Showing posts with label Workers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Workers. Show all posts

Friday, April 4, 2014

Abused and Exploited Temp Workers May Finally Get a Break



CA bill would hold companies legally responsible for wage and safety violations of subcontractors and temp agencies.








California could become one of the first states in the nation to hold companies legally responsible for wage and safety violations by their subcontractors and temp agencies if a bill proposed Friday becomes law.


The bill tackles the longstanding complaint of labor leaders that companies can often shirk responsibility for the abuse of workers by hiring them through agencies or contracting with smaller firms.


A ProPublica investigation last year found that temp workers face high rates of wage violations and on-the-job injuries, but rarely have recourse against the brand-name companies whose products they move, pack or assemble. Typically, only the agencies or subcontractors that directly employ workers face fines when something goes wrong, even when fulfilling contracts with larger firms that indirectly control or influence the work conditions.


Unions and other worker advocates say the bill would protect temps and subcontracted workers, such as building janitors, by holding the companies at the top of the supply chain accountable.


“Current law is simply insufficient to protect workers’ rights in the shadows of the subcontracted economy,” Caitlin Vega of the California Labor Federation said in a letter supporting the bill. “This simple rule will incentivize the use of responsible contractors, rather than a race to the bottom.”


California is at least the second state this year to take up bills to protect temporary and subcontracted workers. Earlier this month, a New Hampshire legislator introduced a bill to curb the practice of charging workers fees to be taken in temp agency vans to work for unknown companies. That bill would limit such fees and require agencies to tell workers in writing their wage, the name of the company, the location of the job and the workers’ compensation insurance carrier in case of injury.


At least 10 states currently have laws that regulate temp and day labor agencies in some way. Massachusetts, Illinois, New Jersey and Texas, for example, require them to register with the state. Florida and Georgia limit or prohibit fees they can charge for transportation to and from a worksite.


But California would be one of the first to take on the companies that contract with temp agencies to supplement their workforce.


The bill, sponsored by Assemblyman Roger Hernandez, would make companies that contract for labor — for example, a warehouse, farm owner or hotel — liable if one of their subcontractors fails to pay employees their wages, provide workers’ compensation insurance or submit unemployment taxes to the state.


Such a law is likely to face steep challenges from the business community. At a labor and employment committee hearing on March 12, Jennifer Barrera of the California Chamber of Commerce said the state already had enough laws to deal with bad actors. Small businesses turn to staffing agencies to avoid the headaches that come with complying with various employment regulations, she said. A new law, she said, would only further burden them.


“They don’t want to violate the law,” she said. “But they just don’t know what to do or how to meet those obligations as we continue to increase the mandates on them.”


But Mark Schacht, deputy director of the California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation, a farmworker rights group, argued that unless businesses at the top of the supply chain are liable for violations that occur on their property, they have no incentive to ensure safe and fair conditions.


Schacht pointed to California’s mixed experience regulating farm labor. The state has required farm labor contractors to be licensed for 63 years. Yet abuses continue, he said, because growers can simply claim ignorance and swap one contractor for another. Proving the grower bears responsibility could require years in court and expensive legal fees, he said.


With a strong liability law, Schacht said, “the grower knows if he doesn’t deal with a reputable contractor, he’s going to be liable. He knows that if he doesn’t supervise the contractor in the field, he’s going to be liable.”


“What will happen,” he said, “is that the bad contractors will be unable to secure contracts.”


A recent dispute in Massachusetts underscores the problem. Temp workers packaging goods destined for Dunkin’ Donuts and Subway say the temp agency failed to pay them overtime. When they complained, supervisors told them the agency didn’t have the funds for overtime because the packaging company didn’t pay them enough, according to the worker rights group, the Massachusetts Coalition for Occupational Safety and Health.


At the California hearing, Assemblyman Hernandez and various witnesses repeatedly cited stories written by ProPublica last year in arguing for better protections for temp workers.


The stories documented the growth of so-called “temp towns,” where workers can’t find jobs without going through temp agencies, and the abuses of immigrant labor brokers, who work with temp agencies to supply workers to brand-name companies. The investigation found that temp agencies consistently rank among the worst large industries for the rate of wage and hour violations.


A ProPublica analysis of workers’ compensation claims showed that temps face a significantly greater risk of getting injured on the job than permanent employees, particularly when it comes to severe injuries such as amputations.


