TNG logo hyperlinked to TNG web site

Click TNG logo above to visit
our international parent union.

WBNG.org Logo

The Guild Forum Online

Electronic Newsletter of the Washington-Baltimore Newspaper Guild, TNG-CWA Local 32035

Dec. 1 , 2003

In This Issue:


Workers’ Rights Are Human Rights!
International Human Rights Day, December 10, 2003

December 10, 2003 marks the 55 th anniversary of International Human Rights Day. This year, American Labor Unions are exposing the hard fact that in the USA, employers suppress workers’ freedom to form unions.

When workers can’t form unions, we all pay a price.

More workers in more unions means a stronger economy and higher living standards. Workers who form and join unions clearly have a higher standard of living. Unionized workers:

  • Earn an average of 26 percent more than workers who don’t have a union.
  • 69% of union workers have guaranteed pensions compared with only 14% of non-union workers.
  • 75% of union workers get health benefits compared with 49% of non-union workers.

American workers want to be union members, because union representation and collective bargaining provide clear and unmistakable advantages to workers!

But workers are NOT free to form unions in the United States.

Employers launch relentless and often brutal attacks when workers try to form unions:

Ninety-two percent of private employers, when faced with employees who want to join together in a union, force employees to attend closed-door meetings to hear anti-union propaganda (Wal-Mart, for one).

Seventy-five percent hire outside consultants to run anti-union campaigns, often based on mass psychology and distorting the law.

Half of employers threaten to shut down if employees join together in a union.

In twenty-five percent of organizing campaigns, employers illegally fire workers because they want to form a union.

Even after workers successfully form a union, in one-third of the instances, employers never negotiate a contract.

Why do bosses fight so hard to keep their employees from unionizing?

The same reason they fight so hard to weaken, and even destroy, existing unions: They want complete control over their employees, including pay, benefits, working conditions, and the ability to discipline and dismiss at will.

  • That’s why the Journal Papers fired 8 pro-union employees last December, just days before the employees were to vote on whether they wanted union representation. The federal labor law did not protect these workers. It took nine months to get a
The Guild Forum is published by the Washington-Baltimore Newspaper Guild, 1100 15th St. NW, Suite 350, Washington, D.C.20005-1707. Tel.: 202-785-3650.

Web Site: www.wbng.org

WBNG is Local 35 of The Newspaper Guild, Local 32035 of the Communications Workers of America, AFL-CIO, CLC. WBNG is solely responsible for Guild Forum content.

Next content deadline: Jan. 6, 2004.

LOCAL 35 OFFICERS
President: Bill Salganik
Salganik@comcast.net

Vice President: J. Darlene Meyer
dmeyer@wbng.org

Secretary: Bonnita Spikes
BonnitaSpikes@

Treasurer: Mark Pattison
Mpattison@catholicnews.com

WBNG STAFF
Lori Calderone, Administrative Officer
lcalderone@wbng.org

Rick Ehrmann, Local Representative
rehrmann@wbng.org

Cet Parks, Local Representative
cparks@wbng.org

Paul Reilly, Local Representative
preilly@wbng.org

Calvin Zon, Organizer
czon@wbng.org

Nancy Banks, Office Manager
nbanks@wbng.org

Elsie Thull, Bookkeeper
ethull@wbng.org

partial back pay settlement, and the employees were not reinstated. (See www.wbng.org/journal/journalntro.htm for the full story).

  • That’s why The Washington Post in the 70’s foisted an open shop on its employees--making union membership voluntary; open shops undermine union bargaining power, and since the 70’s the Post pay scales dropped from number 1 to number 20 among major newspapers. That’s why The Post during the last round of contract negotiations tried to remove the remaining vestige of union security.
  • That’s why Tribune, The Baltimore Sun’s corporate owner, during the 2002 contract talks, spent hundreds of thousand of dollars to import replacement workers to intimidate its employees into accepting concessions.

American workers are losing the freedom to form unions and bargain collectively. Without our unions, without MORE unionized workers in every industry, big corporations will force lower wages and benefits on their employees. Only a guarantee of workers’ rights to form and join unions without fear of retribution can stop that race to the bottom.


