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    #1u

    Explore " #1u" with insightful episodes like "“Just the Facts” – Juliana Feliciano Reyes", "Labor Leaders – Sara Nelson", "Labor Leaders – Liz Shuler, Part II", "Labor Leaders – Liz Shuler, Part I" and "Pandemic Shines Light on Need for Unions, Organizing in the Time of COVID-19" from podcasts like ""WORK! Exploring the future of work, labor and employment.", "WORK! Exploring the future of work, labor and employment.", "WORK! Exploring the future of work, labor and employment.", "WORK! Exploring the future of work, labor and employment." and "The Leslie Marshall Show"" and more!

    Episodes (10)

    “Just the Facts” – Juliana Feliciano Reyes

    “Just the Facts” – Juliana Feliciano Reyes

    “Philadelphia Inquirer” labor reporter Juliana Feliciano Reyes and ILR Dean Alex Colvin discuss the role that cities like Philadelphia are playing, through initiatives such as the Fair Workweek law, to secure workers’ rights.

    Fill out this short questionnaire to provide feedback, or to suggest a guest or topic for a future episode.

    Learn more about ILR by visiting us on the web at ILR.Cornell.edu

    Labor Leaders – Sara Nelson

    Labor Leaders – Sara Nelson

    Sara Nelson, international president of the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA, AFL-CIO, and Dean Alex Colvin discuss the shifts that have occurred in unions – from their approaches, to their membership, to their leadership, and what must continue to happen to benefit all workers.

    Fill out this short questionnaire to provide feedback, or to suggest a guest or topic for a future episode.

    Learn more about ILR by visiting us on the web at ILR.Cornell.edu

    Labor Leaders – Liz Shuler, Part II

    Labor Leaders – Liz Shuler, Part II

    In the conclusion of this two-part episode, Liz Shuler, the secretary-treasurer of the AFL-CIO and Dean Alex Colvin discuss the Fight for 15, the gig economy, and the role millennials will have in the future of unions.

    Fill out this short questionnaire to provide feedback, or to suggest a guest or topic for a future episode.

    Learn more about ILR by visiting us on the web at ILR.Cornell.edu!  

    Labor Leaders – Liz Shuler, Part I

    Labor Leaders – Liz Shuler, Part I

    Liz Shuler, secretary-treasurer of the AFL-CIO, and Dean Alex Colvin discuss the atmosphere of today’s unions. The duo examines the surge of strikes nationwide, the increase of worker activism and the growth of diverse union leadership.

    Fill out this short questionnaire to provide feedback, or to suggest a guest or topic for a future episode.

    Learn more about ILR by visiting us on the web at ILR.Cornell.edu

    Pandemic Shines Light on Need for Unions, Organizing in the Time of COVID-19

    Pandemic Shines Light on Need for Unions, Organizing in the Time of COVID-19
    Leslie is joined by Maria Somma, Organizing Director for the United Steelworkers (USW). They discuss how Covid-19 has shined a spotlight on the devastating economic inequality in the United States, revealing low wages and a lack of access to affordable health care for many front-line, essential workers like food service workers, grocery clerks, delivery drivers and more. This daily risk and poor compensation demonstrate how important it is to have a voice on the job. Though workers want and need unions, organizing during a pandemic presents its own challenges. And it’s not just blue collar workers who need unions; the pandemic revealed the urgent need for professional unions as well. In a positive development, Union organizers and workers have found new methods of capacity-building by organizing remotely and holding campaign events through social media channels. You can find out more by visiting USW.org, or following them on Twitter or Instagram, where their handle is @steelworkers. (Image Credit: Chip Somodevilla / David Degner / Joe Raedle / Noam Galai / Christopher Furlong / JOHANNES EISELE / VALERIE MACON / AFP / Getty)

    Manufacturing, Infrastructure and American Security

    Manufacturing, Infrastructure and American Security
    Leslie is joined by United Steelworkers President Tom Conway to discuss manufacturing, infrastructure, and American security during the COVID-19 pandemic. Much of the information they covered can be found in this week's USW blog, titled "America's Infrastructure Crisis." (link here: https://usw.org/blog/2020/americas-infrastructure-crisis) The website for the USW is www.USW.org and their Twitter and Instagram handle is @steelworkers.

    Why Can’t America Make Enough Masks or Ventilators?

