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RandWilson
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Rand Wilson
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Thursday 02 of August, 2007
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Saturday 23 of January, 2010 [00:11:42 UTC]

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Corporations get bailed out, we get laid off...

By Rand Wilson
Sunday 27 of September, 2009

The Massachusetts jobless rate is now at 9.1 percent and rising.  Workers are increasingly frustrated by the mentality of "corporate greed" that has taken over their employers and the failure of our politicians and policy makers to address the growing jobs crisis.  

With the Massachusetts AFL-CIO, the Greater Boston Labor Council, Jobs with Justice and the support of over 75 union and community co-sponsors, thousands of workers will march and rally on Thursday, October 1, 2009 demanding that corporations be held accountable for the good jobs our communities need.

For example, profitable companies like Verizon and Hyatt are using the current recession as an excuse to cut jobs.  Universities like Harvard with fat endowments and hospitals like Boston Medical Center are making cuts while paying their CEOs millions.  Banks are stalling loans on important construction projects.  Because corporations don't pay their fair share in taxes, state and local governments are slashing critical public services and eliminating jobs -- just when we should be expanding them.

October 1 is the one-year anniversary of the Bush administration's bail out of the banks and insurance companies.  The government gave these companies hundreds of billions of dollars with little or no accountability.

"Working families have been hit the hardest by this recession -- building trades, health care workers, manufacturing workers and public employees," said Robert Haynes, President of Massachusetts AFL-CIO.  "Despite signs that the economy is improving, everyone knows it's a 'jobless recovery.'  The official numbers don't reflect reality or the impact on workers.  The number of people who have stopped looking for work or are underemployed, is as high as those without work.  We need jobs now."

"Far too many profitable companies like Verizon and Hyatt are exploiting the recession to cut their headcount and further boost profits," said Richard Rogers, head of the Greater Boston Labor Council.  "It is absolutely unconscionable."

"Taxpayers poured billions of dollars into banks that were "too big to fail," said Alexandra Pineros-Shields, board member of Jobs with Justice.  "Then the banks gave outrageous bonuses, foreclosed on people's homes, gouged consumers and spent millions to lobby against new laws that would hold them more accountable.  Where are the jobs for working people?"

The march will kick off on the Boston Common at 4:00 PM and proceed to stops at the Hyatt Hotel, the Bank of America and Verizon's Franklin Street headquarters.  Everyone will end up at the Federal Reserve Bank for a short rally at about 5:30 PM.

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Vermont AT&T wireless phone store workers unite in CWA Local 1400

By Rand Wilson
Wednesday 23 of September, 2009
After a short campaign, eighty-one AT&T Mobility phone store workers in eleven Vermont stores have formed a new union with CWA Local 1400.
 
During the months of July and August, a majority of the workers signed representation cards seeking membership in Local 1400.  Their majority was certified by the American Arbitration Association on September 21 against a list provided by AT&T management. 
 
The entire process took place without any management interference, following an agreement between AT&T and CWA allowing employees to freely form unions using a majority sign up process.
 
"With the union contract, we'll have a stronger voice in our work life," said Michael Trudo, a Sales Support Rep. who lives in South Burlington.
 
"As an employee of 5 years, I'm looking forward to gaining more respect on the job and for the seniority of longer-term employees," said Josh Sausville, a Retail Sales Consultant from Burlington.
 
The former Unicel workers will be dovetailed into an existing contract that already covers AT&T wireless phone workers in Maine and New Hampshire.  "Our local union encompasses all aspects of the telecom industry, both wireless and landlines," said Darlene Stone, a Local 1400 organizer who assisted the workers in their campaign for representation.  "With these new members, we are all stronger together."
 
More than 40,000 AT&T Mobility wireless workers have gained a voice in their jobs through the 700,000-member Communications Workers of America.
 
"Contrast the simplicity and ease that AT&T Mobility workers formed a union with the intense management interference that Verizon Wireless workers have experienced," said CWA staffer Ralph Montefusco, who also assisted the campaign.  "Vermonters should seriously consider bringing their cell phone business to AT&T."
 
The AT&T workers victory takes place amid the national political debate about enacting the Employee Free Choice Act.  If enacted, workers at all companies could organize like those at AT&T simply by demonstrating majority support on union authorization cards. 
 
Another 85 AT&T employees who work in Maine and New Hampshire are already united in Local 1400.  CWA Local 1400 also represents more than 1,500 telecom workers throughout New England at Verizon and FairPoint.

