Delegation from Vermont Workers' Center/Jobs with Justice meets with Sen. Bernie Sanders.
Last week was an exhilarating week for Caring Across Generations! In the lead up to Mothers’ Day, we asked you and thousands of others to honor mothers everywhere by taking action to make quality care available to everyone. And together, we did just that!
On May 5, we launched our new website and sent a powerful new video on the campaign to tens of thousands of people across the country.
On May 6-7, we brought more than 100 people representing 26 different states together for a congressional briefing in Washington, D.C. Together we shared powerful testimony and held more than 40 meetings with Senators. Resolutions were introduced in both the House and Senate that call for a solution to the long-term care crises our families face and a transformation of the way we care for each other in this country.
Hundreds of workers walked out of their fast food jobs at over 30 locations this past week. Workers walked out for better pay, respect on the job, and the right to form a union.
St. Louis Jobs with Justice Student Co-Chair Rasheen Aldridge works at Jimmy John’s and has been a leader in the new St. Louis Can’t Survive on $7.35 campaign. He said:
Starting today, we’re standing up to huge corporations like Jimmy John’s, Subway, Panera, and more to make it stop. We’re demanding a living wage and the respect that we deserve, and we need to make sure that they – and all of St. Louis – get our message.
Last week, 99% Power launched the shareholder spring with a week of action targeting Wells Fargo, Walmart, Bank of America and Sallie Mae as key examples of how the corporate 1% devastate our communities, lives, and the planet. The week of action demanded that these corporations renegotiate their debts to workers, homeowners, students and the environment.
The next day, workers at Walmart held their first national day of action since last year’s historic Black Friday strikes. Hundreds of Walmart workers were joined by community allies for actions at 200 stores to demand that Walmart honor its public commitment to be more consistent, transparent, and fair in scheduling shifts and hours for workers. While members of Organization United for Respect (OUR Walmart) and community supporters leafleted customers, talked to workers, and met with store managers, over 10,000 people took action in solidarity online.
It’s May Day! Across the country, Jobs with Justice coalitions are celebrating by mobilizing with our community, labor, student, and faith partners in support of workers’ rights. Here’s some of the actions we know happening in the network...
We also wanted to share this very cool video courtesy of Progressive Workers Alliance, San Francisco Rising, Chinese Progressive Association in San Francisco! That's an incredible UNITY Chant right there!
In honor of May Day, our network of coalitions and allies are raising their voices this week at events across the country to prioritize workers’ rights for all in immigration reform. Click here to view our fact sheet summarizing the importance of worker protections in immigration reform.
This summer, the national movement to make change at Walmart will take a giant step forward. In the tradition of the 1964 Freedom Summer and the UFW’s grape boycott, a deeply committed group of labor, student and community supporters will spend the summer building local OUR Walmart and Making Change at Walmart (MCAW) support teams across the country that demonstrate the broad, growing movement calling on Walmart to change. The program will run from June 15th - Labor Day.
What we will accomplish:
Reach 100,000 Walmart workers and add 200,000 activists to the MCAW network.
Mobilize 30,000 activists to take part in Labor Day Actions at 2,000 stores.
Identify and engage 5,000 supporters who commit to organize Black Friday events, to recruit others and to take monthly online and in-person actions.
Train 200 highly committed volunteers who will return to their local union, college or community organizations with new skills and organize ongoing support for OUR Walmart and MCAW.
Develop local support teams equipped to anchor Black Friday mobilizations and other labor/social justice campaigns.
Immigrant care workers support millions of our country’s seniors and people with disabilities. Consumers uniquely understand that a roadmap to citizenship for the careworkers they rely on. To that end, the Caring Across Generations campaign organized a powerful army of consumers on Capitol Hill to advocate for the importance of immigration reform on April 16.
Last May, Georgia Labor Commissioner, Mark Butler, unilaterally decided to deny access to unemployment benefits to about 64,000 contracted bus drivers, custodians, crossing guards and cafeteria workers.
Since then, Atlanta Jobs with Justice has lead the Justice for School Workers campaign demanding that Commissioner Butler reinstate their unemployment benefits. Throughout the year, workers and supporters have spoken out, demonstrated, and petitioned for their benefits. On the evening on Thursday, April 4, 2013 the historic anniversary of Dr. King's assassination, the workers won a massive victory in the State of GA!
Check out the victory announcement from Atlanta Jobs with Justice here.
We know that now is the time to make sure that immigration reform works for workers, not just corporations. Immigration reform can raise standards for all workers if policymakers make sure that first-class citizenship is accessible for all, making worker organizing stronger now and in the future!
We will be forming a Jobs with Justice contingent to raise up the voices of workers on the value of citizenship at the April 10th Citizenship for 11 Million Rally in Washington, DC, and we invite you to join us and our friends from the We Belong Together Campaign to meet up before the rally.
What: Job with Justice Meet Up Point for A10 Rally Where: SE corner of Lower Senate Park, 1st Street NE & C Street NE When: April 10th, 2:15 pm How: Look for JwJ signs!
Please email Natalie if you have any questions or to let us know that you are joining: natalie@jwj.org. Look forward to seeing you there!
Jobs with Justice is a national network of local coalitions that bring together labor unions, faith groups, community organizations, and student activists to fight for working people. Our members are in the streets in 46 cities in 24 states across the country.
Contact
1616 P Street NW Suite 150 Washington, DC 20036 tel: (202) 393-1044 | fax: (202) 822-2168