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About Northwest labor press. (Portland , Ore.) 1987-current | View Entire Issue (July 5, 2019)
NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS | BUILDING COMMUNITY Donations reach $227,680 for families of ironworkers killed in Seattle crane collapse An outpouring of sup- Shortly after the port for two ironwork- accident, Ironwork- ers killed in an April 27 ers USA Credit tower crane collapse in Union put out the downtown Seattle has call for donations to raised $227,680 for the help the families. surviving families. Money came pour- The mishap took the ing in from iron- lives of Travis Corbet, a workers, contractors, member of Portland Travis Corbet and trade unionists from 22 states. One Iron Workers Local 29, and Andrew Yoder, a member hundred percent of the dona- of Seattle Iron Workers Local tions go directly to the families. “I think this is an amazing 86. Corbet, 33, was a newlywed show of support and love,” from Oregon City just getting said Teri Robinson, CEO of Ironworkers USA Credit ready to start a family. Yoder, 31, was married and Union. “This is another perfect the father of two sons, ages 5 example of People Helping and UNION and 3. He lived in North Bend, People Washington, but had ties to STRONG. The brotherhood Oregon, having been raised in and sisterhood shown has re- ally touched my heart!” Silverton. July 5, 2019 | PAGE 3 Local letter carriers gather 23 tons of food National Association of Letter Carriers (NALC) Branch 82 col- lected 465,845 pounds of food in the one-day Stamp Out Hunger food drive on May 11. In Clark County, Washington, NALC Branch 1104 brought in 122,405 pounds of food. Both numbers are down from the previous year: -2.7% in Oregon and - 16.5% in Clark County. The two locals also took in $15,374.65 in cash donations. The Stamp Out Hunger food drive started 27 years ago in a partnership be- tween NALC and the U.S. Postal Service. Other labor part- ners include the AFL-CIO and United Food and Commercial Workers. On the second Satur- day in May, letter carriers—in addition to their regular work- load—collect nonperishable food products left at mailboxes Teamsters Local 162 members Bill Martinmass and Greg Hampton joined re- tired IBEW Local 48 member John Vandermosten (right) sorting and boxing food donations at the Gresham, Oregon Post Office. That location collected 15,972 pounds of food. After the food was boxed up, Martinmaas and Hampton, who are employed at Fred Meyer, loaded it onto 18-wheel trucks and hauled it to the Oregon Food Bank, where it gets distributed to families in need. by participating residents in more than 10,000 cities across the country. It’s the largest one- day food drive in the world. Last year, the food drive brought in 71.6 million pounds of food na- tionwide. National results for this year have not been released. GREENING OUT THE OHSU BOARD. More than 100 members and supporters of AFSCME Local 328 marched into the June 27 meeting of the Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU) board of directors. They were there to show their opposition to concessions in contract negotiations. The board wouldn’t give them an op- portunity to deliver a statement, so they sat in silent protest, then walked out when OHSU’s chief financial offi- cer got up to speak. He reported that OHSU’s operating income was “well above budget” at $140 million, with earnings at $56 million above budget. At the bargaining table, OHSU is proposing meager raises, takeaways on health insurance, and a new paid-time-off policy that would incentivize employees to work while sick. A life-saving school bus driver Amalgamated Transit Union Lo- children aboard on their way cal 757 member Deb Biel loves home, she was on Cornelius Pass her job as a school bus Road waiting for a driver, but at times her pause in oncoming outer-Northwest Port- traffic to turn left onto land route—with lots Kaiser Road. Checking of curvy two-lane her rear-view mirror as country roads—can be she’s trained to do dangerous. Biel, 65, is every eight seconds, a five-year employee she saw a double dump of First Student, trans- truck coming around a porting students to and blind curve behind her Deb Biel from Skyline K-8 at approximately 45 school in the Portland Public miles an hour. The narrow road School District. where she was stopped has no On June 6, with two dozen shoulder, just a few feet of grassy ground. Realizing that the truck wasn’t going to stop or even slow, she accelerated into the center of the road, giving the truck just enough room to pass her on the right. Her action stopped traffic in front of her, and she was pretty shaken up, but her focus and reflexes may have saved lives. “The most important thing to stress is that all of us drivers need to remember our training,” Biel told the Labor Press. “Don’t become complacent, and don’t take anything for granted.”