 

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Looking for the "Union Label"-- on Labor Day in West Virginia

By Rand Wilson
Sunday 06 of September, 2009
A Labor Day Reminder of CREDO’s Own Credibility Gap...
Posted Friday, September 4, 2009
By Steve Early and Rand Wilson

The mad scramble among cell phone companies for increased market share has already created much consumer confusion about the merits of various "calling plans."  Now, thanks to a re-seller of mobile phone minutes called CREDO Mobile, the politics of which provider to choose has gotten muddled as well, for supporters of progressive causes.
 
CREDO markets itself as the cellular company with a conscience.  Sign up today, say CREDO ads in publications like The Nation, so you can "support the values you believe in."  Every call you make generates a small part of the millions of dollars the company gives to Wellstone Action, Human Rights Watch, Planned Parenthood, NARAL, and Greenpeace.  CREDO is "more than a network," it’s "a movement."
 
In West Virginia this weekend -- to its credit -- the company has been leading the PR charge against a cleverly packaged "Friends of America Rally" down in Logan County.  It's a Labor Day fest for the right, featuring appearances by Sean Hannity and over-the-hill metal head Ted Nugent, plus a speech against global warming by one of its leading deniers, Lord Christopher Moncton.
 
Not surprisingly, the most enthusiastic local sponsor is Don Blankenship, CEO of Massey Energy.  Big Don has posted a YouTube video inviting all West Virginians (including the 10% currently unemployed) to attend the rally so they can "learn how environmental extremists…are trying to destroy jobs."
 
Massey is, as CREDO points out, "the most egregious violator of the Clean Water Act in history," not to mention a notorious union-buster and arch foe of the United Mine Workers.  The UMW is sponsoring its own competing event, but without Hank Williams, Jr. as a headliner, the union is unlikely to attract a crowd anywhere near the 25,000 expected at "Friends of America."
 
And this is where CREDO comes in.  It has developed a sophisticated "Mobile Action" network of customers who want to use their cell phones for social change.  CREDO, along with the National Resources Defense Council, is rallying them against the other major corporate sponsor of the event, Verizon Wireless (VZW).  In e-mail messages and ads, network members are being exhorted to contact VZW president and CEO Lowell McAdam and demand that he "issue a public apology and immediately withdraw all support from this extremist, anti-environmental rally."
 
Like Massey Energy, Verizon Wireless has been an industry leader in anti-unionism (only 50 out of VZW's 50,000 workers are organized and management has been repeatedly cited for its unfair labor practices).  But there's no small irony in CREDO "calling out" Verizon Wireless.  CREDO itself is also completely non-union!  And not only does it knock, with good reason, VZW, it also takes regular aim at AT&T Mobility, the one wireless company that is unionized. 
 
CREDO got its start as Working Assets, reselling long distance service by the notoriously anti-union Sprint.  Now it's doing the same thing with wireless, marketing itself as a bankroller of every kind of rights movement, except the workers' rights one.  Meanwhile, it tries to get progressive customers to switch, not just from VZW (a move long recommended by labor) but from AT&T as well, where more than 35,000 technicians, customer service reps, and retail store personnel belong to the Communications Workers of America.
 
So, on Labor Day, if you want to use your cell phone for a cause-oriented call, by all means dial Lowell McAdam and give him a piece of your mind about VZW's strange bedfellows down in West Virginia.  But, if you want to do a mitzvah for the cause of labor, sign up for AT&T Mobility and show your support for its unionized workforce.
 
Steve Early worked for 27 years as CWA organizer in the northeast and was involved in strikes and organizing campaigns at AT&T.  Rand Wilson works for the AFL-CIO on a joint CWA and IBEW organizing initiative with Verizon workers.
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Telephone workers brief Mass. Congressional Delegation on Verizon's proposed job cuts

By Rand Wilson
Thursday 20 of August, 2009

Angry about how a highly profitable corporation like Verizon is threatening hundreds of layoffs, telephone union leaders and some potentially laid off workers held an unprecedented briefing with the staffs of five members of Congress and both Massachusetts senators.

 
The meeting was convened in Senator Kennedy's office at the Boston Federal Building and was attended by leaders of all the Massachusetts IBEW telephone workers' unions.
 
"Despite being a very profitable corporation, Verizon announced it wants to cut 8,000 jobs nationally and as many as 500 jobs in Massachusetts," said Myles Calvey, Business Manager of Local 2222 and Chairman of the IBEW System Council T-6.  "If Verizon is allowed to do this, it will lead to suicides, foreclosures and broken families.  This is nothing but pure corporate greed."
 