During the hearing, some workers testified that they are often put in unsafe situations and don’t get paid their full wages on time. They explained that many workers don’t complain because they’re uncertain who their employer actually is or fear that the temp agency will stop sending them to jobs.


 Gladys Hernandez (Photo courtesy of The California Channel)

Gladys Hernandez, who was a temporary housekeeper at a DoubleTree hotel in Santa Monica, Calif., told committee members that to clean her quota of rooms each day, she sometimes had to go downstairs, clock out and then finish the rooms off the clock.


A spokeswoman for Hilton Worldwide, which owns the DoubleTree brand, said that because the hotel was a franchise, Hilton “has no ability or authority to influence or dictate any labor related issues at that property.” The franchise owner, The Procaccianti Group, did not return calls or emails seeking a response.


Hernandez said that in February, she and several coworkers complained to DoubleTree management.


“The next day,” she testified, “I was told not to come back.”


 

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Abused and Exploited Temp Workers May Finally Get a Break

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Jim Sinclair: "We support the rights of migrant workers in B.C."

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Jim Sinclair: "We support the rights of migrant workers in B.C."

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Aid workers keen to return to tense western Myanmar

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Aid workers keen to return to tense western Myanmar

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

What Happens When Teachers, Delivery People And Fast Food Workers Don’t Care Anymore…

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What Happens When Teachers, Delivery People And Fast Food Workers Don’t Care Anymore…

Monday, March 24, 2014

Workers End Strikes in Kenya, Continue Actions in Tunisia, Egypt and South Africa

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Workers End Strikes in Kenya, Continue Actions in Tunisia, Egypt and South Africa

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Record Jobs For Old Workers; Everyone Else - Better Luck Next Month

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Record Jobs For Old Workers; Everyone Else - Better Luck Next Month

Saturday, March 1, 2014

Taliban calls for truce in Pakistan on day polio workers are attacked


Andrew Buncombe
Independent.co.uk
March 1, 2014


The Pakistan Taliban has announced a month-long ceasefire in order to try and revive stalled peace talks after reportedly being told the government would not mount operations against it. It came as at least 12 people were killed in an attack on polio workers.


A Taliban spokesman said the government of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif had made clear that it would not be targeted in military operations. There has been mounting speculation Pakistan’s army was poised to launch a major operation in North Waziristan after a series of air raids on militant targets.


“The senior leadership of the Taliban advises all subgroups to respect the Taliban’s call for a ceasefire and abide by it and completely refrain from all jihadi activities in this time period,” spokesman Shahidullah Shahid said in a statement, according to the Reuters news agency.


Read more


This article was posted: Saturday, March 1, 2014 at 1:25 pm










Infowars



Taliban calls for truce in Pakistan on day polio workers are attacked

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

On the News With Thom Hartmann: Raising the Minimum Wage Could Decrease Jobs for Low-Wage Workers, and More

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On the News With Thom Hartmann: Raising the Minimum Wage Could Decrease Jobs for Low-Wage Workers, and More

Saturday, February 15, 2014

This week in the War on Workers: Teachers protest "data walls" that shame students

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Over the past year, grade school students in the low-income city of Holyoke, Massachusetts, have faced having their names and standardized test scores posted in classrooms on “data walls,” for all their classmates to see. Horrible, right? But it shouldn’t be unexpected, as educational policy pushes standardized tests to the center of what goes on in schools, and as test scores are used for ever more punitive purposes. The story of how the data walls came to light is  particularly revealing, though.

Teachers and parents, outraged about the data walls, went to a school committee meeting to complain; at the meeting, the schools superintendent insisted that students’ names should never be used, and suggested that he’d be cracking down on individual teachers who were doing this bad thing. That contradicted testimony from a parent, Paula Burke, who said she’d directly requested that the superintendent “send a clear directive to ALL principals and teachers regarding the sharing of private student information,” but “This has not been done.” But it raised the very real possibility that teachers would be scapegoated for a practice to which they had first drawn attention. But then, Sarah Jaffe reports:


In response to his comments, the teachers released copies of a PowerPoint presentation given to teachers and paraprofessionals for kindergarten (yes, kindergarten) through third grade at Kelly Elementary School in Holyoke on October 11, 2013—at which Superintendent Paez delivered the welcoming remarks. The slides, provided to In These Times by teacher activists, clearly show sample data walls with students’ first names and in some cases, last initials.


