Tuesday, December 20, 2005

Strike!Strike!Strike!

The New York mass Transit Authority (MTA) is on strike.

No busses or trains are running in the city. Lines that run from Long Island, NJ, and Westchester County (north) are going on weekend schedules in solidarity.

New York has this awful law -- the Taylor Law -- that states that mass transit workers (along with cops, fire fighters, and a few other positions) can not strike. It makes striking against the law, and severely punished. Mayor Bloomburg has been heard frequenly over the last week of negotiations referring to the "illegal strike" a-brewing, and now underway.

"The mayor was referring to the state’s Taylor Law, passed after the 1966 transit strike, under which workers lose two days’ pay for every day on the picket line. This penalty was imposed after the 1980 strike that shut down the subway system for 11 days. In 2002, Bloomberg was seeking the renewal of an even more draconian injunction obtained in 1999 by his predecessor, Rudolph Giuliani, that would have imposed individual fines of $25,000 a day on each worker, with the penalty doubling for every additional day on strike."

Here's what the mayor's office says about the Taylor Law.

Here's what a local teachers' union says about it. (yeah -- teachers can't strike in NY either!)

Here's what TWU local 100 pres Toussaint writes in calling the strike.

So, right now, him and the other TWU union leaders have been thrown in jail, and each worker is getting fined two days pay for every day off!

It's nuts. What an awful, awful law.

Good that they're striking.

The sidewalks this morning were filled with north-bound walkers. All quite aimeable. It was cold, but three layers of long underwear will do you good, i tell ya! And the streets were very friendly.

The word out is that most people are pissed about the strike. That has not all been my experience. And im not even hanging with the radicals these days. These are midtown office cogs from NJ, The Bronx, Queens, Westchester Cty. People empathize with the worker very strongly and at a very human level in this city. It's great. And, though its strong within, it's not just the blue collar workers with the blue collar workers, white collar with white. Lots of very vocal solidarity.

While im not gonna get a chance to zip about the city running errands and to-dos today (or for a little while, it seems), walking a bit more my last week seems like a pretty good plan. And, holy moley, if that's my part right now in supporting the effort for the people to have the power to negotiate with the big, faceless, bad-accountant-totin employers, im all about it.

Fuck the Taylor Law, the phasing out of pensions, and the ever-increasing blame of "letting down Americans/American soldiers" that big buisiness keeps putting on larger efforts for human rights. 8 percent increase in wages is hardly over the standard of living increase, dammit.

Cmon.

3 Comments:

Blogger tornadia said...

This pisses me off so much. I'm reading the papers of Samuel Gompers right now, and so much of what he's saying is so incredibly relevant to what's going on today (the volume I'm reading is during WWI, and he has a lot to say about that, too.)

I was thinking of making a donation to the union to help pay strike wages and legal fees.

5:30 PM  
Blogger tornadia said...

Oargh--I posted that before I meant to.

I was thinking of making a donation, but the link above has no contact info. Do you know their address?

5:37 PM  
Blogger aimee said...

yeah, totally.

ive been looking to find a solid fund to contibute to all day. got my roomie looking too. will let you know what i find.

and there is an address on the TWU Local 100 web page at the bottom.

1:59 AM  

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