"These are hard times.  A half a million people are losing their jobs every month.  Businesses like General Motors and the Boston Globe that are losing money have cut staff and forced workers to take steep concessions," said Dan Manning, a FiOS installation technician from Medway who will likely be laid off.  "But with Verizon there's no excuse.  There is still plenty of work for us to do.  Verizon management says it wants to provide high speed internet for America.  Yet now it's orchestrating a slowdown by not marketing FiOS -- just to get rid of us."
 
Anticipating a possible sell-off of Verizon's landlines in Massachusetts, union leaders described in detail how the company has a strategy of under-investing in its wireline infrastructure while using its profits to expand only the wireless side of the business.  The company's facilities, equipment and landlines deteriorate.  Service quality declines, and customers are unhappy -- making them receptive to a landline sale. 
 
Verizon then uses an obscure tax loophole -- the Reverse Morris Trust -- to structure tax free deals to shed its wirelines in rural states.  In northern New England, using the loophole resulted in tiny FairPoint Communications taking over the landlines in 2008.  Today, FairPoint is teetering on the brink of bankruptcy.  Verizon is now proposing a similar landline sale in fourteen states.
 
"We're not going to go quietly," pledged Calvey.  "We'll fight them every step of the way." 
 
Pictures from the meeting may be viewed and downloaded from the Picasa photo sharing site: http://picasaweb.google.com/randwilson.aflcio/TelephoneWorkersBriefMassCongressionalDelegationOnProposedVerizonJobCuts?feat=directlink
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Employee Free Choice supporters blast Rite Aid with new report on company's union busting at West Coast warehouse

By Rand Wilson
Tuesday 11 of August, 2009

Supporters urging passage of the Employee Free Choice Act took to the streets on Monday, August 10 to back warehouse workers at Rite Aid's massive distribution center in Lancaster, California.  They released a new Jobs with Justice report about how management there has aggressively interfered in workers' freedom to form a union. 

The 12-page report: "Rite Aid, Oliver J. Bell & Associates, and the Case for the Employee Free Choice Act" documents how management employed union busters and violated labor laws.  Last year, the National Labor Relations Board was prepared to charge Rite Aid with 49 unfair labor practice charges before the cases were settled out of court.
 
"Union avoidance consultants, such as those engaged by Rite Aid, have contributed significantly to the subversion of the National Labor Relations Act," said John Logan from the Institute for Research on Labor & Employment at the University of California at Berkeley whose research has focused on workers' rights.  "Using every weapon at their disposal, they encourage employers to fight to the death efforts by employees to form unions."
 
The actions were led by local Jobs with Justice coalitions in Boston, Bangor, Cleveland, Indianapolis, Montpelier, Portland, OR and Richmond, VA.  AFL-CIO organizer Rand Wilson and two community activists infiltrated a major pharmaceutical industry conference at the Boston Convention Center where a Rite Aid manager was speaking.  As soon as he was done, they stood up and blasted Rite Aid's union busting while distributing copies of the report to the pharmacy convention delegates.  The report was also released in six other cities.  At some locations, other Rite Aid workers' unions -- 1199 SEIU, UFCW and the Teamsters -- joined the support actions.
 
Despite the company's attacks, a majority the of the workers voted to join the International Longshore and Warehouse Union, Local 26 in March 2008.  But more than a year later, Rite Aid management is still refusing to negotiate a first contract that would improve wages and working conditions for employees.
 
"Rite Aid's intense and longstanding interference in the workers efforts to form a union -- in which professional union busters have played a major role -- and its failure to bargain in good faith with employees are seen as prime examples of why efforts to pass the Employee Free Choice Act are so important," said Veronica Turner, Vice President for Health Systems at 1199 SEIU in Boston.
 
"If Employee Free Choice were the law of the land, the workers at the Rite Aid distribution center would have settled their contract by now.  Access to mediation and arbitration on first contracts would prevent companies like Rite Aid from dragging their feet in negotiations to frustrate workers and defeat efforts to improve working conditions," said Mark Govoni, Vice President of UFCW Local 1445 in Boston.
 
After the press conference, activists announced they would leaflet five Rite Aid stores in the Boston metropolitan area to inform customers about the company's aggressive interference in workers' rights and the need for passage of the Employee Free Choice Act to help prevent union busting.
 
