Who could have predicted a year ago, as Congress-sanctioned pension cuts gathered momentum, that thousands of retired truckers self-organizing in diners and union halls across Middle America would manage to apply the brakes?
āWeāve taken just normal, everyday grandmothers and grandfathers, and weāve made citizen lobbyists out of them,ā said Wes Epperson, a retired member of Teamsters Local 41 in Kansas City, āand itās been because of necessity.ā
The movement won a first-step victory on May 6, when Special Master Kenneth Feinberg recommended that the Treasury Department deny the Central States Pension Fundās bid to slash 207,000 Teamsters’ benefits by up to 70 percent.
āI must congratulate the retirees for reaching out to us and making sure that their voices were heard,ā Feinberg told reporters. āI can tell you that listening to the retirees and what they had to say, of course that influenced.ā
Thousands of Teamsters, retirees, and spouses helped win this reprieve through grassroots lobbyingārallying, writing letters to Congress, and packing the hearings Feinberg held around the country.
Stopping the rush to cuts was only the first battle in what promises to be a much longer fight. Without a funding solution, this pension fundāand others as wellāwill eventually run out of money, because half its payments are made to retirees whose companies went out of business, went non-union, or were allowed to exit the fund. UPS, by far the biggest Teamster employer, was let out in a 2007 deal, in exchange for letting the union organize its freight division.
Nonetheless, in Kansas City, activists rallied in celebration. āIt was so nice to see these people smiling and cheering,ā said retiree Dave Scheidt. āPrior to that Treasury decision, you could have cut the anxiety with a knife.ā
Scheidt, who put in 32 years loading and unloading freight, and Epperson, who worked 43 years for UPS, are leaders in the Missouri-Kansas Committee to Protect Pensions.
āIām a kind of layperson that got involved with this movement because we didnāt have much choice,ā Scheidt said. āWe tried for a long time to work through our union. When we saw they werenāt doing anything, we pretty much had to roll up our sleeves and do it ourselves.ā Since then, he adds, āour unionās come around, and done quite a bit.ā
Dozens of similar committees sprang up, with help from Teamsters for a Democratic Union (TDU) and the Pension Rights Center.
āIt was grassroots, I can tell you,ā said Ava Miller of Flint Local 332, retired after 42 years dispatching carhaulers. āVery few locals gave the retirees and the members any assistance on this. I did lots of calling, day and night. I would meet people at the union hall after the union meeting.ā
BIGGER AND BIGGER
At first, many people didnāt take the threat seriously. In a pension workshop at her first TDU convention, āit was just like somebody had punched me in the gut,ā Miller said, ābecause this was for real.ā But when she brought the news back, co-workers brushed her off: āOh Ava, youāre such doom and gloom.ā
Activists in Kansas City got the same reaction. Epperson remembers a breakfast meeting of freight retirees at the Corner CafĆ© last June. āWe started talking to them about these pension cuts, and they all looked at us like we were crazy,ā he said. āI donāt know what they were thinkingāwe were all a bunch of TDU troublemakers?ā
But word must have gotten around, because the next month, so many people showed up that the cafĆ© owner said, āYouād better find another place to meet.ā
Next they tried the union hall, but got rebuffed as an āoutside organization.ā Undaunted, they turned to the American Legion hall, which is āa better place to meet anyway,ā Epperson said. āOur union hall, youāve got to walk up about 20 steps, and thatās difficult for retirees. Weāve got people on walkers, on crutches.ā
In October, Central States itself kicked the organizing up a notch by notifying each beneficiary how much money he or she stood to lose.
āWhen they all got that letter, it was like everybody was piling on,ā Miller said. āThere were so many people just petrified.ā
āIt was catastrophic, the impact that this was going to have,ā Epperson said. āThereās no way that a guy whoās 75 years old, on a set of crutches or in a walker, taking medicine every day, is going to get a job that pays him 25 or 30 bucks an hour.ā Monthly meetings in Kansas City ballooned from 125 people to 450.
PACKED UNION HALL
Tim Pagel of Houston still works in the freight industry, with 42 years under his belt. For years, he says, Local 988 officers shrugged off his proposals to organize against looming threats to the pension.
Pagel came home from last fallās TDU convention impressed with how pension committees were using Facebook. āItās safe to call me a senior,ā he said. āI do okay with social media, but itās kind of intimidating.ā Nonetheless, armed with a few pointers from the activists heād met, āI went straight from the airport to the local pub, got a pint, and opened up Facebook.ā The group he started quickly grew, and helped him find others who were doing the same thing.
By January, local officers warmed up. The union considered sending a retiree to one of Feinbergās hearings.
But Pagel had a better idea. Instead of flying one person somewhere to give two minutes of testimony, he argued, āletās spend the money to bring Karen Friedman from the Pension Rights Center to the union, and letās get all of our members up to speed.ā
Thatās what they did. āIt was pretty phenomenal,ā Pagel said. āI donāt think Iāve ever seen that many people in our local hall. We kept getting reports that the exit to the freeway was blocked upāwe had so many people, they couldnāt get into the parking lot. They had the double doors open because people were lined up outside the building trying to hear.ā
Meanwhile in Kansas City, activists found a creative way to get press.
When Epperson first called the Kansas City Star, business reporter Mark Davis was skeptical whether his editor would bite. (Like most newspapers, the Star no longer has a labor reporter.) āI said, āYou know what, Mark? If you wonāt come to us, weāll come to you,āā Epperson remembers.
A hundred retirees rallied at the paperās headquarters with campaign T-shirts, signs, flags, and whistles. They delivered Davis a manila envelope packed with their letters from Central States and personal stories.
It worked. The reporter started writing about their fight, and later thanked them for pushing the issue.
LESSONS LEARNED
Feinbergās final hearing was held in Kansas City in February. On a weekās notice, 1,000 people turned outāstanding room only.
And in April, 2,000 activists from 20 states converged on Washington, D.C. to rally at the Capitol. Twenty senators and reps lined up to declare their support. (You can see footage from the rally, including Sen. Elizabeth Warren addressing the crowd, here.)
The heroes from Houston traveled a grueling 1,400 miles each way, by bus. āIt was inspiring and heartwarming to see 70-year-old Teamster retirees with their spouses loading up for what is nothing less than a backbreaking, grinding bus trip,ā Pagel said.
After Treasuryās verdict, Central States opted not to resubmit its application, which gives retirees some breathing room. The matter is back in Congressās hands, and no one expects action until after Novemberās election.
āIām sure theyāre going to come at us again,ā Miller says, ābut we have more organization, and people are more aware that Congress has made it possible to cut your benefits. Weāre having little local meetings, and weāre ready to jump into action as soon as anything happens.ā
āAt my age and stage in life,ā Pagel says, āit gives me an opportunity to look back. I think the thing that distresses me about the Teamsters membership, and this applies to any union, is that weāve got this culture of inactivityājust pay your taxes, just pay your dues, and weāll take care of you.
āWhat this movement has shown is that, first of all, thatās not true. You pay your taxes, you pay your dues, and they still try to screw you over. The real benefits come when you have an active, engaged membership.ā
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