Yes, the practice that the superintendent was all disapproving of in front of reporters and the school committee was drawn directly from a training he introduced. Whoopsies! But if teachers weren’t organized to fight back against practices that hurt their students and retaliation against themselves, this would be a different story. Already, the decks are stacked against teachers fighting back:

“The data walls really speak to a bigger problem,” Kaeppel says. The battle against data walls is just one fight in a broader war—everywhere, testing is replacing teaching time, and test scores are used to pressure students, to determine whether teachers can keep their jobs, and to rate schools as successes or as “failures,” with dire consequences. [Teacher Agustin] Morales points out that his students in Holyoke spend 27 days out of the 180-day school year taking standardized tests rather than learning. [...]

The constant exhaustion means that the union must prove to its members that a fight is worth the effort. That’s why [Educators for a Democratic Union, a progressive caucus within the Massachusetts Teachers Association] is trying to build solidarity through concrete victories—like the effort to fight the data walls in Holyoke. Kaeppel, who was one of [Barbara] Madeloni’s students at UMass, says that it seemed like a winnable fight to the Holyoke EDU members and their supporters from outside of the district, and has served to catalyze some parent support. Administrators, she says, assume that the lower-income parents in Holyoke are not involved with their kids’ schooling and won’t challenge school practices, but they got a surprise when parents and teachers spoke together at the school committee meeting.



But however outgunned by test-crazy politicians and billionaires, teachers and parents are there, in kids’ lives. The need to fight back is so obvious.

(Disclosure: My father is a member of EDU and has been involved in the campaign against Holyoke data walls. And background: I’ve written about Barbara Madeloni in the past.)


Continue reading below the fold for more of the week’s labor and education news.




Daily Kos



This week in the War on Workers: Teachers protest "data walls" that shame students

Monday, February 10, 2014

Group Home Workers Ran ‘Mentally Disabled Fight Club’ (VIDEO)

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Group Home Workers Ran ‘Mentally Disabled Fight Club’ (VIDEO)

Thursday, February 6, 2014

The New Workers" Party


The Obama administration’s response to the Congressional Budget Office’s prediction that Obamacare will cause 2.5 million fewer Americans to work in the coming years is an opportunity for Republicans to seize the moral high ground on the issue of work.


Rather than dispute the CBO’s analysis — which would have been awkward, as the White House has touted CBO’s predictions in the past — the administration is spinning the jobs loss as a kind of liberation. No longer tied down to the pesky need to earn a salary, some Americans will be able to follow their bliss.


The is part of a pattern from this administration (it would be crude to call it a “war on work”), of incentives, disincentives, taxes, regulations and other decisions that make jobs more difficult to find and unemployment more entrenched.


If a Republican were in the White House, the state of unemployment in America would be on everyone’s lips. As Michael Strain outlines in National Affairs, the absolute number of long-term unemployed and their share of the jobless are both at post-World War II highs. Five years after the end of the Great Recession, the economy still has 1.3 million fewer jobs than it had in 2008. The employment rate among 24-54-year-olds, the prime working population, plummeted in 2009 and has scarcely recovered since.


The Democrats have struck out in their efforts to improve the jobs picture. The $ 1 trillion stimulus package proved not to contain “shovel-ready jobs” (and few of any other kind). Obamacare encourages employers to reduce employees’ hours, increases taxes on a significant share of the economy, and adds layers of stifling bureaucracy to an already-burdened sector. Extending unemployment compensation to 99 weeks ameliorated the pain of being out of work, but may also have dulled the incentive to search for replacement jobs. The same was true of dramatically increasing the disability rolls — a permanent alternative to work. Increasing the minimum wage adds a barrier to employment just when we need fewer.


The administration touts the number of new jobs in the energy sector, but all of those have come from exploration on privately owned land. Pressure from environmentalists prevents the president from opening public lands to drilling and approving the Keystone pipeline. The symbol of this administration isn’t a guy in a hard hat but Pajama Boy cradling his hot cocoa.


During the Cold War, the surest sign that a political party would spell doom to the average person was if it had the word “workers” in its title. Leftist governments destroyed the standard of living of scores of millions of people around the globe (when they didn’t kill them outright). It was all in the name of the “workers” and sometimes “peasants.”


The decline of work is more than an economic challenge — though it is clearly that. It is also a profound moral, familial and even spiritual crisis for those affected. Americans derive a large measure of their self-esteem from work. Prolonged joblessness is linked to depression, disease, family breakups, suicide and, of course, poverty.


