Category: Uncategorized

  • How to Avoid a Transit Strike in Austin, Texas

    Editorial

    IndyMedia Austin

    Here’s some unsolicited advice for the bosses at Capital Metro, the
    bare-bones transit system of Austin, Texas. Now is not the
    time to be pushing American workers to the wall.

    Top hourly wages of $18-$21 (which translate into annual salaries of
    about $40,000) are in no way unreasonably high living wages in this city, so
    there is no reason to attempt to lower them through a two-track salary
    system which would reduce pay for new employees.

    Before you consider pressing for cuts in salary and benefits, you
    should consider the reputation that you will have as a premier employer
    in the Austin area, entrusted with a business that is by, for, and of
    the people.

    What calls for your management genius is not the size of stick you’ll
    need to bully your trained professionals who drive the streets and keep
    the buses running at all hours.


    To comment on this story, please see comment blog.
    No, the people of Austin, and fellow workers, need your management
    skills to figure out how to best organize your operators and mechanics
    in such a way that their hard work is the most productive for people
    who need to get from one end of your proud city to the other, with as
    much speed and flexibility as possible.

    Suffice it to say your reputation as managers is not the
    greatest. How else do you explain the fact that 80 percent of the
    Capital Metro workforce is unionized, deep in the heart of this
    Right-to-Work state, and that they have taken their first-ever strike vote this year in response to your union-busting attitude?

    And if you’re hard at work on the reputation of your transit agency,
    why does the myth of ’empty seats’ prevail at the
    editorial board of the daily paper? Here’s one thing anyone can
    try who worries about empty seats on the streets of Austin, Texas. Get
    on the 350 Southbound bus at Highland Mall and as you
    cruise along Airport Drive, count the number of empty seats you see in
    the passing cars. A typical count yields an average of one driver
    per car, with three or four seats to spare.

    If your bus operators were not moving about 82,000 passengers per day,
    we would need about that many more cars on the streets of Austin. Last
    week, the City Council learned that ‘Mobility Issues’
    (parking, traffic congestion, & construction) are what the people
    of Austin would like to see solved first. Before you push your
    workers hard into a striking position, maybe you should chat with your
    Council colleagues about the need to maintain mobility and living wages
    for all workers of Austin.

    Indeed, when you count ALL the empty seats on the streets of Austin,
    there is an amazing inefficiency in our transit system, and the cost of
    that inefficiency is rising every day in terms
    of the damage it does to life quality, pocket books, and ground
    water. Solving that problem is something you would find more
    worthy of your lasting
    honor than pushing workers from the lower middle class another step
    down on the opportunity ladder. Why not be proud to supply
    workers to this city who can enjoy themselves somewhat?

    In the contract negotiations that resume August 4th and 5th, we
    recommend you apologize for that ‘scare tactic letter’ that you sent to
    your employees this week and instead bring to the table your own
    promise made in this year’s
    printed budget to: "Continue promoting positive labor relations and
    fostering the relationship with collective bargaining representatives,
    including continuing to focus on the utilization of interest based
    bargaining techniques" (see pdf page 98, budget page 94). It’s
    not too late to reverse the betrayals of this promise that have
    occurred since negotiations officially began in April.

    As for ‘zero-tolerance’ in drug use, let’s keep our wits about us,
    shall we? In this age of cell phones, any noteworthy impairment
    on the part of a bus driver is going to get called on right away.
    Riders are not going to put up with it. Of course, workers should
    be allowed to take drug rehab as a condition of their
    re-employment.

    If you refuse to help keep Austin weird, at least
    help keep it sane. The practical value of
    this so-called point of disagreement has been blown out of proportion
    by a ‘zero-tolerance’ editorial board that makes lots of money off of Austin’s party scene. Again, we might suggest
    logging some realistic hours as a bus rider. Believe me, it’s not the
    bus operators you have to worry about out there.

    On this note it is especially deceptive for the local editorial board
    to try and blame operators for the fact that a strike would most hurt
    those for whom car driving is simply not an option. You’d have to
    ride the bus sometime in order to see that on any given day it is the
    bus operators who make it their business to move even the least
    able. Note to editorial board: nobody needs your guilt
    trip. All the operators are asking is fair treatment. In
    American labor history, that’s what strikes are about.

    So we’re not onboard for your proposed changes in pay for overtime or
    split routes. If driver awakeness is really something you are
    concerned about, you will keep the overtime limit at 8 hours per day
    rather than 40 hours per week. The 8-hour overtime policy is the
    safer one for your riders.

    If the voters of Austin some day decide that they want to abolish their
    city transit system then so be it. But so long as voters want it,
    and so long as you are in charge of that public trust, we implore you,
    do not use your political clout to bully your workers. Instead,
    help keep Austin moving–on the streets and in the negotiating
    rooms. Do not put the brakes on work quality or transit
    efficiency. You can easily avoid this strike. All it will
    take is about a dollar’s worth of good faith.

    Take it from a frequent bus rider: your operators are gettin’ it done. They deserve your respect, not your threats.

  • Let Them Eat Maggots: Jailing Refugees in Texas

    Email from Jay Johnson-Castro.

    Hola amigos y amigas…

    One of my journalist heroes is Victor Castillo, who I got to know quite well from the Border Wall-k. He is currently a TV reporter for CBS affiliate KGBT in McAllen, Texas. He’s one of the really rare and brave ones. He has exposed some of the grotesque conditions in the largest concentration camp on planet Earth, located in Raymondville, Texas…north of Brownsville. ICE and the nervous politicos are not happy with him.

    PLEASE read the story about maggots in the refugees’ food.

    Sometime this weekend, I will send you the video clip of the same newscast. But word about this crime has to get out. They are imprisoning the wrong people. The people that would do this are free…and getting rich. They should be indicted and imprisoned…but our government is protecting them like the protected the guard that sexually assaulted the mom in front of her child in Hutto and has not been charged with a crime. Those in the cover up include high up elected officials. We will bring them down.

    If anyone is interested in joining in a protest on Raymondville in a couple of weeks…please let me know.

    Victor is not done! But he will need your moral support. Please share this info…

    In solidarity…

    Jay

  • Free Ramsey Website Updated

    Email from Irma Muniz:

    Dear Friends:

    The Ramsey Muniz website has been updated. We invite all friends and supporters to visit the new website at www.freeramsey.com
    and learn about Ramsey’s background and contributions to humanity. When you click on Support, you will gain insight into the the suffering that he has endured for many years, and the unjust treatment that he has been subject to.

    We ask that you forward this message to your
    senator, congressmen, and friends so that they will gain knowledge about an extraordinary man who gave of himself for the sake of many people. All political leaders, whether Democrat or Republican, should be involved in the humanitarian effort to free Ramsey Muniz.

  • Immigration Judge Orders Deportation of Ibrahim Family

    Our heroes Maryam and Faten Ibrahim have been ordered deported to Palestine, says their attorney. The brave girls and their family, who all endured detention following an election-eve arrest by immigration authorities, returned this week to a Dallas immigration court, only to be told that they must leave the USA.

    Family attorney John Wheat Gibson says he has filed notice of appeal.–gm