“Workers must let the big banks, corporations and both
parties know that we as workers will continue building our powerful Southern
movement that addresses our needs as workers and not corporate greed!”
proclaims a statement issued from the Southern Workers Assembly, which plans a
major presence at the DNC convention. “Enough is enough! We will organize,
unionize, and fight back!”
Dante Strobino, an organizer with the North Carolina Public
Service Workers Union, United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America
(UE) Local 150, said workers and activists from across the South will converge
on Charlotte to let the nation and world know of their struggle in the region
and in a state that is essentially “Wall Street South” and home to Bank of
America, Wells Fargo Bank East and other major corporations.
“We have independent outside space where workers can speak
out about crimes of right-to-work for less,” Strobino said in a recent e-mailed
letter to me. “We also will be having a session there to dig in deeper to our organizing
lessons, methods and experiences to help share practices and learn from each
other’s work to organize in right-to-work states.”
The many endorsers of the assembly include: the Farm Labor
Organizing Committee (FLOC), Ken Riley of the International Longshoremen’s
Association in Charleston, S.C., the Southwest Workers Union in San Antonio,
Texas, the Mississippi Workers Center for Human Rights, representatives with
the United Auto Workers, the North Carolina Triad Jobs With Justice, Black
Workers for Justice, and The Labor Forum, WRFG 89.3FM, Atlanta.
A call to mobilization has gone out across the region.
The goals of the assembly include the following:
- Organizing
a workers’ speak-out on Sept. 3 in Charlotte
- Developing
an infrastructure utilizing social media and a newsletter to report on workers’
struggles across the South
- Creating
a region-wide alliance of existing networks and coalitions as a step toward the
founding of a Southern Workers Congress
- Gathering
resources from national unions and other organizations for a Southern
organizing campaign.
“We have such a great opportunity on our hands with the DNC
coming to town, but we got to do some work to make sure the voices of real
worker struggles and labor is heard,” Strobino said in a recent letter to a
fellow activist.
Check out the group's interactive web site: http://southernworker.org.
Check out the group's interactive web site: http://southernworker.org.
Also on hand in Charlotte Sept. 3 will be another major
group of activists, participants in the national No Papers, No Fear Ride for
Justice. These are undocumented immigrants traveling across the country to
heighen awareness of issues related to their fellow immigrants in the United
States.
Some 300 people in the Memphis area this week came together
for music and speeches during a stop in that city, and several joined the
UndocuBus for the journey to Charlotte.
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