Just as Republicans are wise to offer alternatives to Obamacare (as Sens. Tom Coburn, Richard Burr and Orrin Hatch have recently done), they should be proposing policy initiatives to create jobs. Strain suggests several: relocation subsidies to help people move from high-unemployment regions to those with more job openings, eliminating barriers to entry, like excessive licensing requirements (it requires an average of 372 training days to become a cosmetologist, compared with 33 days to become an emergency medical technician), permitting more high-skilled immigration (25 percent of engineering and tech businesses founded between 1995 and 2005 had at least one immigrant founder), and decreasing the minimum wage for the first six months of employment for those who’ve been unemployed for longer than 27 weeks.


Part of the Democrats’ approach is to make unemployment more bearable, whether through Obamacare subsidies, disability payments or prolonged unemployment insurance. The other part of their program is to make unemployment more likely, through higher minimum wages, more regulation of businesses, a less friendly environment for investment, and sweetheart deals for politically connected firms.


Republicans should seize the opportunity to become the party of jobs — the true party of workers. 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



The New Workers" Party

Monday, February 3, 2014

HK a safe place to come out for domestic workers



By Dennis Chong, AFP
February 4, 2014, 8:15 am TWN





HONG KONG–Working long hours away from home for low pay and little time off, life is tough for foreign domestic workers in Hong Kong, but for some the city has brought sexual liberation unheard of in their home countries.

To Jenny Patoc, a 41-year-old Filipina helper, Hong Kong is the place where she met her girlfriend 15 years ago and where they unofficially tied the knot at their own “holy union” ceremony last year — despite the semi-autonomous territory’s failure to recognize same sex marriages.


“In Hong Kong, we are free. We can show who we are,” Patoc told AFP in the southern Chinese city’s packed Central financial district on a recent Sunday, where thousands of helpers congregate every week on their one day off.


While conservative attitudes still prevail in aspects of Hong Kong society, for many migrant workers the former British colony is an easier place than home to be gay, particularly those from Muslim Indonesia and the deeply Catholic Philippines.


Roughly 300,000 domestic workers make about HK$ 4,000 (US$ 515) a month as helpers for Hong Kong families, doing household chores and looking after children while the parents are out at work.


They are mainly from the Philippines, Indonesia or Thailand, many supporting their families by sending earnings home.


Conditions can be tough. In a report last year Amnesty International condemned the “slavery-like” conditions faced by thousands of Indonesian women who work in Hong Kong as domestic staff, accusing authorities of inaction.


The findings came just weeks after a Hong Kong couple were jailed for a shocking string of attacks on their Indonesian housekeeper, including burning her with an iron and beating her with a bike chain.


Last month thousands of domestic workers took to the streets demanding justice for another Indonesian helper who claimed that she was left unable to walk after eight months of abuse at the hands of her employer who has subsequently been arrested.


And this week another Hong Kong housewife was arrested for allegedly assaulting her Bangladeshi maid.


‘I wanted to be free’


For Marrz Balaoro, a member of local lesbian support group Filguys Association, coming out was much easier in Hong Kong compared to her home in the Philippines in the 1980s.


“I came to Hong Kong because I wanted to be on my own. I wanted to be free,” Balaoro said.


“My first employer was considerate and she understood my situation.”


After witnessing a lesbian being bullied by fellow Filipinas in Hong Kong, she formed the Filguys Association to help homosexual migrant workers from her country facing discrimination.





China Post Online – China News



HK a safe place to come out for domestic workers

Saturday, January 18, 2014

This week in the War on Workers: Charter cheerleaders reject accountability

Michelle Rhee, Chancellor, District of Columbia Public Schools, speaks during
Michelle Rhee


A couple new entries in the charter school hall of horrors. In New York City:

A whopping 80% of special-needs kids who enroll as kindergartners in city charter schools leave by the time they reach third grade, a report by the Independent Budget Office released Thursday shows.

In Columbus, Ohio, 17 charter schools closed in 2013:

Nine of the 17 schools that closed in 2013 lasted only a few months this past fall. When they closed, more than 250 students had to find new schools. The state spent more than $ 1.6 million in taxpayer money to keep the nine schools open only from August through October or November.

But while 2013 was unusual, closings are not rare. A Dispatch analysis of state data found that 29 percent of Ohio’s charter schools have shut, dating to 1997 when the publicly funded but often privately run schools became legal in Ohio. Nearly 400 currently are operating, about 75 of them in Columbus.



