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NYSUT Retiree Council 12

AFL-CIO

Capital District Area Labor Federation, AFL-CIO
A lot of angry, over-the-top rhetoric is muddying our discussion of health care reform. To help clear things up, here’s a brief summary of President Obama’s plan, including how it will stop insurance company abuses and help you—even if you currently have a strong health benefits plan.
  • Health care reform will stop insurance company abuses.
    • Insurance companies won’t be able to refuse to pay a claim or give you coverage because of “pre-existing” conditions.
    • Your out-of-pocket expenses will be capped. No more going broke because of a serious illness or injury.
    • Insurance companies won’t be allowed to charge women higher rates than men or drop you if you get sick.
    • Insurance companies will have to cover your children until age 26 instead of dumping them at 19.
  • Health care reform will hold down rising costs.
    • A public health insurance option will force private insurers to compete and will lower costs for everyone.
    • By requiring companies to pay their fair share, we’ll stop them from dumping their health care costs on the rest of us.
  • Health reform means affordable care will be there for you, no matter what. If you lose your job, or your kid loses his. If you get sick. When you retire. Affordable health care will be there for you, no matter what. That means you and your family can’t fall through the cracks and won’t go broke because of health care bills.
For more information about how health care reform can help you and for answers to many of the common questions about President Obama’s plan, check out this new web resource from the White House.
We are so close to real reform, but getting over the finish line will be a battle. We are up against giant insurance companies, a Republican Party that wants President Obama to fail and the corporate media like Fox and Rush Limbaugh.
The reality is that health care costs are spiraling out of control, and everyone in America deserves quality and affordable care. Health care reform simply can’t wait. We will all be better off with real reform.
 
Anti-Union Campaign Aims to Undermine Workers' Voice and Political Power
More than half of U.S. workers—nearly 60 million—say they would join a union right now if they could. If only it were that easy. And it could be: If the Employee Free Choice Act were passed, workers who want to unionize could sign a card saying as much, and a majority would then authorize the formation of a union. But not if groups like the misnamed Coalition for a Democratic Workplace and the Center for Union Facts have their way.
 
If you've seen a TV commercial with Vince Curatola (better known as Johnny "Sack" Sacramoni in the HBO hit series "The Sopranos") in which he is pretending to be a threatening and overbearing union "boss," then you've seen one of the latest efforts in a well-coordinated anti-union campaign
 
In the commercial -- at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N6yrZtq27e0 -- "The Sopranos" character personifies a threatening thug who is scaring a would-be member into signing a union membership card. This is a slam at the Employee Free Choice Act, which would allow workers to indicate their desire to form a union by signing a card. While it is reasonable and logical that people should be allowed to form or join a union as they see fit, the opponents of the Employee Free Choice Act describe the bill as a tool that will open the doors to union intimidation. The real aim of the ad campaign, however, is to subvert the political power of working people, who, when joined together through their chosen unions, have more of a voice and more political clout than they do individually. (A related commercial — at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r267W0w3Veg -- attacks Al Franken, the Democratic U.S. Senate candidate in Minnesota.)
 
The completely misnamed Coalition for a Democratic Workplace (made up of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers, among others) and a subgroup of the Center for Union Facts called the Employee Freedom Action Committee are two of the main players in the current anti-union campaign. The groups have mounted television ads, print ads, letters to the editor and much more in an effort to paint unionization as bad and employees' freedom to choose unionism as "hazardous." The so-called Employee Freedom Action Committee is a new nonprofit organization that specializes in "astro-turfing"—that is, setting up shallow state organizations that look like they are grass-roots organizations. An article in the Willamette Week (Oregon) has a great description http://wweek.com/editorial/3429/11033/ of the committee.
 
What the groups don't mention is the millions of employer dollars that go into fighting employees' efforts to unionize every year, the pressure and intimidation that go into employer one-on-one meetings with employees to "set them straight" about unionism, and the workers who are fired for their unionizing efforts. They also don't mention the better pay and benefits that accompany a collectively bargained contract (which is voted on through secret ballot), or the improvement in the standard of living for those who decide to unionize.
 
As for anti-union organizations touting the right to privacy when it comes to signing a card versus conducting a vote for unionization, the group American Rights at Work (http://www.americanrightsatwork.org/) notes how unbelievable it is that "business interests would suddenly care about privacy now, when corporations increasingly monitor employees' every move, including e-mail, home calls, personal belongings and even interactions outside of the workplace."
 
When you see these attacks, fight back. Before these attacks come your way, make your voice heard. Preserving the right to choose unionization and ensuring an effective method of indicating that choice are essential to protect the right to be heard and to better our standard of living. Use these facts (http://leadernet.aft.org/documents_supporting/Talking_Points.doc) to arm yourself.
 
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