    Why Can’t America Make Enough Masks or Ventilators?
    Leslie is joined by Scott Paul, President of the Alliance for American Manufacturing (AAM), a partnership established by some of America’s leading manufacturers and the United Steelworkers union. For over a decade, Mr. Paul and AAM have worked to make American manufacturing a top-of-mind issue for voters and our national leaders through effective advocacy, innovative research, and a savvy public relations strategy. The two discuss Scott's recent op-ed published in the New York Times titled, "Why Can’t America Make Enough Masks or Ventilators?" (Link: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/14/opinion/coronavirus-industry-manufacturing.html) They also talk about President Trump’s troublesome “tariff relief” plan, as well as why AAM believes now is the perfect time to rebuild America's infrastructure. On that note, we'd like to encourage you to please add your name to AAM's message to President Trump, and Vice President Pence, that it's time to Rebuild America! Just go to tinyurl.com/RebuildAmericaAction to add your name. Thank you! The website for AAM is AmericanManufacturing.org and their Twitter handle is @KeepItMadeInUSA. Scott Paul's handle is @ScottPaulAAM. (Image Credit: Rick Bowmer/Associated Press)

    Workers’ Memorial Day and Trump administration’s Responsibility to Workers During COVID-19 Pandemic

    Workers’ Memorial Day and Trump administration’s Responsibility to Workers During COVID-19 Pandemic
    Leslie is joined by Steve Sallman, Assistant Director of the United Steelworkers Health, Safety and Environment Department, where he’s worked for more than 16 years. He has 28 years of safety and health experience, investigating fatalities and life-altering accidents, providing assistance to local unions and working closely with employers’ safety and health professionals. Mr. Sallman serves as a labor representative on the National Advisory Committee on Occupational Safety and Health (NACOSH) and NFPA’s 652 Technical Committee on the Fundamentals of Combustible Dust. Leslie and Steve discuss Workers’ Memorial Day and the Trump administration’s responsibility to workers during the Covid-19 pandemic. Coronavirus has introduced a host of new health and safety concerns into the workplace: both for essential workers who have been on the job for the past two months and for workers who will be entering the workplace again as the economy begins to reopen. During this pandemic, many USW members have been and continue to go to work each day in oil and chemical plants, paper and steel mills, hospitals, power plants, and many other workplaces. Unions, including the USW, have made a series of common sense recommendations and some employers have been taking steps to keep workers safe. However, there are still real challenges, including access to appropriate PPE, the need for appropriate distancing, still sometimes limited opportunities to regularly wash hands, and more. The biggest challenge has been a lack of leadership from the federal government, which has left everyone to tackle these problems piecemeal. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), the agency charged with keeping workers safe, has been largely absent from this conversation. In March, a group of unions demanded that OSHA implement an emergency, temporary infectious disease standard that would specify the steps employers must take to keep workers safe. But OSHA still has not done so. Instead OSHA merely provided guidance that employers are free to accept or reject. As a result, since January, more than 3,000 workers contacted OSHA to complain about employers’ failure to take basic steps to protect them from COVID-19. Yet another problem is that OSHA has all but stopped investigating complaints. This has left the states, and other stakeholders, to fill in the holes. Oregon, for example, ramped up enforcement of state-level occupational safety rules and began spot checks of employers to ensure workers practice social distancing. This is sadly unsurprising. Labor Secretary Eugene Scalia has long sided with corporations over workers. The Trump administration has also targeted the Chemical Safety Board (CSB), which has broad bipartisan support, and rolled back chemical safety regulations. A recent paper mill explosion in Jay, Maine is another example of how the CSB should be responding to understand how this happened, what lessons can be learned and shared with the industry, workers, unions and the public. It is truly a 'miracle' no one was hurt after the mill exploded. This week the USW marked Workers Memorial Day, a somber day that we observe every year in the fight for safe jobs. This year, their union remembered the 29 workers who were killed at USW-represented workplaces in the USA and Canada over the past twelve months. And, as they always do, they resolved to fight for the health and safety of their members and all workers. But in light of COVID, and the administration’s failure of leadership, they’re also mobilizing to fight for the safety of all workers by supporting H.R. 6559, The COVID-19 Every Worker Protection Act of 2020. This legislation would require OSHA to put out an enforceable standard for COVID-19. On April 28, 2016, Workers Memorial Day, President Obama signed a Presidential Proclamation. On April 28, 2020, Workers Memorial Day, President Trump keeps meatpacking hotspots open as he signed an executive order under the Defense Production Act to compel meat processing plants to remain open amid the coronavirus pandemic. The President should instead be using the DPA to mandate the production and distribution of personal protective equipment, while issuing an emergency temporary standard to protect workers from COVID-19. The USW's website is USW.org and their handle on Twitter and Instagram is @steelworkers.