Meanwhile, Michelle Rhee’s StudentsFirst once again released its education report card, which measures states not on their educational outcomes but on whether they have corporate education policies in place. That means you get gems like Louisiana getting a B- while Connecticut got a D+, even though Connecticut’s educational outcomes are substantially better than Louisiana’s. Hilarious, isn’t it, how the people who scream the most loudly about accountability when it comes to teachers tasked with educating the most challenged students absolutely reject accountability when it comes to their own policies?

More stories on labor and education below the fold.




Daily Kos



This week in the War on Workers: Charter cheerleaders reject accountability

Friday, January 17, 2014

Fear Is Why Workers in Red States Vote Against Their Economic Self-Interest




Last week’s massive spill of the toxic chemical MCHM into West Virginia’s Elk River illustrates another benefit to the business class of high unemployment, economic insecurity, and a safety-net shot through with holes. Not only are employees eager to accept whatever job they can get. They are also also unwilling to demand healthy and safe environments.


The spill was the region’s third major chemical accident in five years, coming after two investigations by the federal Chemical Safety Board in the Kanawha Valley, also known as “Chemical Valley,” and repeated recommendations from federal regulators and environmental advocates that the state embrace tougher rules to better safeguard chemicals.


No action was ever taken. State and local officials turned a deaf ear. The storage tank that leaked, owned by Freedom Industries, hadn’t been inspected for decades.


But nobody complained.


Not even now, with the toxins moving down river toward Cincinnati, can the residents of Charleston and the surrounding area be sure their drinking water is safe — partly because the government’s calculation for safe levels is based on a single study by the manufacturer of the toxic chemical, which was never published, and partly because the West Virginia American Water Company, which supplies the drinking water, is a for-profit corporation that may not want to highlight any lingering danger.


So why wasn’t more done to prevent this, and why isn’t there more of any outcry even now?


The answer isn’t hard to find. As Maya Nye, president of People Concerned About Chemical Safety, a citizen’s group formed after a 2008 explosion and fire killed workers at West Virginia’s Bayer CropScience plant in the state, explained to the New York Times: “We are so desperate for jobs in West Virginia we don’t want to do anything that pushes industry out.”


Exactly.


I often heard the same refrain when I headed the U.S. Department of Labor. When we sought to impose a large fine on the Bridgestone-Firestone Tire Company for flagrantly disregarding workplace safety rules and causing workers at one of its plants in Oklahoma to be maimed and killed, for example, the community was solidly behind us — that is, until Bridgestone-Firestone threatened to close the plant if we didn’t back down.


The threat was enough to ignite a storm of opposition to the proposed penalty from the very workers and families we were trying to protect. (We didn’t back down and Bridgestone-Firestone didn’t carry out its threat, but the political fallout was intense.)


For years political scientists have wondered why so many working class and poor citizens of so-called “red” states vote against their economic self-interest. The usual explanation is that, for these voters, economic issues are trumped by social and cultural issues like guns, abortion, and race.


I’m not so sure. The wages of production workers have been dropping for thirty years, adjusted for inflation, and their economic security has disappeared. Companies can and do shut down, sometimes literally overnight. A smaller share of working-age Americans hold jobs today than at any time in more than three decades.


People are so desperate for jobs they don’t want to rock the boat. They don’t want rules and regulations enforced that might cost them their livelihoods. For them, a job is precious — sometimes even more precious than a safe workplace or safe drinking water.


This is especially true in poorer regions of the country like West Virginia and through much of the South and rural America — so-called “red” states where the old working class has been voting Republican. Guns, abortion, and race are part of the explanation. But don’t overlook economic anxieties that translate into a willingness to vote for whatever it is that industry wants.


This may explain why Republican officials who have been casting their votes against unions, against expanding Medicaid, against raising the minimum wage, against extended unemployment insurance, and against jobs bills that would put people to work, continue to be elected and re-elected. They obviously have the support of corporate patrons who want to keep unemployment high and workers insecure because a pliant working class helps their bottom lines. But they also, paradoxically, get the votes of many workers who are clinging so desperately to their jobs that they’re afraid of change and too cowed to make a ruckus.


The best bulwark against corporate irresponsibility is a strong and growing middle class. But in order to summon the political will to achieve it, we have to overcome the timidity that flows from economic desperation. It’s a diabolical chicken-and-egg conundrum at a the core of American politics today.


