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About Northwest labor press. (Portland , Ore.) 1987-current | View Entire Issue (March 16, 2007)
...Unionists’ obituaries (From Page 2) JOHN W. BOGGS SR. of Fairview, a retired member of Operating Engineers Local 701, died at age 78 on Feb. 25. He was born on July 3, 1928 in Morgantown, West Virginia. He served in the U.S. Navy in World War II and moved Gresham several years after the war. He later moved to Milton-Freewater in Eastern Oregon but returned to Gresham in the 1970s. He moved to Fairview in the 1990s. SURVIVORS INCLUDE his wife, the former Eloise Hudson, whom he mar- ried in 1950; a son, John, Jr.; a sister, Eleanor Weisz; and brothers O.J. and Franklin Memorial contributions can be sent to the American Heart Association. Funeral arrangements were by Bateman Carroll. ★★★ STANLEY D. DORNAN of Vancouver, Wash., a member of Portland-based Iron Workers Local 29, died Feb. 23 at age 65. A memorial service was conducted on March 2 at Omega Funeral and Cremation. He was born Aug. 12, 1941 in Webbers Falls, Okla. He served in the U.S. Army in the Vietnam War. Later, he moved to Vancouver. SURVIVORS INCLUDE his wife, Dorothy, whom he married in 1974; a daughter, Priscilla; a son, Robert; four grandchildren; his mother, Lola; and two sisters, Fran Meyer and Joyce Miller. ★★★ BLANCHE FEELY of Portland, a retired union grocery clerk, died at age 92 on Feb. 8. She had worked for Safeway and Albertsons as a member of Retail Clerks Local 1092, which later became part of United Food and Commercial Workers Local 555. She was born on Sept. 24, 1914 in Tidewater, Ore.; and later lived in Brownsville before moving to Portland in 1939. She married Cyrus McAllister in 1934; they later divorced. She married Robert H. Feely in 1970; he died in 1985. SURVIVORS INCLUDE a son, Gerald McAllister; a brother, Cedric Williamson; a sister, Irene Fee; and nieces and nephews. Remembrances can be sent to the Doernbecher Children’s Hospital Founda- tion. Riverview Abbey handled funeral arrangements. ★★★ GLENN E. GREGORY, a retired member of Portland-headquartered Sheet Metal Workers Local 16, died on Feb. 9 at age 89. He was born on April 8, 1917 in Index, Wash. He moved to Portland in 1953 and went to work in the sheet metal trade as a member of Local 16. He later served as a business agent for the union. HE MARRIED Ella B. Reniker in the late 1930s, she died in 2004. Survivors include his daughters, Jan Nerison and Jeanne L. Warren, four grand- children and four great-grandchildren. Memorial contributions can be sent to the American Cancer Society. Funeral arrangements were handled by American Burial and Cremation. ★★★ HARROLD GLENN JOHNSTON of Portland, a retired member of Ma- chinists Auto Mechanics Local 1005, died Feb. 24 of Alzheimer’s disease at age 80. He was born on Aug. 21, 1926 in Portland. He graduated from Roosevelt High School. He served in the U.S. Army in World War II and later lived in Los Ange- les before returning to Portland in 1962. He worked as a Local 1005 member at the Freightliner truck manufacturing plant on Swan Island for 28 years. SURVIVORS INCLUDE his wife, Marjorie, whom he married in 1952, two daughters, Kim Peil and Lauren Fox; a son, Randy, a sister, Marci Juarez, six grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. Contributions can be sent to the Alzheimer’s Association. Affordable Funeral Alternatives handled funeral arrangements. ★★★ DAVID WILLIAM OLNEY of Oregon City, a retired member of Operating Engineers Local 701, died Feb. 22 at age 74. A memorial service for hin was held March 1 at Grand View Baptist Church in Beavercreek. He was born on Nov. 28, 1932 in Portland. His family later moved to Colton where he grew up. He lived in Colton until moving to Oregon City last year. He worked as a heavy equipment operator for about 30 years. SURVIVORS INCLUDE his wife, Darl, whom he married in 1953; three daughters, Theresa Olney, Julie Olney and Jenny Hopkins; five sons, Jeffrey, Mike, Tony, Nick and Charlie; a sister, Mary Wheeler; 30 grandchildren and five great- grandchildren. Funeral arrangements were handled by Family Memorial. MARCH 16, 2007 ...9/11 rescuers suffering from ill health 9/11 illnesses. The Victims’ Com- in nearby buildings where toxic de- (From Page 10) pensation Fund, open only to fami- bris and gases wafted into rooms and two young children. “They were no lies who lost kin in the terrorist at- heating, ventilation and air condi- more than 8 years old, trying to tacks, and which is now closed, climb in the coffin to say goodbye to tioning systems. should be reopened and extended to The federal government’s re- Daddy,” Sferazo said, with tears in the other victims, they added. sponse to their plight? A Bush his eyes and a choked voice. “Individuals who are now suffer- budget proposal for $25 million this Part of the rasp in Sferazo’s voice ing from 9/11 health effects were re- is from the ailments he contracted as year for follow-up study of the vic- sponding to an act of war against tims — just enough to keep two of one of the thousands of workers this nation. The government is re- the three treatment centers for them from around the country who spent sponsible for assisting them, but operational. The money would go to months picking through and sorting New York City cannot bear the re- the city Fire Department, which