Copies of the report may be obtained on the National Jobs with Justice website at www.jwj.org/freechoice/riteaid_report.pdf
 
 
In more than 40 cities in 25 states, Jobs with Justice coalitions unite labor, religious, student and community organizations in campaigns to win justice in workplaces and in communities where working families live.
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Verizon employees call on management to respect workers' rights, provide quality service

By Rand Wilson
Thursday 12 of March, 2009
Members' concerns about safety and harassment prompts sticker campaign
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Verizon Business Techs Gain Benefits of New Contract and Voice on the Job

By Rand Wilson
Tuesday 06 of January, 2009
Former MCI technicians at Verizon Business (VZB) who had been seeking representation for nearly two years finally are united in a new labor agreement that went into effect on December 28.
 
During the month of January many of the techs will be initiated as members at local union meetings throughout the Verizon East footprint.  Photo and interview opportunities are available.
 
The VZB techs gained union recognition last August in a breakthrough contract agreement reached between Verizon management and the CWA and IBEW.  Since then, Verizon and the two unions have been meeting regularly to work out a smooth integration of the VZB workers into a union environment.  The new VZB contract covers about 600 technicians from Virginia to Maine. 
 
The VZB techs received strong support from CWA and IBEW members in a campaign to "tear down the wall" between union and non-union sectors at Verizon.  The technicians' victory takes place amid the intensifying national political debate about enacting the Employee Free Choice Act.  If enacted, workers at companies like VZB could organize simply by demonstrating majority support on union authorization cards. 
 
The Communications Workers of America represents 50,000 workers at Verizon and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers represents another 15,000 workers in the northeast.
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A Teamster Apart: Ron Carey Remembered

By Rand Wilson
Wednesday 17 of December, 2008
By Steve Early & Rand Wilson
December 16, 2008
The rise and fall of Teamster reformer Ron Carey, who died December 11, is still a much contested tale. His political demise, a decade ago, was a tragedy for some and a case of hypocrisy punished to others. In the demonology of current Teamster leaders, Carey left the union in financial trouble and personal disgrace, after serving as president from 1992 to 1997. A jury later absolved him of criminal responsibility for the illegal fundraising activities of some of his supporters when he ran for re-election in 1996. Even though these backers enriched themselves without his knowledge or approval, the scandal gave Carey-bashers a damaging propaganda line: "Mr Clean" was a "fraud" and a "crook" himself, no better than any other Teamster bad guy ousted from the union, before or since.
 
To Teamsters for a Democratic Union (TDU) and other members whose votes made him the first directly elected leader of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters (IBT), Carey was a genuine hero. In a union where to this day few local officers dare to cast their lot with TDU, the pugnacious ex-Marine and former UPS-driver from Queens was a unique ally in TDU's singular campaign for democracy and accountability that has spanned four decades. The memory of Carey's contribution to institutional reform and key contract fights is keen indeed among those who keep hope alive in the IBT; for evidence of that, see the online memorial site that has filled up with postings, from far and wide, since the news of his death to cancer at age 72.
 
Remembering him now, neither of us is neutral on the question of Ron Carey and whether he was different from those who served before or after him in the IBT's "Marble Palace" in Washington. We saw Ron in action behind the scenes and in public, during two critical junctures in the union's modern history. Based on working with or for him, we believe his courageous role will be remembered and honored long after his critics have been forgotten. The first Teamster turning point was in the period from 1989 to 1991. Thanks to years of grassroots organizing by TDU, labor's most durable reform group, and a court-ordered election of top Teamster officers (part of a federal racketeering case settlement), there was finally an opportunity for members to clean up the most corrupt union in America.
 
But Teamsters seeking change they could believe in back then needed a candidate to run against the IBT's still-powerful, well-financed "old guard." There were not a lot of folks knocking on TDU's door to apply for the job. Always a brave battler against United Parcel Service in his own NYC Local 804, Carey stepped forward and waged a grueling, two-year, cross-country campaign to rally the rank-and-file in hundreds of Teamster work locations. After he took the plunge, of course, all sorts of experts and insiders in the daily press and labor bureaucracy dismissed him as a loner, a fringe candidate, an inexperienced "outsider" with little backing among "real Teamsters."
 
In December of 1991, Carey got 48 percent of the vote in a three-way race, sweeping into office with a near-full slate of dissidents, including some top TDUers. Four years later, his "new Teamsters" cast 1.4 million votes for the "New Voice" slate of current AFL-CIO President John Sweeney, providing the margin of victory in the first contested election at the federation in 100 years.
 