Robert Reich’s new movie Inequality for All is now available on iTunes, On Demand and DVD.



Follow Robert Reich on Twitter: www.twitter.com/RBReich




Robert Reich



Fear Is Why Workers in Red States Vote Against Their Economic Self-Interest

Monday, December 30, 2013

At $2.13 minimum wage, restaurant workers struggle to put food on their own tables



Restaurant workers are supposed to get at least minimum wage, when tips are combined with the $ 2.13 an hour tipped worker minimum wage. But, as the women in this video make clear, that’s not enough. Too often, employers don’t make up the difference, or even push workers to do prep or cleaning work at $ 2.13, with no chance to make tips. Or customers walk out on their checks, or leave a racist note instead of a tip, or a homophobic note instead of a tip, or a religious tract instead of a tip.

Relying on tips also forces an overwhelmingly female workforce to flirt with customers and smile at things that should be considered sexual harassment, all for the hope of a tip. A server named Gwenn told the Restaurant Opportunities Centers site Living Off Tips that “I think service is the hardest part. especially when customers decide how they’ll pay you by what they think of your looks.”


While the regular federal minimum wage of $ 7.25 an hour hasn’t gone up since 2009, the minimum wage for tipped workers hasn’t gone up since 1991 and is now a cause of widespread poverty among restaurant workers.




Daily Kos



At $2.13 minimum wage, restaurant workers struggle to put food on their own tables

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

AP Exclusive: Al-Qaida leader targeting UN workers








This undated photo provided by Iraqi government intelligence officials on Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2013 shows Nusra Front leader Abu Mohammed al-Golani. Iraqi intelligence officials that the shadowy leader of the powerful al-Qaida group fighting in Syria has sought to kidnap United Nations workers. The officials say they obtained the information about al-Golani, after capturing members of another al-Qaida group and that men gave them the first known photograph of al-Golani and letters written by the militant leader. (AP Photo/Iraqi Government)





This undated photo provided by Iraqi government intelligence officials on Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2013 shows Nusra Front leader Abu Mohammed al-Golani. Iraqi intelligence officials that the shadowy leader of the powerful al-Qaida group fighting in Syria has sought to kidnap United Nations workers. The officials say they obtained the information about al-Golani, after capturing members of another al-Qaida group and that men gave them the first known photograph of al-Golani and letters written by the militant leader. (AP Photo/Iraqi Government)





This undated photo provided by Iraqi government intelligence officials on Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2013 shows Nusra Front leader Abu Mohammed al-Golani. Iraqi intelligence officials that the shadowy leader of the powerful al-Qaida group fighting in Syria has sought to kidnap United Nations workers. The officials say they obtained the information about al-Golani, after capturing members of another al-Qaida group and that men gave them the first known photograph of al-Golani and letters written by the militant leader. (AP Photo/Iraqi Government)













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(AP) — The shadowy leader of a powerful al-Qaida group fighting in Syria sought to kidnap United Nations workers and scrawled out plans for his aides to take over in the event of his death, according to excerpts of letters obtained Wednesday by The Associated Press.


Iraqi intelligence officials offered the AP the letters, as well as the first known photograph of the Nusra Front leader, Abu Mohammed al-Golani, the head of one of the most powerful bands of radicals fighting the Syrian government in the country’s civil war.


The officials said they obtained the information about al-Golani after they captured members of another al-Qaida group in September. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to speak to journalists.


“I was told by a soldier that he observed some of the workers of the U.N. and he will kidnap them. I ask God for his success,” read an excerpt of a letter given by officials from Iraq’s Falcon Intelligence Cell, an anti-terrorism unit that works under Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.


The officials said other letters planned the kidnapping and killing of other foreigners, and Syrian and Iraqi civilians.


One U.N. worker was kidnapped for eight months in Syria and was released in October. Another two dozen U.N. peacekeepers were briefly held this year. It’s not clear if those abductions had any relation to al-Golani’s letters.


Syria’s uprising began with peaceful protests, but it turned into an armed uprising after Assad’s forces cracked down on demonstrators.


Since then, hard-line Islamic brigades have emerged as the strongest rebel forces in Syria, chiefly among them the Nusra Front.


Under al-Golani’s leadership, it has dominated rebel-held parts of southern Syria, and it is a powerful fighting force in the Damascus countryside and northern Syria, with an estimated force of 6,000 to 7,000 fighters.


