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Louisiana
4th October 2009, 05:31
BY SETH GALINSKY
Union federations in Puerto Rico have called a one-day island-wide strike October 15 to protest the impending layoffs of almost 17,000 government workers.


Gov. Luis Fortuño claimed the layoffs, which will go into effect November 6, are needed to save $386 million as part of a plan to close a $3.2 billion budget gap. Some 500 workers will be rehired by the Treasury Department to help collect back taxes.

After taking office in January, Fortuño, a former Republican congressman and a leader of the New Progressive Party in Puerto Rico, instituted a strict hiring freeze and an across-the-board 10 percent spending cut.

At that time, the Puerto Rican government employed about 21 percent of the island’s workforce. In March, Fortuño signed the “Fiscal State of Emergency Law,” known as Law 7, in spite of protests and marches by tens of thousands of workers.

By August the government workforce was down to 201,300, about 11,200 less than August last year.

Unemployment in Puerto Rico, a U.S. colony with almost 4 million people, is now over 15 percent, higher than any state except for Michigan.

“With these layoffs, unemployment could go up to 18 percent,” Sandra Correa, vice president of the Puerto Rican Workers Union, affiliated to Service Employees International Union, told the Militant in a phone interview.

“The government said they were going to lay off all those with less than thirteen and a half years of seniority,” Correa said. “But we know of people who have worked for the government for 25 years who are being laid off.”

Many of those facing layoffs are among the lowest paid government workers, Correa said, including many school cleaners and cafeteria workers.

“In one agency, 132 out of 140 workers received layoff notices,” said Luis Pedraza Leduc, spokesperson for the Coordinadora Sindical, a coalition of independent unions.

José Rodríguez Báez, president of the Puerto Rican Workers Federation, affiliated to the AFL-CIO, told the Militant that “we have made many proposals to the government on how to deal with the fiscal crisis but at no time have they listened to us or even been willing to talk.”

He said that Law 7 also suspended union contracts and any union negotiations for two years for government workers. “They passed this law to carry out the wishes of the wealthy,” Rodríguez Báez said.

The Popular Democratic Party, the largest opposition party in the Puerto Rican Congress, has criticized the layoffs. Instead it proposes cutting the workweek of government employees to 35 hours, which would mean working people paying for the crisis through reduced wages.

The three main union federations are planning a series of protests, including civil disobedience, leading up to the October 15 work stoppage.

On September 30 students, professors, and workers from the University of Puerto Rico marched to demand that Law 7 not be applied to the university. That same day the Union of Electrical and Irrigation Workers (UTIER) held a march and 12-hour strike to protest cutbacks in health care for retirees.
UTIER president Angel Figueroa Jaramillo said in a statement that the one-day action was also taken to protest “the brutal assault that the government and businessmen are carrying out against the Puerto Rican working class.”

Source: The Militant

noway
11th October 2009, 19:01
just one day???? what kind of a strike is that.. they just want to take the day off..

Raúl Duke
11th October 2009, 21:04
What makes it worse is that in PR the government is the main employer in the entire island (there's not much in economy I guess).

I've always had a feeling in the back of the mind that the reason why there's this vicious assault against the working class is due to their performance during the 2006 budget crisis.
Back then there was all these protests, etc with lots of people but in the end they pushed forward the unwanted sales tax while ignoring the calls of the people to tax the rich/corporations and nothing much happened afterward. Since then I guess the elite think they are free to do whatever attack against the Puerto Rican working class with the implicit assumption that in the end they will stay pacified.
Perhaps if they would have used a bit more violence like smashing up the financial offices in Hato Rey and beat up the police (thus showing no fear about getting out of hand) back in 2006 would the colonial elite and their lackey government would realize that we aren't no push-overs.

cyu
13th October 2009, 00:49
Excerpts from http://www.seiu.org/2009/09/puerto-rican-governor-sicks-swat-team-and-police-brutality-on-laid-off-workers-holding-peaceful-prot.php (also go there for a video)

http://www.seiu.org/images/ChainsoutsidePRGovernorestate.jpg

The act of civil disobedience was led by members of the Puerto Rican Workers union, SEIU Local 1996SPT, in reaction (http://www.elnuevodia.com/trabajadoresseencadenanfrenteafortaleza-620748.html) to the Governor's announcement on Friday (http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/local/orl-asecpuerto-rico-government-layof092609sep26,0,3920831.story) to lay off 16,970 government employees.

"We have sent a message to thousands of our jobless brothers and sisters that this is not the time to be sad or depressed; that the better psychological therapy at this moment is to convert our indignation into action and mobilize to stop this abuse

In spite of the peaceful nature of the protest and lack of provocation, around noon uniformed SWAT team members who'd been waiting outside the Gov's mansion gates suddenly sprung into action and began to bodily remove protesters from Calle Fortaleza... resulting in the injuring of a substantial number group of people who were there supporting the demonstrators, including at least one reporter.

http://www.seiu.org/images/PuertoRicoprotest-Laborleadersbeaten.jpg

Assistant Superintendent of Field Operations Leovigildo Vázquez said this (http://www.elnuevodia.com/trabajadoresseencadenanfrenteafortaleza-620748.html) just before the protesters were violently removed from Calle Fortaleza by law enforcement officials:

"So far there have been no complaints and legitimate activities have not been affected. We are talking and observing on-site to determine next steps."
http://www.seiu.org/images/PuertoRicoprotest-Unionmembersrunover.jpg

Methodist bishop and spokesman for the All Puerto Rico for Puerto Rico Coalition, Juan Vera, denounced the violence with which police responded to the demonstration, saying "Enough is enough. [We've had] enough aggression." Vera warned union members would continue the civil disobedience actions to protest the massive layoffs of public employees.