To his credit, Carey never felt comfortable in his new inside-the-Beltway world (where a sycophantic culture of political hustling and unprincipled "consulting" would, in the end, contribute to his undoing). He liked hanging out with working Teamsters in Queens, not politicians or union officials in Washington. He was a work horse, not a show horse, a hands-on handler of IBT members' daily problems. His finest hour came in 1997 -- the other crucial moment in recent Teamster history -- when the presence of someone at the top of the union who believed in the power of those at the base made it possible for 185,000 UPS workers to win the biggest nationwide strike in the past quarter-century.
 
Ron was in his element during UPS national bargaining because he knew the company like the back of his hand. He went to the table with a team of thirty that included, for the first time, rank-and-filers just off the truck and loading dock. On the other side sat an equal number of arrogant "Big Brown" managers and lawyers. He loved jousting with the top brass, but, unlike his tainted predecessors, he was not about bluff and bluster, followed by backing-down.
 
When UPS wouldn't drop its demand for contract concessions -- despite record profits in 1997 -- Carey countered with coordinated Teamster rallies around the country. When there was still no progress in the talks, he broke them off and ramped up the union's carefully planned member mobilization. UPS found itself beset with job actions and negative publicity about its plan to replace even more full-time workers with part-timers, while undermining their defined-benefit pension coverage.
 
As the contract deadline neared and it was clear that UPS management wouldn't budge, Carey privately agonized about the enormous cost and disruption of a national walkout for UPS workers and their families. He knew that taking on the company was risky and a favorable outcome far from assured. Strike action by such a relatively well-off group could easily have become the focus of much public resentment, just as auto workers today are being unfairly pilloried for their past gains.
 
To avert such a backlash, the Teamsters under Carey used direct rank-and-file outreach to friends, neighbors, customers and local communities to turn their struggle into a popular cause. During the two-week strike, Carey himself became a convincing national spokesperson not just for his own members, but for all workers concerned about the "part-timing of America." But, with each passing day, the pressure on Ron was enormous. Internally, many local union officials -- more accustomed to accommodation than agitation -- were petrified by the tumult around them. Externally, big business began demanding that the government get a Taft-Hartley injunction to force Teamsters back to work. Top politicians tried to put the arm on Carey with this threat as well, but he brushed them off and soldiered on, until UPS threw in the towel.
 
The result was a rare strike win, an inspiring victory for all of labor, at a time when workers had little else to cheer about. If only for that reason and his original decision to run, Ron Carey will be long remembered by Teamsters and other labor activists who know that the full potential of unionism -- on display so dramatically during the UPS strike -- is far from being fulfilled today.
 
About Steve Early and Rand Wilson:
Rand Wilson was a Teamster communications staffer who helped coordinate the 1996-97 contract campaign and strike at UPS. Steve Early is a longtime supporter of TDU who aided Ron Carey's 1991
Teamster presidential campaign and then was loaned by the Communications Workers of America to serve on Carey's headquarters transition team after his victory. For more on Carey's rise and fall,
see Early's forthcoming book, "Embedded With Organized Labor" (Monthly Review Press, 2009). Wilson can be reached at
Rand@mindspring.com, Early at Lsupport@aol.com
 
Copyright © 2008 The Nation
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Hundreds in Massachusetts kick off campaign for passage of Employee Free Choice Act

By Rand Wilson
Thursday 11 of December, 2008

More than 100 representatives from dozens of community and labor organizations gathered on Dec. 10 in Boston to mark International Human Rights Day and kick off a statewide campaign to win passage of the Employee Free Choice Act.

The Employee Free Choice Act would give workers a simple one-step process to freely choose a union. It would also strengthen penalties for companies that intimidate employees from trying to form unions and provide for mediation and arbitration when employers and workers cannot agree on a first contract.

"We won our union with majority sign up," said Christian Kanonga, a guard with Northeast Security Company. "Now we've negotiated our first contract and won major improvements in our standard of living. That's an opportunity that I want for everyone else in this country."

"Management constantly threatened our livelihood and our retirement security if we were to form a union," said Kevin Simoneau, a former Comcast field technician who experienced employer intimidation. "Giving us a choice about how to form a union would be a much fairer way to gain a real voice at work."

