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Subject: New "Unity Unions" Self-Organize to Confront Workplace Abuses

New "Unity Unions" Self-Organize to Confront Workplace Abuses

By Amy Dean
Truthout | Interview
October 20, 2011

http://www.truth-out.org/making-unity-union/1319119030

The last five years have been grim and isolating ones for
immigrants and working people, right? Overall, this may be
the case, but if you talk with organizers at Fuerza Laboral,
an independent workers' center in Rhode Island founded in
2006, you might get a different impression.

Despite difficult times, the group has taken on some bold and
determined organizing. And they have some important victories
to show for their efforts.

"Fuerza's roots are really and truly the essence of what the
labor movement is: workers organizing themselves and getting
together with their communities to identify some real
injustices that are systemic throughout the country," says
Josie Shagwert, the group's executive director. "They got
together to say, 'How can we put a stop to this? Because the
system is failing us.'"

Not long ago, workers' centers were seen as service
providers, staff-driven organizations where individuals could
go to have caseworkers help with their problems. That has
changed over the past decade, and the Rhode Island group is
part of the transformation. "Fuerza Laboral builds worker
power," the organization's web site explains. "[We] organize
to end exploitation in the workplace. We train workers in
their rights, develop new community leaders, and take direct
action against injustice to achieve real victories."

This work sounds a lot like what unions do. And, yet, Fuerza
Laboral is not formally affiliated with the labor movement.
Instead, it is an affiliate of National People's Action
(NPA), and shares with other NPA members an organizing model
rooted in communities. Fuerza Laboral's campaigns show two
things: why organizing among workers remains essential, and
how the labor movement still has work to do in bridging the
gap between its traditional practices and new groups doing
cutting-edge organizing, especially among immigrants and low-
wage workers.

What Good Are Laws Without the Power to Enforce Them?

When Fuerza Laboral first started organizing, it focused on
the abuses of temp agencies in Rhode Island, "employers who
were underpaying, not paying, taking illegal deductions,"
Shagwert says. Having first coalesced around this industry,
the group soon moved to take on other businesses with unjust
labor practices - notably a local manufacturer called
Colibri. On a cold morning in January 2009, some 280 workers
showed up for work at the Colibri jewelry factory, a nonunion
shop in East Providence. They found a handwritten sign taped
to the factory door reading, "Plant Is Closed. Go Home."

"Shock turned to anger pretty quickly," says Shagwert, "with
people asking, What kind of treatment is this? People had
worked there for 5, 15, 20 years." One of the workers called
a local Spanish-speaking radio station and complained on the
air about the closing. The radio host suggested that he get
in touch with Fuerza Laboral.

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"For the first meeting they had 12 people," Shagwert says.
"By the time they got together for a second meeting there
were 60 people in the living room of one of the workers,
crowded in to talk about what to do and what an organizing
campaign would look like."

The group discovered that Colibri's closing violated the
federal Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act
(WARN), which mandates that any business with 100 or more
employees must give 60-days notice before closing. (The WARN
Act was in the news during the December 2008 occupation of
the Republic Windows factory by the Chicago company's laid-
off workers, which Kari Lydersen chronicles in her book
"Revolt on Goose Island.") The law affords an important
protection for employees. Unfortunately, there is no federal
agency to enforce it. The Colibri workers decided that they
would take it upon themselves to make the company obey the
law.

"The vast majority of those workers had never organized
before," Shagwert says. Yet, in the course of the campaign,
they pulled together a 250-person rally at the Colibri site
and also began engaging in direct action. "The workers
practiced civil disobedience at the auctions [of company
assets]," says Shagwert, "which resulted in 13 people getting
arrested."

During the action, one observer told the local NBC affiliate,
"I'd like to see them get justice ... This is another AIG
deal. The rich get richer, and the workers get the shaft."

The activists subsequently brought 100 people to the
headquarters of the private equity firm in New York that had
purchased the company, and workers held a sit-in in the
firm's lobby. "As a result of all those actions," Shagwert
explains, "a prominent labor lawyer in Rhode Island, Marc
Gursky, felt inspired by this grassroots surge of energy. He
stepped forward and said, 'I know that to enforce the WARN
Act you are going to need a lawyer.'"

For two years, Fuerza Laboral pursued the case in court, and
it ultimately reached a settlement. The precise terms of the
agreement have not yet been made public. Nevertheless,
Shagwert notes, "I will say that the workers felt really
happy that after two years they were vindicated."