Raúl Duke
13th October 2009, 21:06
In spite of the peaceful nature of the protest and lack of provocation, around noon uniformed SWAT team members who'd been waiting outside the Gov's mansion gates suddenly sprung into action and began to bodily remove protesters from Calle Fortaleza... resulting in the injuring of a substantial number group of people who were there supporting the demonstrators

See? It doesn't matter in PR what tactic you use the police will still be pigs and push you out; especially since they're using the assumption that the protestors will stick to being non-violent the entire time. Do you think the police would have been having an easy time if the crowd reacted violently? While I'm not going to argue if violence should have been used in this case (since I can't tell how many demonstrators v. police), PR is becoming an example when the whole "non-violent to a fault" principle isn't working. Thus why we have to be flexible with our tactics depending on the conditions at hand.


denounced the violence with which police responded to the demonstration, saying "Enough is enough. [We've had] enough aggression." Vera warned union members would continue the civil disobedience actions to protest the massive layoffs of public employees.

The police and the government do not care about these calls and warnings. I've heard this rhetoric or similar many times when things get heated up in PR yet the main answer is "If you are tired of all the police aggression what are you going to do about it?" 2006 was the "moment of truth" in regards to this, and the public failed. The response at this time seems to be nothing and thus the government and the police will continue their aggression since they don't fear reprisal (Both main parties are the same: Bourgeois).

The only good thing about this news is comparative. In Puerto Rico at least people do complain and protest, etc about problems while here in Florida I've rarely/seldom seen even that to the same degree. In PR, the university sudents do protest and strike (close the uni) when they increase tuition, etc while here in Florida when they did that and changed a bit the state scholarship barely anything seemed to happened.

ckaihatsu
16th October 2009, 07:51
just one day???? what kind of a strike is that.. they just want to take the day off..


Do you *realize* how *racist* this sounds???

Why, as a "Junior Revolutionary", would you say this??? You're demeaning all of the political work that goes into the preparations for this scale of a mobilization.... It's better to hold your tongue so that you don't come off as being flippantly hyper-critical....

cyu
16th October 2009, 19:55
Why, as a "Junior Revolutionary", would you say this???


As mentioned in another thread, this guy smells like a troll.

Raúl Duke
16th October 2009, 20:17
just one day???? what kind of a strike is that.. they just want to take the day off..



Do you *realize* how *racist* this sounds???

Now that I think about it (since I brushed that comment off perhaps expecting a mod to thrash it as irrelevant comments) it's quite racist due to the common stereotype that Puerto Ricans are lazy.

The strike occurred this Thursday according to my sources. The biggest mall on the island (and perhaps the Caribbean) was closed, truckers union went on strike so I guess there was lots of traffic jams, and "lots of money lost" (some people in PR saw this newsheadline as a bad thing...but it was the rich who lost lots of money so whatever is my opinion. )
The only thing I'm worried about is whether they have an exact goal/solution/etc (I'm guessing the most basic is to stop the governor's actions and/or perhaps to get rid of him) and if they're planning a way to reach these goals.

PRC-UTE
18th October 2009, 02:53
just one day???? what kind of a strike is that.. they just want to take the day off..

Verbal warning. Dont' mock working class people struggling in this forum.

AntifaAustralia
18th October 2009, 05:59
just one day???? what kind of a strike is that.. they just want to take the day off..


Do you *realize* how *racist* this sounds???

Why, as a "Junior Revolutionary", would you say this??? You're demeaning all of the political work that goes into the preparations for this scale of a mobilization.... It's better to hold your tongue so that you don't come off as being flippantly hyper-critical....

I too was critical of the strike

Im a junior as well, and i feel more than adjusted to the forum of radical lefties. Please dont judge, when i was judged for being a fascist it made me so ANGRY! fuck youse all judgers

he might be a true radical, he probably wanted a true strike of a couple months! remember the south korean Ssangyong factory workers strike? Peurto Rico is an american slave society just like SK, they should do the same shit.


Verbal warning. Dont' mock working class people struggling in this forum.

True, they are judging like pathetic anti-Semitic WWII germans, totally pathetic.

And about this incident i think it is better than a public holiday, Public holidays are really fucking jokes nowadays, well in australia. THe labour (AKA May) Day in australia was so crappy, We had a public holiday and for what? not one Union or political party started a protest! it was a leisure day! not a workers rights day! our labour day was 12th october, not may 1.

Raúl Duke
21st October 2009, 23:29
Puerto Rico is not the same as South Korea...

South Korea is de-jure an independent country; Puerto Rico is a U.S. territory (i.e. a colony of sorts). South Korea actually has a "good economy" and actually have known Korean corporations...Puerto Rico has niether of these 2. Most of the workers being fired are government workers and the government is the major employer due to the weak economy.

This "one day strike" that everyone is laughing about is actually not very common in PR...it's a one day general stop (i.e. many people didn't go to work and perhaps some couldn't even get to work probably, although I'm guessing, of the trucker union causing traffic jams) and even the largest mall in the Caribbean was closed.
It was a bit controversial among some of my friends...some thought it was stupid (but they used the wrong reasons; unless they are in the bourgeois side) while others supported it (but there seem to be a lack of any coherency of goal).