For workers in America, it can be hard to know where to turn when a
boss pays you late or not at all, doesn't provide benefits, or just
yells at you for no good reason.
That's why a Working America, a "community affiliate" of the AFL-CIO
that focuses specifically on nonunion workers, launched a website last
month that makes it easy to get that kind of information. FixMyJob.com
is a bit like WebMD, but instead of typing in your aches and pains, you
tell it about problems at your workplace. Launched on June 5, the site
has already garnered 5,000 visitors, according to Working America
organizer Chris Stergalas.
After choosing from a comprehensive list of workplaces and problems,
visitors to FixMyJob.com get a set of resources and options for taking
action. While unionization is a part of the solution for many problems,
the site also informs workers about labor laws and instructs them on how
to advance proposals to defend their rights. The site is a part of
Working America's expanded new campaign to organize people in their
communities in all 50 states, says Executive Director Karen Nussbaum.
In both online and offline campaigns, Nussbaum said, the aim of
Working America is to reach beyond the workplace and rally support at
the local level for a pro-labor agenda. Working America's list of
priorities includes living wage laws, expanded health care, adequately
funded public schools, and the protection of voting rights.
Before the launch of Working America, Nussbaum had served as founder
and director of 9to5, National Association of Working Women; as director
of the Women's Bureau of the U.S. Department of Labor; and as an
advisor to former AFL-CIO president John Sweeney. I recently spoke with
her about her vision for Working America, about FixMyJob.com, and about
what the 50-state expansion means for the prospects of union revival.
Working America was founded in 2003 partly as an answer to the
question of how to mobilize people who are not union members but would
benefit from activism by and for working people. Nussbaum said that,
from the beginning, her staff "concentrated on talking to workers in
their communities." Scoring success in mobilizing blue-collar voters for
electoral campaigns, the organization created a foundation of members,
and it is increasingly attempting to mobilize them around broader issues
like working conditions, paid sick leave, and the right to join unions.
She added that the ultimate goal of Working America is "finding the
connections with collective bargaining." But she's experimenting with
different ways of organizing that might lead there. "It's about taking
whatever path opens on the way."
In past years, Working America focused on battleground states during
elections. But regional and statewide labor federations have pushed the
organization to expand to all 50 states over the next five years. At
first, Nussbaum said, that goal seemed "preposterous," but she has come
to embrace it. Ultimately, she said, she appreciated the strategic value
of supporting local labor structures as they connect with community
allies and work on issues that go beyond a single workplace.
One reason why the 50-state strategy is necessary is the national
proliferation of so-called "right-to-work" laws and attacks on voting
rights, two issues that Working America has taken up in Pittsburgh,
Penn..
Nussbaum describes the approach taken by activists leading the Pittsburgh campaign:
These are a group of mostly white people in their 40s and 50s. They
decided that voter protection actually was the key issue for them. Their
group set a goal of reaching a million people in the Pittsburgh area on
the issue. Part of that million was going to be reached by doing
letters to the editor and circulation of the newspaper and so on. It
also included things like a guy who said, "I go to my hardware store
every weekend and everybody there knows me, so I will set up a table at
the hardware store every weekend," which is what he did. Another woman
said that she dropped her father off at adult daycare every day, and so
she would talk to the workers and other people at the adult daycare
center.
This type of organizing taps into the existing frustrations that
people have -- in the Pittsburgh case obstacles to voting -- and showing
them how they can make a difference. "It's everybody recognizing their
own networks," Nussbaum said. "I think that's the key to organizing,
isn't it?"
She explained that Working America encourages people to see
themselves as leaders within their own social circles, and, as it did in
the case of the man in the hardware store, this recognition makes it
easier to take action.
Nussbaum sees FixMyJob.com
as a complement to these offline campaigns and as a means for
introducing people to the labor movement. "Some people who use these
tools will get turned on and they will become activists for life," she
said. "Some will fail, but it will help create a new environment that I
think supports what we're already beginning to see bubble up."
Source from: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/amy-b-dean/why-the-revival-of-us-lab_b_3607972.html
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