    Nurses Protest Outside of White House for Life-Saving PPE in Fight Against COVID-19

    Nurses Protest Outside of White House for Life-Saving PPE in Fight Against COVID-19
    Leslie begins the hour with her 'Ripped from the Headlines' news segment. Here are the four news stories that she covers: 1. AXIOS: "White House and Congress reach interim coronavirus funding deal" 2. CNN/AXIOS: "Bipartisan Senate report backs intel community assessment that Russia interfered to help Trump in 2016 election" 3. Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: "At least 7 new coronavirus cases appear to be related to Wisconsin election's in-person voting, Milwaukee health commissioner says" 4. NBC News: "Two-thirds of voters back vote-by-mail in November 2020" She's then joined by Jean Ross, an Acute Care Nurse, and Co-President of National Nurses United, the country’s largest union and professional organization of registered nurses, with more than 150,000 members nationwide. Leslie and Jean discuss the registered nurses who are holding a protest in front of the White House today. They're protesting to call attention to the tens of thousands of health care workers nationwide who have become infected with COVID-19 due to lack of personal protective equipment (PPE). The nurses, members of National Nurses United (NNU), are practicing social distancing and are reading aloud the names U.S. nurses who are known to have died of COVID-19. Nurses have been demanding that the Trump administration’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) promulgate an emergency temporary standard so that health care workers are provided with the optimal PPE. NNU petitioned OSHA on March 4, 2020 for such a standard and never received a response. With no federal health and safety standard, nurses and other health care workers in many hospitals across the country have not been provided with adequate PPE to protect them from exposure to the virus. Nurses point out that they require N95 respirators or a higher level or protection as well as other protective gear when taking care of patients who may be infected with COVID-19. With the failure of the Trump administration to protect health care workers, NNU is demanding that Congress include a mandatory OSHA emergency standard in its next COVID-19 legislative package. Leslie and Jean also talk about the healthcare workers being hailed as heroes after standing in the street to block a right-wing protest against Colorado's stay-at-home order. NNU's website is NationalNursesUnited.org and their Twitter and Instagram handle is @NationalNurses. (Image Credit: Reuters)

    Women of Steel and Women’s Activism Around the Globe

    Women of Steel and Women’s Activism Around the Globe
    March is women’s history month and March 8th was International Women’s Day. This is also a big year for commemorating women’s activism, with 2020 marking the centennial of women’s right to vote. To discuss some highlights of women's activism around the globe during the past year, Leslie is joined by Anna Fendley of the United Steelworkers Union (USW). Anna also shares some incredible insights on the USW's 'Women of Steel' program during the interview. Anna has been with the USW for over a decade and has worked doing legislative advocacy and in the union’s Health, Safety and Environment Department. Anna serves as the vice president for North America for the IndustriALL Global Union, which represents industrial workers all over the world. She also represents the AFL-CIO as the chairperson of the International Trade Union Confederation’s Global Youth Committee, where she led the effort to create a global economic platform for young workers. Here are some of the details that Leslie and Anna covered during today's conversation. - Women of Steel: · The USW’s 'Women of Steel' is its program for empowering women leaders and activists. It began as a grassroots effort in Canada in the 1980s as an effort to combat sex discrimination. · Now it’s union-wide. Women of Steel work on a variety of issues that are important to women in the workplace: some of it iscommunity-based and some national. - Health care worker safety: · The union has long fought for protections for health care workers. The USW represents approximately 50,000 health care workers, many of whom are women. · This includes work on the Workplace Violence Prevention for Health Care and Social Service Workers Act (H.R. 1309), which passed the House late last year. · Many of the issues that the USW fights for, not just in 'Women of Steel,' but across the board, are now taking on a new resonance with the outbreak of COVID-19. · The USW and other unions have pushed to get OSHA to issue anemergency standard to protect front line workers in the wake of the virus. - Paid Leave · The issue of paid leave is also as urgent as it’s ever been. Even before the current crisis, the USW supported legislation that would expand leave, including the FAMILY Act. · Now, there is greater need. Lawmakers are proposing the 'Paid Sick Days for Public Health Emergencies and Personal Family Care Act.' · This issue does not just affect women, but because many women are caregivers in their families, access to benefits like paid leave help with gender equality. - Women’s Activism Internationally: · It’s not just domestically that the USW has been fighting for women’s rights. As a part of a global alliance of unions called IndustriALL, the union has been taking a wider view of women’s participation in the workforce. In November, they met in Geneva and set ambitious goals. These included increasing diversity in workplaces, finding ways to get more women into leadership positions, and combating gender based violence. Anna was part of the USW’s delegation. · The ILO has also set reducing gender based violence as one of its goals. It also announced that this year’s World Day for Safety and Health at Work, celebrated on April 28 dually as Workers Memorial Day, will focus on calling for the prohibition and prevention of violence and harassment in the workplace. As part of the campaign, the ILO will produce a global report highlighting how a comprehensive OSH (Occupational Safety and Health) framework at both national and workplace levels could address the epidemic of violence and harassment. · Women in Mexico have also started a grassroots movement against the violence they experience. o On International Women’s Day, 80,000 protestors took to the streets of Mexico City. This “Day Without Women” was intended to draw attention to femicide and government inaction. It’s estimated that ten women are killed in Mexico every day. The website for the United Steelworkers is USW.org and their Twitter and Instagram handle is @steelworkers. The Twitter handle for USW President Tom Conway is @USWblogger.
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