http://themilitant.com/2017/8104/810401.html
The Militant (logo)
Vol. 81/No. 4 January 23, 2017
(lead article)
‘Workers need to unite in face of boss attacks’
SWP LA mayor candidate on doorsteps, picket lines
Militant photos: above, Laura Garza; inset, Jonathan Batres
Above, Jan. 6 Teamsters picket line at University of California Los
Angeles. Dennis Richter, SWP candidate for Los Angeles mayor, joined
strikers in solidarity with contract fight. Inset, Richter talks with
teacher Arlene Washington at her doorstep Jan. 3.
BY LAURA GARZA
LOS ANGELES — “We haven’t had a raise in four years, they’ve raised our
health care costs, lowered what we get for disability, and new hires
were switched to a 401(k)-style fund. They won’t get the pension and
retirement other workers get,” Jon Kramer, a plumber at the UCLA medical
plaza, told Dennis Richter, Socialist Workers Party candidate for mayor
here, as they marched on the picket line Jan. 6. Kramer, who has worked
at UCLA for 15 years, is a member of Teamsters Local 2010 and on the
negotiating committee fighting for a new contract.
“You’re facing what a lot of workers confront,” said Richter. “Bosses
delay and delay on contracts knowing that workers are losing every day.”
The strikers are the skilled trades workers — plumbers, carpenters,
electricians, elevator repair people, and other facilities workers — who
work at UCLA and UCLA’s medical center. Local 2010 represents some 600
workers there, and 200 more at University of California at San Diego.
Kramer said they are asking for a graduated scale of payments, depending
on years worked, to make up for lack of raises over four years — from
$7,000 for those with over four years on the job to $1,000 for those
with a year. “But management is offering only $1,200 to $1,500 for those
with four years and more, and nothing for those with a year,” he said.
“They’ve delayed the negotiations and are retaliating against our
members,” he said, citing examples of harsh disciplinary action being
taken against unionists. “I had to defend two different workers, both
misplaced their keys, both reported it immediately and said they would
retrace their steps. In both cases the keys were found and turned in the
same day. But instead of going through the different disciplinary steps,
a warning first, etc., both were immediately suspended.”
“I’m here to give solidarity and to learn more about your fight so I can
build support, and to explain how it will take more workers standing up
for ourselves to take on the bosses’ attacks,” said Richter. Strikers
plan to keep their picket line up for five days, and thousands of
clerical workers at the university are organizing to join them Jan. 10
in a one-day solidarity strike. Richter said he would urge other workers
to join the rally.
“I have an interview with the Los Angeles Times editorial board later
that day,” he told Kramer. “I’ll come here first and then use the
interview to explain the issues in your fight and call for support.”
“I’m running not because I think voting for me will change something,”
Richter told several workers on the picket line as they discussed the
bosses’ assaults on workers’ rights and standard of living. “The history
of working-class struggle teaches us that all big questions facing
working people, from wages and working conditions to war and cop
brutality, are solved in the streets, not at the ballot box. I’m running
because I want to talk with workers about how to build a movement that
can bring solidarity with fights like yours and build up confidence in
the capacity of workers to organize and fight for our interests, not
depend on politicians from the twin parties that represent big business,
the Democrats and Republicans.”
A number of workers wanted to talk about the rising cost of health care
and how employers and the government are pressing to make workers
shoulder more and more of the burden.
“The problem is it remains a for-profit commodity, sold on the basis of
making rich the insurance companies, the pharmaceutical companies and
others,” Richter said. “Obama never touched this, he just guaranteed a
big payout to the insurance companies. We need to remove health care
from being a commodity. We need to fight for universal health care paid
for by the federal government as a basic right for all who live and work
here.”
“My party organizes to visit workers on their doorsteps throughout the
region and the country,” Richter said. “Workers everywhere are
discussing these challenges, trying to find an effective way to change
things. We say there are two classes and three parties, and the SWP is
the workers’ party.”
“The bosses won’t give up on their attacks, we will face more, and we
have to get more prepared to fight back,” Richter said. “In the end we
need to fight to change this from being a system run by and for the
ruling rich to one run by and for those who work, from the factories to
the fields.”
A couple of strikers wanted to know more about the ideas Richter raised
and picked up copies of the Militant.
For more information on the Socialist Workers Party, contact the party
branch in your area listed in the directory on page 8.
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