Help Expand And Protect Workers’ Rights To Form Unions

  • Get educated! Detailed information about the law, and documentation of the realities for American workers trying to form a union is at www.aflcio.org/aboutunions/voiceatwork/employerwar.cfm. And call your Guild representive to arrange a presentation about the cost to all American workers of the loss of freedom to form unions.
  • View at www.wbng.org a summary of legislation introduced in the Senate and House which will allow employees to choose freely whether to form a union by signing cards authorizing union representation, provide mediation and arbitration for first-contract disputes and establish stronger penalties for violation of employees’ rights when workers seek to form a union and during first-contract negotiations.
  • Call your U.S. senators at 202-224-3121 and U.S. representative at 202-225-3121, and urge them to co-sponsor the Employee Free Choice Act.
  • Sign up with WBNG to get more involved with the nationwide campaign to ensure workers have a fair chance to win a voice at work! Do you honestly think if there were no union today in your workplace, workers could successfully organize one and get a first contract? Contact your unit chair, or send your name, phone, and email address to czon@wbng.org.
  • Join American workers on Wednes-day, December 10, 2003 from 12 noon to 1:00 p.m. for a rally in front of the U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Ave, NW, Wash-ington D.C. By subway: Take Metrorail’s Red Line to Judiciary Square station; take 4th Street Exit (between D&E Streets) from station. Walk to 2nd Street, then make a right onto Constitution.

Striking California Grocery Store Workers’ Battle Is Our Battle, Too

Mega-corporations in California seek to drastically reduce health care benefits, establish lower wages and benefits for new hires, and toss full time workers in to poverty.

Seventy thousand members of the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union (UFCW) are on strike against Safeway/Vons grocery stores— and locked out by Albertsons and Kroger/Ralphs grocery stores in Southern California, with thousands more on strike against grocery stores in West Virginia. As the New York Times wrote (11/15/03) “The 70,000 grocery workers on strike in Southern California are the front line in a battle to prevent middle-class service jobs from turning into poverty-level ones.”

Here in DC and Baltimore, we face the same battle, as a number of major employers seek to bargain “two tiered” compensation/benefit systems—to pay new hires less than current employees in the same jobs, and to reduce health and retiree benefits as well. The UFCW strikers’ battle is our battle, too.

When big, national corporations can muscle their way to concessions, other big, national corporations become more aggressive. When workers can win a fair contract, it helps other workers win fair contracts.

The Washington Baltimore Newspaper Guild represents UFCW’s staff, head-quartered
in Washington, DC. The Guild UFCW is collecting donations to contribute to striking workers. The strike-lockout is in its second month.

Please support UFCW strikers. Their battle is indeed our battle.You can find more information about the strike at UFCW.org. Guild members can donate by sending a generous check by December 12, to WBNG (make check payable to WBNG)

1100 15 th St., NW, Suite 350
Washington, DC 20005
Write: UFCW STRIKE FUND on the memo line (Receipt will be acknowledged).

For more information, email Guild UFCW chair Jack Weberski (jweberski@ufcw.org), or vice-chair Joey Hipolito (jhipolito@ufcw.org)


Notable Quotes

“Our findings are disturbing, to say the least. Loophole-ridden laws, paralyzing delays and feeble enforcement have led to a culture of impunity in many areas of U.S. labor law and practice. Legal obstacles tilt the playing field so steeply against workers’ freedom of association that the United States is in violation of international human rights standards for workers.”

-- Ken Roth
Executive Director
Human Rights Watch


“Unions have been the only powerful and effective voice working people have ever had in
the history of this country.”

-- Bruce Springsteen
Rock and Roll Troubador


Return to Top of Page

Return to Guild Local Home Page

Click here for the previous issue of the Guild Forum Online Previous Issue of Guild Forum Online

Click here for an index of back issues of the Guild Forum Online Back issues of Guild Forum Online


[About Local 32035] [Local Leaders] [Local Staff] [Unit Leaders] [Local Bylaws & Governance] [Contracts] [Newsroom]
[Need a Union?]
[Labor Calendar] [Related Sites] [Home Page]


Washington-Baltimore Newspaper Guild, Local 32035 TNG-CWA, AFL-CIO/ 1100 15th St., NW, Suite 350, Washington, D.C. 20005
202-785-3650 /Fax: 202-785-3659

© 2003 Washington-Baltimore Newspaper Guild. No portion of this website may be reproduced in any form without expressed written permission, except by members of the Washington-Baltimore Newspaper Guild. Copyright of photographs is held by the photographers; reprint permission may be granted only by the photographers. WBNG is solely responsible for the content of this website.

Questions or comments about this site? Contact Local32035@wbng.org