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About Northwest labor press. (Portland , Ore.) 1987-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 2012)
...YEAR IN REVIEW: Top labor stories of 2011 (From Page 1) business-as-usual. In Portland, while the occupation of two downtown squares drew carping about mess and for attracting the home- less, union support for the camp and ideas it represented never publicly wa- vered. The downtown camp was evicted by police Nov. 13 after 37 days of oc- cupation, but the idea of occupation moved on to banks, a bridge, and ports. An Occupy revival seems likely in 2012. In Wisconsin, protest energy suc- ceeded in recalling two of six targeted Republican state senators who voted for the anti-union bill, which took effect anyway. But voters in Ohio struck down — by better than a three-to-two margin — that state’s version of a law stripping public employee bargaining rights. For the trade union movement, there were other developments of na- tional note in 2011. • In April, a group of 43,000 trans- portation security officers at 450 air- ports voted to unionize, and in June se- lected American Federation of Government Employees over an inde- pendent union. • Also in April, National Labor Rela- tions Board dared to enforce federal la- bor law in a case involving Boeing, and all hell broke loose in Congress among Republicans. Evidence from top Boe- ing leaders was that the company had located its 787 Dreamliner final assem- bly in South Carolina expressly because union members had struck at its other locations; that’s against the law, and the NLRB brought Boeing before a federal judge. House Republicans called for re- peal of the law and tried to subpoena the agency’s legal strategies. But in De- cember, Boeing and the Machinists union buried the hatchet with a four- year contract extension that includes a pledge to locate some future assembly work at existing union facilities. • In August, 45,000 workers at Veri- zon’s East Coast land line operations went on strike for two weeks, returning to work when Verizon pledged to re- sume bargaining with Communications Workers of America. Five months later, the workers are still without a union contract. In the Portland area, the economy wasn’t bleak for all workers: Many building trades union members got back to work in 2011 — building a $4 billion chip plant for Intel, a $344 million hos- pital for Kaiser Permanente, and per- forming a $144 million renovation of the Edith Green Wendell Wyatt Fed- eral Building. In October, Daimler Trucks North America began adding several hundred workers at its Portland truck plant. Other local stories of note: • Starting in January, members of Amalgamated Transit Union Local 757 began picketing outside all meetings of TriMet’s board of directors after the transit agency halted cost-of-living wage increases and started taking money out of workers’ paychecks to cover a portion of their health insurance costs. The union contract expired Nov. 30, 2009, and the sides were awaiting an arbitrator’s ruling on several unfair labor practice complaints when TriMet unilaterally implemented the changes. The sides are still waiting for the state arbitrator’s decision. • A fired pro-union teacher at private Portland French School won rein- statement in a case with the National Labor Relations Board, only to see all 40 employees lose their jobs when the partially unionized school shut down in May. The non-profit school had a his- tory of bad financial practices, but may have been pushed over the edge by the $170,000 in legal bills to oppose a cam- paign to join American Federation of Teachers. • It was a bad year for long-time union foe Bill Sizemore. In March, a judge tossed out his lawsuit against sev- eral unions and union-supported groups for calling him a racketeer. “The court finds that it could be reasonably inferred that Bill Sizemore was a ‘convicted racketeer,’ the judge wrote in his deci- sion. Then in August, Sizemore spent 18 days in jail for not filing tax returns — presumably to shield income from (Turn to Page 10) JANUARY 6, 2012 NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS PAGE 9