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California workers express concerns about Rite Aid management at special shareholder meeting in NY

By Rand Wilson
Wednesday 03 of December, 2008

Over 600 workers employed at Rite Aid's giant distribution center in Lancaster, California, sent their representative to attend the company's emergency shareholder meeting in New York City on Tuesday, December 2.

With the company's stock price hovering at less than 50 cents, and problems plaguing Rite Aid's supply chain serving hundreds of stores in the southwest, workers expressed "serious concerns about the focus and execution of Rite Aid's top management team."

Rite Aid management is blaming its troubles on the economy, but employees offered a different perspective.

"When you work inside a critical point in the supply chain, you can tell if management is really focused on running things efficiently and motivating everyone to work together as a team.  Right now, that's not happening at Rite Aid from what we can see." said Carlos "Chico" Rubio who works at Rite Aid's modern million-square-foot distribution center in Lancaster where container-loads of products arrive each day from the Port of Los Angeles and are quickly distributed with just-in-time precision to more than 500 Rite Aid retail stores throughout the southwest.

"The good news is that we've got talented employees who want to be part of a successful solution.  But we're missing that opportunity now because management can't seem to focus on solving problems and working together with us as a team," explained Mr. Rubio, who offered three suggestions at the shareholder meeting:

  • Rubio invited CEO Mary Sammons to visit the Rite Aid's distribution center in Lancaster to meet with employees, explain the company's goals, and encourage problem-solving.
  • Rite Aid executives should consider limiting their compensation to reasonable multiples of what workers earn, and keep executive pay more in line with performance.
  • Rite Aid management should abandon its anti-union "we know what's best for you" philosophy, and focus instead on building cooperative relations with its employees' unions.

Morale among Rite Aid workers nationwide has suffered because top management has been taking huge compensation packages despite a 95 percent decline in share value since June 2007.  Top executives took over $18.2 million in total compensation in FY 2008, including more than $3.5 million in cash bonuses related to the acquisition of the Brooks and Eckerd drug store chains, a decision some analysts consider to have been a costly mistake. 

At Rite Aid's distribution center in Lancaster, workers have struggled with other examples of bad management that surfaced soon after employees expressed interest in joining the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU).  The ILWU already represents dockworkers at the ports who handle Rite Aid shipping containers that are offloaded from ships and then transported to distribution centers, including Lancaster.  In March 2008, the distribution center workers voted to form a union, overcoming an expensive and vicious anti-union campaign waged by Rite Aid management.  The company engaged in a host of illegal labor activities, including disciplining, harassing, and firing union supporters.  The company's behavior was so egregious that the National Labor Relations Board prepared to try Rite Aid on 49 violations of federal labor law.  Rite Aid executives chose to settle the charges rather than defend their costly and illegal campaign against employees having a voice at work. 

Management's aggressive interference did not end after the Lancaster workers voted to form their union.  Rite Aid has continued a costly and intense anti-union campaign that has included harassing workers, issuing warnings and suspensions to union supporters, and firing at least six union supporters on flimsy pretexts.  Charges alleging new unfair labor practices, related to the company's failure to bargain in good faith, are pending.

"Rite Aid is wasting precious time and money on their anti-union campaign when all of us should be focused on getting this company back on the right track," said Mr. Rubio.  "Management should be working with us, instead of against us, to help this company succeed."

Prior to attending the shareholder meeting, Mr. Rubio met with the AFL-CIO and other unions representing workers at Rite Aid.  At the meeting, an AFL-CIO representative announced that a special briefing was being organized for industry analysts and investors in early 2009.

Trustees of union health and welfare funds, which have an important say over lucrative contracts with pharmacies including Rite Aid, are expressing concern about the company's poor labor relations record.  At a recent Employee Benefits Conference in San Antonio, hundreds of union plan representatives received detailed information about Rite Aid's ongoing labor dispute in Lancaster.

In addition to financial and labor problems, Rite Aid has been entangled in a number of consumer fraud cases.  The company has defended itself against a slew of consumer fraud allegations during the past decade, and is now in litigation with the New York Attorney General.  Last summer an investigation by the Attorney General found that 112 Rite Aid stores had carried or sold expired products.  The announcement of the New York allegations came as Rite Aid was settling a similar case with Attorney General of New Jersey.

A more detailed report documenting Rite Aid's mismanagement and attempts to suppress workers' rights may be obtained by contacting Rand Wilson at the above number or by email at rand@mindspring.org.

The International Longshore and Warehouse Union unites more than 45,000 workers in over 60 local unions in the states of California, Washington, Oregon, Alaska and Hawaii. 

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