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View Full Version : Socialism is creating wealth in Seattle. Minimum wage law of 15 dollars per hour



AmilcarCabral
20th January 2014, 04:43
$15 minimum wage wins in SeaTac

http://socialistaction.org/2013/11/minimum-wage-referendum-wins-in-seatac-wash/

Published November 28, 2013 | By Socialist Action (http://socialistaction.org/author/socialistactionusa/)
http://socialistaction.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/Dec.-2013-SeaTac-4.jpg
By ANN MONTAGUE
Workers won a big victory this month in the little Washington town of SeaTac with the success of passing Referendum 1 and its signature issue to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour. The vote was certified, and it passed by 50.6% (77 votes).


The town is named for the airport located between Seattle and Tacoma. Most of the people who live in this diverse community are dependent on jobs in and around the airport. It is estimated that 6300 workers at 72 airport-related businesses in and around SeaTac will directly benefit from passage of the referendum.


The Teamsters have been trying for 13 years to organize baggage handlers and other non-union airport workers. The obstacles they had faced seemed insurmountable. They were constantly blocked by anti-union laws and regulations and the targeting of union activists. Every time they had an organizing campaign that looked successful, the rank-and-file leaders were fired or intimidated.


Airports are under the Railway Labor Act, which means unions are required to organize a certain number of airports at the same time—in this case, including Hawaii. A few years ago, they decided to go directly to the community with a workers’ rights referendum. They joined together with HERE, which was organizing the large hotels and restaurants near the airport, and SEIU, which was working to organize Seattle fast-food workers.


The current minimum wage in Washington is $9.19, which is the highest in the country. The new minimum wage will be indexed to inflation. The referendum states that the new minimum wage will take effect on Jan. 1.


While most of the publicity has been around raising the minimum wage, there is much more to the SeaTac Referendum. It also provides for a minimum of 6.5 days of sick leave a year and specifies that all tips go directly to the workers instead of being confiscated by managers. In addition, it states that part-timers must be given more work hours before other part-time workers are hired. And it includes 90-day job protection for workers whenever there is a change in contractors.


The week that I volunteered in the campaign, there was a giant multi-union blitz for a push to get out the vote for Referendum 1. Rank and file and staff from all three unions arrived from as far away as Minnesota, believing that a victory in SeaTac would be an impetus to struggles across the country. Some union workers at SeaTac also took leave to be able to work on the campaign.


Abdirahman Abdullah, an employee of the airport’s Hertz rental car location, took a leave of absence from his job to campaign in support of the measure. “The workers at the airport work hard but don’t get what they deserve,” Abdullah said. “They’re juggling two or three jobs just to pay the bills, let alone to save money. This initiative … it’s going to improve their lives.”


The working class in SeaTac is very culturally diverse, as is the workforce in and around the airport. When I went into the Ethiopian Cultural Center, I saw that it was clearly an organizing hub where community meetings were held and all the latest information about the campaign was posted.


Teamster Local 117 had worked with workers in struggle at the Hertz rental car company a few years ago when 34 Somali and Muslim workers were suddenly suspended for praying on the job. It had been agreed previously that they could take mini-breaks for their daily prayers. Then suddenly, they were told by a manager, “If you guys pray, you go home.” When the workers asked if this was a new rule, they were told “yes,” but they prayed anyway. They believed it was a contractual violation.


“This is an outrageous assault on the rights of these workers and appears to be discriminatory based on their religious beliefs,” Tracey A. Thompson, secretary-treasurer of Teamsters Local 117, said in a statement at the time. The Teamsters worked to get them their jobs back and filed an unfair labor practice. About 70% of the Hertz drivers are Muslim. Labor and faith-based organizations joined with the Teamsters in protests outside the Hertz counter with signs, “Respect me, respect my religion.”


The union represents nearly 80 Hertz drivers, who earn between $9.15 and $9.95 an hour. They receive no health benefits, vacation, or sick leave. This history of struggle helped bring together labor, faith-based organizations, the Somali Services Coalition, and the Ethiopian Cultural Center to fight for Referendum 1.


