industrialization” was not usually seen as a short-term stint around a specific campaign, but rather a long-term commitment to building a revolutionary presence in the class.

imageThe state of the union is …unequal Jan 30 by Mike Harris 1 comments

Direct action and workplace organization rather than legislation will end inequality

imageWhich way forward for Ontario teachers? Mar 20 by Richard R 0 comments

It has been over a month since the Ontario Federation of Labour (OFL) held their one-day protest of the provincial Liberal Party leadership convention, mobilizing some 15,000 people on the streets of Toronto and then sending them all home again around 4:00 PM. The protest was part of the trade union response to Bill 115, which enabled the provincial government to circumvent collective bargaining and mandate the terms of new “collective agreements”. [Italiano]

more >>

imageA free film screening Apr 13 Anarkismo 0 comments

The documentary Palikari: Louis Tikas and the Ludlow Massacre (2014, Nickos Ventouras) narrates one of the “bleakest and blackest” chapters in American labor history, the Ludlow Massacre.
A 101 years earlier, on April 20, 1914, in Ludlow, Colorado, USA, a strike for basic labor rights by exploited miners and their families, mostly immigrants, was violently ended by state militia. In the fight, the strikers’ tent colony was machine-gunned and burned to the ground, leaving over twenty people dead, including women and children.

imageDylan's Candy Bar Workers Rally for Better Hours, Pay, & Respect Nov 02 Retail, Wholesale & Department Store Union 0 comments

Dylan's Candy Bar workers staged a lively rally outside the store's flagship location Wednesday night.

imageSolidarity Callout - Domino's Pizza Drivers Dispute Aug 27 3 comments

September 15, 2012 north american Day of Solidarity with Aussie Dominos Pizza Drivers.

imageWorkers Solidarity Alliance - On Labor Day Sep 03 W.S.A. 0 comments

W.S.A. Labor Commission US Labor Day Statement

imageUnfazed by near tie, Jimmy John’s Workers vow to continue campaign Oct 23 Industrial Workers of the World 0 comments

Workers report widespread illegal activity by company

more >>
© 2005-2024 Anarkismo.net. Unless otherwise stated by the author, all content is free for non-commercial reuse, reprint, and rebroadcast, on the net and elsewhere. Opinions are those of the contributors and are not necessarily endorsed by Anarkismo.net. [ Disclaimer | Privacy ]