| Vermont's
Workers Need to Protect Their Rights
Dawn
Stanger, Vermont Workers Center Steering Committee Member
It's
only natural for employers to seek concessions from workers. Improvements
in working conditions, wages, benefits and Vermont's environment
-- all undermine profits.
The
only way this system becomes accountable is when workers struggle
to get their fair share. We cannot sit back and accept what we're
"given." Our profit-seeking system, by its very nature, demands
that employers manipulate accounting and throw money into politics,
corrupting our "democracy" and getting special favors.
If
workers don't struggle against it, the system spits them out, as
Enroners and IBMers now see. In a capitalist economy, the people
who run it are first and foremost trying to get rich and things
like the rights of workers just get in the way.
Historically,
there has been only one way for workers to increase their rights
and gain power -- uniting and acting together. As workers, when
we have the ability to make collective, democratic decisions and
act in all of our interests, we can make improvements for all of
us.
Bosses
call unions "third parties," insinuating outside forces, but unions
are really a second party. When we're organized, we have the right
to sit down and bargain our conditions, not have them imposed on
us. Unions are democratic, and union members have a voice in how
they run their organization and they often argue about what is the
best thing for them to do. And this is the sort of thing everybody
deserves, to have democratic rights in all aspects of our lives.
CEO
pay is now a ridiculous 600 times the average worker's pay in the
United States. Income and wealth disparity between the rich and
the rest of us is the worst it's ever been. Our health-care, with
44 million Americans uncovered and sky-rocketing rates, has hit
rock-bottom. If workers' concerns were addressed in politics, we'd
already have universal health care like all the other civilized
nations do. When corporate excess reaches the present level, and
people mistakenly believe that the stock market reflects workers'
goals, we've got big trouble.
We're
the Vermonters getting laid off and struggling to get by. Rich people
might go on fewer vacations, but workers have to make tough choices
between things such as clothes for our kids, medication, food and
heat. But the fact is we do have to worry about those things, while
the rich are still getting richer.
For
years there has been an attack on our living standards -- the top
5 percent are ripping us off. They're avoiding taxes, moving companies
to other countries, and cheating us out of our old-age money. We
need to get over those stupid barriers between workers, white-collar,
blue-collar stuff, union, non-union, and get our act together. Employers
play hardball and our team has gotten soft.
I write
as a member of the Vermont Workers' Center. I load trucks for a
living. I've become militant with good reason. I've spoken to hundreds
of Vermonters on our Workers' Rights Hotline. There is little fairness
in a system manipulated by transnational corporations.
The
Workers Center and Vermont's labor unions will not tolerate this
disparity in our communities and we are groups of workers fighting
back.
We
invite all workers in Vermont to come celebrate the fact that we
all trudge off to work each day, dependably, all year long, to earn
a living, making the economic wheels of our state turn. Gathering
at 11 a.m. Saturday we're parading from H.O. Wheeler in Burlington's
North End to Battery Park, then throwing a free picnic for all who
join us.
Vermont's
workers need to take back our state from the bosses. Let's start
by taking back Labor Day Weekend for workers.
Dawn
Stanger is a Teamster who lives in Underhill and is a steering committee
member of the Vermont Workers' Center. For more information about
the Labor March and Picnic, call 863-2345, Ext. 8. For the Vermont
Workers' Rights Hotline, call toll-free (866) 229-0009.
|