The opponents of Referendum 1 have threatened to demand a recount and will take the measure to the courts to try to get it nullified. From the beginning, Alaska Airlines and the employer associations for restaurants, hotels, and rental car companies opposed the referendum. They tried to keep it off the ballot but were unsuccessful. Then, the oil tycoon, ultra-rightist Koch brothers joined them in trying to defeat the measure.
But the victors are taking this win as a mandate and moving forward to expand the $15 minimum wage to Seattle. Fast-food workers and their allies announced that on Dec. 5 there will be an all-day march from SeaTac to the Seattle City Hall. “We are taking the movement from its victory in SeaTac all the way to City Hall, and for people who cannot make the march there will be rallies in SeaTac and Seattle as well as along the march.” Despite the threats to take the measure to court, these workers are not deterred from pursuing their mandate from the SeaTac vote.


Photo: Seattle-Tacoma airport workers held banner reading “UNION!” last summer, demanding that the employers recognize SEIU Local 6. The drive for union recognition ran concurrently with the campaign for a $15 an hour raise. From Working Washington / Labor Notes.

Sinister Cultural Marxist
20th January 2014, 05:02
A $15 dollar minimum wage is better than what we have now but it's not "socialism". It's just capitalism where owners can extract at best a little bit less surplus value. One can say this is just a semantic issue, but I think it's important to use these terms properly as they basically define what kind of struggle we're fighting for. Is a $15 minimum wage the world we're fighting for, or is it at best a good short-term way to reduce the suffering of workers while bringing them together to act in concerted struggle? I'm going to go with the latter

Sperm-Doll Setsuna
20th January 2014, 05:08
Now, let's go on and demand a $100 minimum wage and all sorts of overdue benefits. Push it to the limit. Isn't that the purpose of the 'transitional program'?

thc
20th January 2014, 05:41
The capitalists are going to find ways to increase the rate of exploitation to combat the effects of a higher minimum wage. They can still subsidize the wages of first world laborers with the superprofits extracted from the third world. No amount of reform will solve the contradiction between capital and labor. It still sickens me how the first world exchanges it's comfort for the poverty of third world nations.

Five Year Plan
20th January 2014, 06:00
I suppose we can call this Socialism in One City (SiOC II).

Sea
20th January 2014, 06:10
I suppose we can call this Socialism in One City (SiOC II).You ain't seen nothin' yet.
Now, let's go on and demand a $100 minimum wage and all sorts of overdue benefits. Push it to the limit. Isn't that the purpose of the 'transitional program'?They'll just increase automation until that labor-price sweetspot is hit again.

Halert
20th January 2014, 06:11
Every time there is a thread about reform like increase of minimum wage people come in the thread and rip on it. I think most people here understand that reform doesn't bring socialism closer and doesn't bring a revolution closer. Reforms like this bring relief to workers right now can't we just be happy about that, without having talk it down about how it doesn't bring socialism, YEAH WE GET THAT.

consuming negativity
20th January 2014, 06:16
I remember reading about this a while ago, but there aren't any articles out on the results of it AFAIK. I'd be interested in seeing how things went, although yeah it only took effect a couple weeks ago.

Lily Briscoe
20th January 2014, 06:20
Um yeah, it's worth clarifying some things, particularly in light of the misleading (and kind of hilarious) thread title and the fact that the article in the OP is from November...

For one, this referendum is not for the city of Seattle, it is for the small town of SeaTac, which is based mostly around the SeaTac airport. Incidentally, a few weeks after the referendum was approved, a judge ruled that it does not apply to actual airport workers (eta: the airport is the biggest employer in the town, btw)...

Also, if I remember correctly, it only applies to travel/hospitality workers (excluding actual airport workers), not to workers in general.

That this is the stuff a lot of people on the left here are reduced to celebrating should give some indication of how bleak things actually are.

Sea
20th January 2014, 06:33
Every time there is a thread about reform like increase of minimum wage people come in the thread and rip on it. I think most people here understand that reform doesn't bring socialism closer and doesn't bring a revolution closer. Reforms like this bring relief to workers right now can't we just be happy about that, without having talk it down about how it doesn't bring socialism, YEAH WE GET THAT.The title of this thread implies that TrotskistMarx thinks that socialism is already in Seattle. Nobody here is complaining about the proposed minimum wage increase.

WilliamGreen
20th January 2014, 06:48
Thank god they are raising the minimum wage. I don't know how people survive on it in any country. Europe is a bit better because in a lot of places it's set by profession but in Canada and the states I don't know how you guys do it. Even worse in america your health-care and schooling costs are through the roof.

So good on them for doing this :)

Sinister Cultural Marxist
20th January 2014, 07:26
They'll just increase automation until that labor-price sweetspot is hit again.

Or encourage runaway inflation.