"Unity" and Unions

Fuerza Laboral's efforts show why, even with only 7 percent
of workers in the private sector of the American economy
covered by traditional unions, there is no substitute for
organizing among working people. Even with pro-employee laws
on the books, there is little hope of justice without a
grassroots demand. Prior to the labor laws enshrined in the
New Deal, mutual aid among workers was the very essence of
union life. With collective bargaining in decline, the
revival of this type of action may be important for labor's
future as well.

Asked what Fuerza Laboral takes from the organizing model of
National People's Action, the national coalition of which it
is a member, Shagwert says, "Networking and constantly
building leadership. It's a real belief that everyone who
belongs to your organization, or wants to belong, has the
potential to take leadership."

In addition to developing leadership through their campaigns,
Fuerza Laboral has also actively pursued a program of
political education. "The essence of Fuerza Laboral is having
the passion to develop leaders who will confront social
injustice," says Heiny Maldonado, a community organizer at
the group. "We have a year-round calendar of trainings for
our members and leaders."

Shagwert adds: "Since 2006, we have put at least 3,000
workers through a really aggressive popular education model
within which our members and leaders get trained to teach
basic workers rights. We also hold democracy schools: a
multi-week school that teaches about organizing, the history
of the labor movement, and the history of immigration. Many
of our leaders have come through those courses. They take a
course, get fired up, and then we look for ways to plug them
into the regular organizing we do. That feels like a huge
victory."

If there's going to be a progressive revival in this country,
having a broadly inclusive approach to worker education and
developing community leadership will be just as important to
traditional unions as they are to workers' centers.
Currently, the labor movement is engaged in efforts to reach
out beyond its established membership in shops covered by
collectively bargained contracts. From the AFL-CIO's Working
America program to Service Employees International Union's
(SEIU) Fight for a Fair Economy, labor organizations are
seeking to expand their reach into working-class communities
at large, recognizing that if they are perceived as a narrow
special interest that benefits only a few workers, the
movement will be destined to permanent decline.

Operations such as Fuerza Laboral represent another strain of
organizing among workers that is taking place outside of
traditional labor structures. A decade ago, the relationships
between emerging workers' centers in different parts of the
country and traditional labor unions tended to be mistrustful
- if not outright hostile, as Janice Fine discussed in her
book "Worker Centers: Organizing Communities at the Edge of
the Dream." Few ties existed in most cities. Since then, both
sides have made inroads into this challenge and have
strengthened their relationships with one another. In the
past five years, the AFL-CIO has formed partnerships with the
National Day Laborer Organizing Network (NDLON) and with
Interfaith Worker Justice.

Yet, gaps in organizational cultures and strategies still
remain. The relationships between traditional unions and
workers' centers are continually being redefined, and the
interaction of the groups represents a vital ongoing
conversation.

As for Fuerza Laboral, Shagwert says: "Our board president
has started calling us Unity Union. Which is what we are
doing: Representing people in terms of grievances, doing a
lot of the things a union would do for its members. But we're
not a union. We don't identify with workers based on where
they are working, we identify with them based on the abuses
they are experiencing."

While she cites alliances with unions such as SEIU and labor
groups like Jobs with Justice as crucial to Fuerza's work,
she views her organization differently: "It's the way I
compare working on human rights to working on the rights of
one small minority," she says. "It doesn't feel right to
throw our hat in the ring and fight for one particular group
of people. We are fighting for all of us because we are
fighting for the most vulnerable."

She adds, "I want to find a way to say this that isn't
critical of unions. Without unions what would our country be?
But I see Fuerza as able to be a little more flexible than a
union can be because we don't represent one particular group
of workers."

Fuerza Laboral at once embodies an impulse toward mutual aid
that has deep roots in the history of workers' struggles and
represents a new breed of organization that is expanding in
areas where traditional union structures have not been able
to reach. For a labor movement that desperately needs to make
clear its relevance for all Americans, the task of deepening
partnerships with such community allies could not be more
urgent.

[Amy Dean is co-author, with David Reynolds, of "A New New
Deal: How Regional Activism Will Reshape the American Labor
Movement" and is president and founder of ABD Ventures. She
worked for nearly two decades in the labor movement and now
works to develop new and innovative organizing strategies for
social change organizations. You can follow Amy on Twitter at
@amybdean, or she can be reached via www.amybdean.com.]

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