Al-Maliki’s Shiite-majority government is considered a quiet ally of Syrian President Bashar Assad. The officials may have released the letter excerpts to underscore the dominance of al-Qaida in Syria.


The intelligence officials did not where they found the al-Qaida fighters who handed over the documents. They also would not say when the letters were written, though they said it represented a tiny sample of a large cache of documents.


The officials couldn’t explain why the letter excerpts were in a sloppily written, grammatically incorrect version of an Arabic dialect used across the Levant. It is believed that al-Golani was an Arabic teacher before he rose through al-Qaida’s ranks, and typically hard-line Muslims try to write in classical Arabic.


It may have been that an aide was writing down al-Golani’s speech. Arabs typically speak in dialects that are often quite different from the classical Arabic.


“The claim by Iraqi intelligence that Jolani and by extension, Jabhat al-Nusra, have been behind an explicit policy of kidnapping U.N. workers should be treated with some suspicion,” said Charles Lister, a prominent analyst of Syria’s militant groups. He referred to the Nusra Front by its Arabic name. “While it might well be true, elements within Iraq’s security services have a clear interest in portraying jihadists in Syria and Iraq in a highly negative light.”


Little is known about al-Golani, including his real name. He is believed to be 39 years old. The photograph suggests a man in his thirties.


Al-Golani is a nom de guerre, indicating he was born in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.


A Syrian native, he joined the insurgency after moving to Iraq.


He advanced through al-Qaida’s ranks and eventually became a close associate of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian-born leader of the militant group al-Qaida in Iraq.


He eventually returned to Syria shortly after the uprising against Assad began in March 2011, where he formed the Nusra Front, first announced in January 2012.


The group gained prominence in April after Golani rejected an attempted takeover of the Nusra Front by another rival al-Qaida group, now known as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.


Iraqi intelligence officials said it was members of ISIL who gave them the information about al-Golani.


___


Associated Press writers Bassem Mroue and Diaa Hadid in Beirut contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



AP Exclusive: Al-Qaida leader targeting UN workers

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Bankers Win, Workers Lose

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Bankers Win, Workers Lose

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Fast-Food Workers Cry Poverty Wages As McDonald"s Buys Luxury Jet





Fast-food workers march towards the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C., on Thursday. Similar rallies occurred in about 100 cities across the U.S.



Morgan Walker/NPR



Fast-food workers march towards the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C., on Thursday. Similar rallies occurred in about 100 cities across the U.S.


Morgan Walker/NPR



When you’re making eight bucks an hour, which is pretty typical in the fast-food industry, it’s tough to make ends meet.


And increasingly, the working poor are asking this question: Why am I living in poverty, even when I’m working full time?


That’s the message that thousands of fast-food workers rallying Thursday in about 100 U.S. cities — from Oakland to Memphis to Washington, D.C. — want heard. A living wage in big cities is closer to $ 14 an hour, and it jumps to about $ 20 an hour for an adult supporting a child.


The protests are part of a growing campaign backed by a coalition of advocacy groups, religious organizations and union organizers aimed at raising fast-food wages to $ 15 an hour.


At at time when the fastest-growing jobs in the U.S. economy are also the lowest paid, the issue of income inequality is on the lips of leaders worldwide.


From the remarks by Pope Francis a few weeks back to President Obama’s speech Wednesday, it’s clear that there’s growing unease about the divide between the haves and the have-nots.


And the image problem for the fast-food industry is exemplified by this online petition urging McDonald’s chief executive officer, Donald Thompson, to cancel his order for another corporate jet until he pays all his employees a decent wage.



According to the petition, McDonald’s just bought a $ 35 million luxury Bombardier jet for its corporate executives. Yet many of the company’s employees make so little that they rely on public assistance to get by.


“It’s not right to impoverish your employees while sailing above them at a rate of $ 2,500 an hour,” reads the petition started by the Campaign For America’s Future. “It’s immoral to do it with a taxpayer subsidy.”


In a recent study, economists at the University of California, Berkeley, found that 52 percent of fast-food workers rely on taxpayer-funded public assistance programs, such as food stamps or Medicaid.


“Taxpayers are subsidizing the low-wage model of these employers, who are making record profits in some cases,” says Dorian Warren, an associate professor at Columbia University who studies income inequality.


