Back in 1999, Victor Narro co-organized* up to 100 Los Angeles-based day laborersāmainly Latino and many undocumentedāto attend the AFL-CIO convention, the nationās largest labor gathering. Now, he admits, they were all a little naĆÆve. Without affiliate status, the group learned at the entrance that they could not share the hall with the representatives of 12 million union workers.Ā āWe felt like, āWhy would [certain] workers not be allowed into the AFL-CIO convention?ā,ā Narro says.
What Narro, who isĀ now a project director at the UCLA Labor Center, recalls more vividly though, is the unofficial greeting:Ā A grip of ironworkers and others in the construction trade formed and, ābasically told us we had no business being there. Weāre not a union. We take away union jobs.ā Echoing a sentiment shared by many working people of color today, Narro says, āWe felt that we were not part of the labor movement.āĀ The last decade has given Narro hope however that an unprecedented all-workers movement, not just a union member-only movement, could one day become a reality.
There are signs that traditional labor leadership, if not its dwindling white male rank and file, is taking steps to better include workers of color. Not only has itĀ recognized the growing strength of alt-laborĀ models like those built over the last 15 years by veteran organizer Narro. Itās slowly beginning to address the racial justice concerns of workers of color, too.
The latest indicator, labor observers say, was provoked by Michael Brownās killing in Ferguson. It came three weeks ago in the form of aĀ little-publicized but powerful speechĀ by AFL-CIO president Richard Trumka.Ā During his remarks Trumkaāa former mine worker from western Pennsylvaniaāurged the mostly white audience attending their St. Louis convention to honestly tackle racism. āWe cannot wash our hands of these issues,ā he said, before recounting how local labor had instigated a 1917 pogrom against African-American migrants in St. Louis. āRacism is part of our inheritance as Americans. Every city, every state and every region of this country has its own deep history with racism. And so does the labor movement.ā
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After watching Trumkaās speech on YouTube (his second on race), Atlanta-based organizer Tamieka Atkins says she is more inclined to count herself as part of the labor movement. āI generally say that I belong to the domestic workers movementāor the workers rights movement because I havenāt felt represented by labor,ā says Atkins, director of the first and largelyĀ African-American chapterĀ of the Latina and immigrant National Domestic Workers Alliance. As a sign of their growing strength, the 10,000-member alliance boasts a newly announced MacArthur āgeniusā grant winner in Ai-Jen Poo and domestic workersā bills of rights wins in four states.
āNow, because of this speech and other overtures,āālike dedicating a major part of theĀ 2013 AFL-CIO convention agendaĀ to non-union, undocumented and women workersāāI see more of an opening to say, I belong,ā Atkins says.
Belonging means more than ticking off new non-white members, however. As Narro notes, it means transformationāand when it comes to workers of color that means integrating individual on-the-job concerns with āoff-the-clockā community concerns like climate change, racial profiling,Ā mass incarcerationĀ and, certainly, police violence. And therein lies the rub for organized labor as it looks toward the future.
Among the lines and metaphors most quoted back to this reporter from Trumkaās post-Ferguson speech is, āOur brother killed our sisterās son.ā Officer Darren Wilson is union, as is Michael Brownās mother. Trumka notably frames police violence towards young black men as a union āfamily matter.ā But organizer Douglas Williams, whoās also policy committee chair of Moral Mondays-Alabama, sees more than an insular quarrel. He sees a fundamental internal conflictāand a clear choice being made.
ā[Consider] the fact that theĀ Missouri Fraternal Order of PoliceĀ (FOP) raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for Michael Brownās murderer, and you see the importance of [Trumkaās] speech,ā Williams says, adding that, āwhen someone with the gravitas of Richard Trumka stands up and gives such an unequivocal endorsement of racial equality and working-class power, it is a signal that the FOP are the people who are out of line.ā
Trumka, in his speech, said he supports demilitarizing police, which,Ā BuzzFeed reports, directly counters the position of the police union that falls under the AFL-CIO, theĀ International Union of Police Associations (IUPA). (The FOP does not belong to the AFL-CIOās 56-member federation.)Ā Still, in keeping with the IUPA position, he urged people not to judge the specifics of Officer Darren Wilsonās case until investigations were complete.
For workers of color, the impact of racial issues, of which the Brown killing is only one example, can overtake traditional labor concerns about wages and benefits. āSome of our members are union, many of them are not. I might have a union contract, but that doesnāt stop the police from shooting me in the street,āĀ Los Angeles Black Worker CenterĀ director Lola Smallwood-Cuevas says, adding that Trumkaās speech was, for her, āone of the proudest moments of belonging to the labor movement.ā
Amaya Smith, national media director for the AFL-CIO, says the federation is tackling the issues surrounding Brownās killing. āIn Ferguson, the AFL-CIO leadership in partnership with the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists spent time meeting with and listening to local leaders and is actively looking for ways to duplicate those conversations nationally in labor halls and councils,ā she says. Practical applications like āeconomic training [for union members] around mass incarceration,ā for example, would be one way for the body to breathe life into Trumkaās speech, says Steven Pitts, associate chair of the UC-Berkeley Labor Center.
āOne of the most interesting parts of the meetings in Ferguson is that community leaders often wore three hatsāand one of them was often union member,ā Smith says. āI think mainstream labor may not understand that a lot of the folks whoāve been working on the ground in Ferguson are also union members. Theyāve already been part of this larger [social justice] fight.ā
Immediately, Smith says, many union members are stepping up to support the planning of the upcoming NationalĀ Weekend of ResistanceĀ in Ferguson from October 10-13. In Atlanta, Atkins is arranging for five women to attend. And over Labor Day weekend Smallwood-Cuevas took a 36-hour bus ride from Los Angeles to Ferguson with other worker center members as part of Black Lives Matter.
Jeanina Jenkins, who works at the Ferguson McDonaldās, may not be union but sheās typical of workers of color who integrate expectations of fairness, equality and justice both on and off the job. Jenkins earns $7.97-an-hour, an increase from the $7.50 she made last April when she decided to join the fast-food worker strikes. Jenkins was finishing up her shift when she heard shots fired the Saturday afternoon that Brown was killed. Since then, sheās been double-timing it on the picket line, in Ferguson streets and in strategy meetings with local youth ever since.
On the Saturday afternoon that we speak on the phone, sheās standing in front of the police station demanding the release of recently arrested protesters.
āPeople around here know me ācause as a fast food worker, Iāve been striking for a long time. But out here, Iām just Jeanina. This is really about Michael Brown,ā she says.
- Post has been updated since publication to accurately reflect that in 1999 Victor Narro did not organize up to 100 day laborers on his own.
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