lost the debris of the Twin Towers, sponsibility on its own, espe- dubbed “The Pile.” Workers loaded debris onto trucks and fer- ...victims of 9/11 want recognition cially for those who aided New York in its time of need ries and carted it off to the Staten of their ills, especially by a but now live in other states,” Island landfill without any pro- government that told them it was declared Linda Gibbs, the tection for their bodies — and es- deputy mayor for pecially their lungs. Now they’re safe to work on ‘The Pile’ without city’s health and co-chair of its paying the price. breathing apparatus or masks. World Trade Center health “I’m typical of the others who panel, which produced last stayed 29-32 days at the site. My year’s report. The city wants medical conditions are reactive a permanent dedicated fund to help 343 union firefighters in the attacks, airway disease, restrictive airway pay the health care costs of the vic- and to Mt. Sinai Hospital, which disease, sinusitis, continual lung in- tims. treats other first responders — but fections, post-traumatic stress disor- Besides the money, the continu- not those who dug into “The Pile” der, anxiety, depression, sleep ap- ing victims of 9/11 want recognition later, nor the kids nor community nea” and gastric diseases, the residents. They’re treated at Bellevue of their ills, especially by a govern- now-disabled Sferazo told a House ment that told them it was safe to Hospital, which gets none of the Oversight and Government Opera- work on “The Pile” without breath- funds. tions subcommittee. ing apparatus or masks. That’s why And Bush officials told lawmak- City medical and civic officials Sferazo, Bethea and the others hold also testified that the Bush Adminis- ers they are concentrating on docu- the Bush Administration responsible menting data of long-range health tration harmed clean-up workers for their ills. effects of 9/11 so future claims are twice in the aftermath of 9/11: Once “If I am to be the voice of the re- legitimate and victims who become by saying the air was safe to breathe sponder,” the now-disabled Sferazo ill in coming years will really have at “Ground Zero” without masks been sickened by the toxic gases and rasped, “then I am outraged by the and then by short-changing pro- lack of responsibility and loss of ob- grams to deal with their health prob- particles. ligation this Administration has to- That’s not good enough, union lems. wards us. We are clearly being members and other witnesses told A study by the city released late shown that we are expendable. the subcommittee. The city report last year said 681,000 people could George Bush came to the Trade estimates that between $250 million be affected. That includes workers Center and told us ‘We will never and $393 million will be needed to on “The Pile,” lower Manhattan resi- forget.’…Well, we feel he forgot.” treat all the victims of subsequent dents, school children and workers Workers want unions more than ever By ROSS EISENBREY Today, more than at any time in the recent past, American workers want to join unions and have unions represent them in the workplace. In 1984, about a third of nonunion workers wanted a union to represent them, while two-thirds said they would definitely or probably vote against forming a union. As shown in the figure at right, by 2005, nearly the opposite was true: 53 percent of nonunion workers wanted a union and only a little more than a third said they would vote against a union. According to new survey research by Richard Freeman of Harvard Uni- versity that combines results from both union and nonunion private sector workers, “if workers were provided the union representation they desired in 2005, then the unionization rate would be about 58 percent” almost eight times higher than the actual rate of 7.4 percent, and considerably higher than the 44 percent found in polls from the mid-1990s. NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS Nonunion worker likely vote in a union representation election, Hart polls, 1984-2004 70 65 60 55 Percent Let me say this about that or probably Definitely or Definitely probably vote vote against forming a union against forming a union 50 45 40 35 Definitely or probably vote Definitely or probably vote for for forming forming a union a union 30 25 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 Source: Accociates, various various 1984. year’s Those data are TK. from Harris TK. SOURCE: Hart Hart Research Research Associates, polls, polls, except except 1984. Those data year’s are from Harris These results track a significant im- provement in the general public per- ception of unions. While a majority of the public has always approved of unions and a minority disapproved, the gap between approval and disapproval grew from about 20 points in 1981 to 43 points in 2005, the largest gap be- tween approval and disapproval of unions ever recorded in the Gallup and Hart Research polls. Americans approve of unions and want unions to represent them. Only employer hostility and inadequate laws keep employees from having the union representation they want. Further discussion of this topic can be found in the briefing paper, “Do Workers Still Want Unions? More Than Ever,” at www.sharedprosper- ity.org. (Editor’s Note: Ross Eisenbrey is vice president and policy director for the Economic Policy Institute.) PAGE 11