McDonald’s didn’t comment on the new round of protests Thursday. But back in October, a company spokeswoman told The Salt that McDonald’s history is full of examples of individuals who worked their first job with the company and then went on to have successful careers — both within and outside of McDonald’s.


As for the push from workers for higher hourly wages, McDonald’s “does not determine wages set by our more than 3,000 U.S. franchises,” a spokeswoman for the company says.


But at the restaurants run by the company — less than 10 percent of the roughly 14,000 McDonald’s outlets in the U.S. — the spokeswoman explains, “we pay salaries that begin at minimum wage, but range up from that figure, depending on the job and employee’s experience level.”


And according to an analysis by the financial information company Sageworks, many franchise operators are seeing significant increases in sales revenue.


Over the past four years, privately held fast-food restaurants have seen profit margins nearly double, Sageworks found, while the restaurants’ labor costs have remained flat.


So what will it take to push up wages? Depends on who you ask.


Increasingly, politicians are under pressure to raise the federal minimum wage. The president made his case Thursday. And already, a patchwork of state and municipal pay hikes have been passed. For instance, New Jersey passed a ballot initiative to raise its minimum wage by $ 1 to $ 8.25 an hour. And many workers in the city of SeaTac, Wash., — home to the Seattle airport — will get a raise to $ 15 an hour.


“The federal minimum wage has lagged behind the rising cost of living for the past four decades,” says Jack Temple of the National Employment Law Project.


According to Raise The Minimum Wage, a project of the National Employment Law Project, the minimum wage would be $ 10.74 if it had kept up with inflation over the past 40 years.


“Workers’ backs are against the wall,” Temple says.


But not everyone agrees that raising the federal minimum wage will fix the problem. “I would oppose raising the minimum wage to $ 15 an hour,” says Michael Strain of the American Enterprise Institute.


Such a hike in wages would lead to higher prices at the fast-food counter for all of us, Strain says, and employers would hold back on hiring. In addition, fast-food chains might replace people with new automated technology, which could be cheaper over time, he says.


Strain favors responses that wouldn’t put the onus on business owners, such as an expansion of the Earned Income Tax Credit or other subsidies.


Otherwise, free market economists, say low-skill workers run the risk of being priced out of the job market.


It’s true that the fast-food industry has given lots of young workers a start in the job market. In fact, the current CEO of McDonald’s started behind the counter of a Michigan McDonald’s decades ago.


But at a time when 70 percent of fast-food workers are in their 20s or older and one-quarter are raising children, the demands for higher wages are growing.




News



Fast-Food Workers Cry Poverty Wages As McDonald"s Buys Luxury Jet

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Charts: Why Fast-Food Workers Are Going on Strike



This Thursday, fast-food workers in more than 100 cities are planning a one-day strike to demand a “livable” wage of $ 15 an hour. They have a point: The lowest-paid Americans are struggling to keep up with the cost of living—and they have seen none of the gains experienced by the country’s top earners. While average incomes of the top 1 percent grew more than 270 percent since 1960, those of the bottom 90 percent grew 22 percent. And the real value of the minimum wage barely budged, increasing a total of 7 percent over those decades.


More of the numbers behind the strike and the renewed calls to raise the minimum wage:


Median hourly wage for fast-food workers nationwide:
$ 8.94/hour


Increase in real median wages for food service workers since 1999:
$ 0.10/hour


Last time the federal minimum wage exceeded $ 8.94/hour (in 2012 dollars):
1968


Change in the real value of the minimum wage since 1968:
-22%



Median age of fast-food workers:
29


Median age of female fast-food workers:
32


Percentage of fast-food workers who are women:
65%


Percentage of fast-food workers older than 20 who have kids:
36%


Income of someone earning $ 8.94/hour:
$ 18,595/year


Federal poverty line for a family of three:
$ 17,916/year


Income of someone earning $ 15/hour:
$ 31,200/year


Income needed for a “secure yet modest” living for a family with two adults and one child…
In the New York City area: $ 77,378/year
In rural Mississippi: $ 47,154/year


Growth in average real income of the top 1 percent since 1960:
271%


What the current minimum wage would be if it had grown at the same rate as top incomes:
More than $ 25



How would you and your family fare on a typical fast-food paycheck? How much does it really take to make ends meet in your city or state? Use this calculator to get a better sense of what fast-food workers are up against.







$  





Politics | Mother Jones



Charts: Why Fast-Food Workers Are Going on Strike