Claudette Konola
 
Last Saturday I attended a meeting hosted by the Colorado AFL-CIO. In addition to union leaders, the Pipefitter’s Hall in North Denver was filled with Democratic legislators and candidates interested in learning about the issues important to unions. Presentations were given by the Colorado Building and Construction Trades Council, public sector unions representing both state and federal government workers, private sector unions, and allied organizations.

The allied organizations were the most interesting to me. There is the Colorado Alliance for Retired Americans, made up of retired union workers.  There is Working America, an organization working to reach out to all working families, regardless of union membership. And there is a Young Worker Project. How about FRESC, working on a “formula for a new energy economy in Colorado?” Finally, there is the Labor Council for Latin American Advancement, working on organizing Latino workers.

Working America is working to organize the 99%. They are “the community affiliate of the AFL-CIO.” In their eight years of existence, they have recruited 3-million members by reaching out to working-class moderates and conservatives who don’t have a union on the job. Their membership is not the traditional union membership:

70% are moderate or conservative.

33% own guns.

33% are weekly churchgoers.

82% are active voters.

500,000 are young.

500,000 are unemployed.

Working America recognizes that good jobs will be on the mind of most voters in 2012. Their issues during this election cycle include extending unemployment insurance, creating green jobs and investing in infrastructure, protecting quality public services and public jobs, preserving Medicare and Medicaid, holding Wall Street accountable to Main Street, and getting corporate money out of elections, while protecting voting rights.

Working America canvassed neighborhoods in nine states during the 2010 election. They cite wins in Minnesota and Colorado. In Minnesota, they had 50,000 in-person conversations with voters, helping to elect Mark Dayton.  In Colorado’s seventh district they contacted more than 40,000 voters to help elect Michael Bennet.

I plan to write more about what I learned about unions over the next few days, so stay tuned.

Homework

www.workingamerica.org
 
 
In surfing the web this morning looking for things to blog about, I was struck again by how resource rich our corner of the world actually is. Our economy is linked to coal, natural gas, uranium and water—just to name a few resources we have in abundance here.

We have people who depend on each of these resources for their jobs. And we have people who want to pay the lowest possible wage to the workers who work in resource extraction. A Highlands Ranch developer, who is also a state senator, is feuding with a bureaucrat who enforces Colorado’s real estate laws while also trying to exempt Colorado water projects from federal regulations requiring Davis Bacon wage rates.

And we have media coverage that pretty consistently tells the story of industry, but rarely tells the story of labor. Davis Bacon wage rates, which are always made to seem unfair by reporters, are nothing more than a federal law that says that if federal money is used to fund a project, the workers should be paid union wage rates. For the life of me I can’t figure out why it is such a bad thing to pay decent wages to the people who live in my neighborhood, and spend money in local businesses which results in sales taxes for cities and counties. Nor can I figure out why developers are always surprised that the federal government actually enforces federal laws when they fund a project with taxpayer money.

It is all about balance. We need the jobs. We need a clean place to live and work. We need workers to share in the fruits of their labor as do the business owners and developers who hire them.

Homework:

http://www.deltacountyindependent.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=14106:huge-gas-field-eyed-for-development&catid=77:top-stories&Itemid=373

http://www.gjsentinel.com/news/articles/bill_focuses_on_cleanup_of_ura

http://www.statebillnews.com/section/frontpage/ßStory about SJR10-018

http://www.denverpost.com/business/ci_14706668

http://www.hcn.org/greenjustice/blog/location-location-location