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About Northwest labor press. (Portland , Ore.) 1987-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 16, 2018)
SERVING ORGANIZED LABOR IN OREGON AND SOUTHWEST WASHINGTON SINCE 1900 NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS VOLUME 119, NUMBER 20 IN THIS ISSUE MULTNOMAH COUNTY OPPOSES UNION CAMPAIGN On-call and temp workers want to join AFSCME. | Page 3 UNIONIZING AT CASCADIA BEHAVIORAL HEALTH 270 workers will now be in AFSCME. | Page 3 Meeting Notices p.6 County Courthouse Tops Out p.8 PORTLAND, OREGON NOVEMBER 16, 2018 ELECTION 2018: A night of wins for working people Around the nation and in Oregon and Washington, union political efforts bore fruit election night. By Don McIntosh THE RETURN OF A DEMOCRATIC HOUSE While most Americans didn’t vote on Nov. 6, the estimated 114 million who did deliv- ered control of the U.S. House of Represen- tatives to Democrats for the first time in eight years. Whether or not it was a refer- endum on the Trump administration, it was a clear rejection of his party after Republi- cans passed the biggest corporate tax cut ever and tried but failed to repeal the Af- fordable Care Act. Come January, Democ- rats’ new 228-207 majority in the House will mean deadlock or compromise in Congress for the next two years. That means any fur- ther plans by Republicans to repeal the Af- fordable Care Act or monkey with “entitle- ments” like Social Security are moot. It’s unclear whether Democrats will cooperate to pass Trump’s slightly improved NAFTA re- placement agreement with Canada and Mexico. With Republicans still in control of the Senate and White House, Democrats won’t be able to pass their own legislation, but they willbe able to model what a future Democratic Congress could deliver. Let’s hope that includes labor’s agenda of a higher minimum wage, infrastructure in- Rauner, a private equity fund billionaire who attacked public employee union members and their pensions immediately after taking office as Illinois governor in 2015. It was his federal lawsuit against public employee unions that became the notorious Janus v AFSCME case — in which the U.S. Supreme Court made America a “right-to-work” nation for public employees. Rauner was defeated by billionaire Democrat J.B. Pritzker in a campaign in which both candidates spent a considerable part of their fortune: Pritzker spent $175 million, and Rauner $50 million. A UNION ORGANIZER GOES TO CON- GRESS Michigan voters elected a former union organizer to Congress. Andy Levin helped unionize health care workers into SEIU in the mid ‘80s, and later served on President Bill Clinton’s labor law reform commission. At the national AFL-CIO, he set up the Union Summer and Voice@Work As Portland-area Democrats gathered at union-represented Hilton Hotel, it was Oregon AFL-CIO chief of staff Graham programs, and lobbied Congress to pass the Trainor who announced the night’s big news: the re-election of Governor Kate Brown. Employee Free Choice Act. Now he’ll serve in the U.S. House of Representatives, in the vestment, and an easier path to a union. Rauner. Walker famously stripped Republican nomination for president. Southeast Michigan seat formerly held by Wisconsin voters finally had enough of SAYONARA, SCOTT WALKER, AND BYE- Wisconsin public employees of their his father, Sander Levin. collective bargaining rights in 2010, and his one-two combo of slashing corporate BYE TO BRUCE RAUNER The 2018 ‘IRONSTACHE’ COMES UP SHORT Union taxes and public school budgets, and election had many sweet results for union later signed an anti-union right-to-work ironworker Randy “Ironstache” Bryce failed law and a repeal of the prevailing wage. voted by a narrow margin to elect state members, but perhaps none sweeter to win the seat vacated by Republican He then touted that anti-union record in school superintendent Tony Evers, a than the defeat of Wisconsin governor his failed 2016 campaign for the former school teacher. Then there was Scott Walker and Illinois governor Bruce Turn to Page 2 UA Local 290 retiree gives $500,000 to Shriners Hospital By Michael Gutwig SPRINGFIELD, Ore.—More than 30 years after retiring, a working man who found success as a union welder is giving back in a very big way. Duke Mitchell — a member of United Associa- tion of Plumbers and Fitters Lo- cal 290 — gave $500,000 to the Shriners Hospitals for Children. The donation was made Nov. 5 at Local 290’s Springfield training center, with several retired union brothers in attendance. “This is not a common occur- rence,” said Kathy Park, director of development for Shriners Hos- pital-Portland. Shriners Hospitals for Children is an international nonprofit network of medical centers that specializes in care for children with orthopedic condi- tions, burns, spinal cord injuries, and cleft lip and palate, regardless of the families’ ability to pay. Care is provided for newborns up to age 18. The Portland medical center boasts the largest team of pediatric orthopedic surgeons (12) in the Pacific Northwest. Mitchell, 96, isn’t a Shriner, and he wasn’t familiar with the organization until a few months ago, when he saw a story about all the good things they do for children. Mitchell said he and his wife of 72 years, Lucy Marie, often talked about donating some of their money to a good cause, but they hadn’t decided on anything when she died in 2014. After learning about the Shriners, Mitchell knew immedi- ately where the money should go. “My God, that’s the greatest UA Local 290 retiree Duke Mitchell worked, saved, and invested, and now, at 96, has set an extraordinary example of giving. thing in the world you could do, — helping those little kids,” he said. “What could you do that would be any greater than that? Nothing! Nothing!” Duke Mitchell grew up in poverty, living out of a car in Texas during the Great Depres- sion with 11 sisters and his mother and father. He learned to weld as a young man in Kansas. He joined the Chemical Workers Union in 1957 in New Mexico, and traveled the country building chemical plants and industrial mills. He landed in Springfield in 1960, where he joined what then was Fitters Local 481 (plumbers and fitters locals merged to form United Association Local 290 in July 1985). Mitchell served on the union’s Executive Board and on numerous volunteer commit- tees, including bargaining com- mittees. “Joining the union was the greatest thing that ever happened to me,” Mitchell said. Working under a union con- tract meant good benefits, a pen- sion, job security, and good wages, Mitchell said — enough to take care of his wife and three children, with enough left over to invest in the stock market. Turn to Page 7