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About Northwest labor press. (Portland , Ore.) 1987-current | View Entire Issue (March 15, 2013)
Schwarz retires from AFT-Oregon after 24 years In a Salem parking lot outside the office of the Oregon Employment Relations Board, Oregon State University graduate assistants celebrate, joining hands to sing “Solidarity Forever.” Graduate research assistants voted by a 9-to-1 margin to join American Federation of Teachers. (Photo by Matt Loewen.) OSU graduate research assistants unionize CORVALLIS — Graduate research assistants at Oregon State University have won union representation. Over- coming administrative opposition and legal obstacles, they voted 287 to 32 to join American Federation of Teachers (AFT) in ballots counted March 8. The 781-member group joins an ex- isting bargaining unit of about 900 graduate teaching assistants, known as AFT Local 6069. The research assistants are graduate students who get full scholarships and a stipend in exchange for helping fac- ulty conduct research. Last year, they turned in union authorization cards signed by nearly 500 graduate research assistants, but the OSU administration argued that they’re students, not public employees. The Oregon Employment Relations Board disagreed, and sched- uled an election. Local 6069 President Wren Keturi said the union hopes to soon start ne- gotiating additions to Local 6069’s contract, which runs through mid- 2016. The research assistants are likely to seek cost-of-living increases and pro- tected leave, Keturi said; teaching as- sistants are allowed to take time off during winter, spring and summer breaks, but research assistants don’t currently have that right. Richard “Dick” Schwarz retired af- ter four decades in the labor movement and 24 years as executive director of American Federation of Teachers (AFT) Oregon. His last day was Feb. 28. During his tenure, AFT-Oregon helped Oregon School Employees As- sociation affiliate with AFT’s national organization, and teamed up with Ore- gon Education Association (OEA) in a civil racketeering lawsuit that brought down perennial union foe Bill Size- more. Richard Schwarz, 66, a self-de- scribed army brat, grew up in Germany, Illinois, Texas, and Missouri. He earned an honorary commission as a Junior ROTC cadet major. But opposition to the Vietnam War led him later to be- come a draft resister. He refused induc- tion, until a motorcycle accident made that moot. After graduating from University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1970 with a philosophy degree, Schwarz worked as a part-time general assignment and po- lice beat reporter at the Wisconsin State Journal. When the paper’s inde- pendent union began contract negotia- tions, he volunteered to serve on the bargaining committee, and later was elected union president. But he was let go by the paper’s management. Schwarz then worked as a stringer for Associated Press and the Milwaukee Sentinel. In 1978 he was hired by the Wis- consin Nurses Association as a field representative. When AFT set up its health care di- vision in 1979, it hired Schwarz to help set up locals in several states. His first organizing campaign, at St. on the 2000 ballot. Francis hospital in The initiative was in- Milwaukee, Wiscon- tended by Sizemore sin, lost by five votes, to bleed public em- but management la- ployee union treasur- bor law violations led ies, and indeed they the National Labor spent buckets of Relations Board to money to defeat it. In overturn that result 2002, a jury found the and order bargaining Sizemore organiza- to commence. tions had committed Schwarz moved a pattern of fraud and to Oregon in 1981. forgery. The judge He remained with R ICHARD S CHWARZ awarded over $2 mil- AFT 33 years, in- cluding five years as assistant director lion in damages, and later issued an in- of the organizing department for na- junction that tied Sizemore’s hands tional AFT’s health care division, and from committing further abuses. three years as a field rep for AFT in Schwarz credits the lawsuit for ending abuses in Oregon’s initiative system; Oregon. When Reagan appointees to the Na- exposures during the trial led voters to tional Labor Relations Board made it pass a union-backed reform measure harder for unions to form appropriate that year that ended the per-signature bargaining units in health care, bounty in initiative campaigns. During his tenure, AFT-Oregon Schwarz helped craft the AFL-CIO’s response, which eventually prevailed grew from 5,000 members to about 15,000, adding units of university and in federal court. In 1988, he was assigned to help community college faculty and staff AFT members during a strike at Kaiser and graduate students at Oregon State Permanente. Besides AFT’s nurse and University. Schwarz says he never gave any health professional affiliate, members of Oregon Nurses Association and thought to quitting, despite organized United Food and Commercial Workers labor’s ups and downs. “I’m a Cub fan,” he said. “There’s also struck. The strike lasted 58 days. Schwarz became AFT-Oregon’s always tomorrow. To last in this move- ment, you have to accept the notion of first executive director in 1989. In 1990 and 2000, he was sent to incremental gains.” In retirement, Schwarz says he Bulgaria to assist newly-independent plans to reintroduce himself to his trade unions. In 2001, Schwarz led AFT to join wife, Judy, who retired last June as a the OEA suit against Bill Sizemore’s medical social worker at Oregon ballot measure operation, in which the Health and Science University. The plaintiffs charged that fraud and for- two live in Northwest Portland along gery were used to qualify an initiative with two miniature schnausers. Blues Festival April 13 to benefit Health Care for All-Oregon Health Care for All-Oregon is throwing a party on Saturday, April 13, at the Melody Ballroom, 615 SE Alder, Portland. The Inner City Blues Festival: “Healing the Healthcare Blues” — In the Groove of Love will feature some of the Northwest’s biggest blues stars for a night of music that will benefit the work of the statewide coalition Health Care for All-Oregon for universal, af- fordable health care for all Oregonians. Included in the program are: • Richard Arnold “Tribute to the Crooners;” • LaRhonda Steele and Andy Stokes “Motown Songbook;” • Norman Sylvester Band with Ben Rice, “Blues Stains on my Hands;” • DK Stewart Band “Tribute to Etta James;” • Lloyd Allen Band “Portland Blues Legend;” • Shoehorn “Tap Dancing Sax Man;” • Mad as Hell Doctors “Mad Min- utes;” • Steve Cheseborough “Acoustic PAGE 8 Blues.” Masters of ceremonies for the evening are Paul Knauls, former owner of legendary blues/jazz clubs Geneva’s and the Cotton Club, and Renee Mitchell, former columnist for the Ore- gonian. For more information about the In- ner City Blues Festival and Health Care for All-Oregon go to: www.hcao.org. To purchase tickets on line go to www.tickettomato.com. NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS MARCH 15, 2013