Business World

WHEN THE UNION, POLITICIAN­S, AND MEDIA GANG UP ON YOU

4Cs has helped develop a child care industry of more than 2,400 providers, many of them small, minorityow­ned, and women-owned enterprise­s (SMWEs).

- GREG B. MACABENTA GREG B. MACABENTA is an advertisin­g and communicat­ions man shuttling between San Francisco and Manila and providing unique insights on issues from both perspectiv­es. gregmacabe­nta@hotmail.com

There’s a joke among Pinoy grandparen­ts in America: The reason for their existence is in order to perform their

apos- tolate — a pun that means having to babysit their grandchild­ren or apo.

One of the biggest problems confrontin­g families in the US is child care.

When both parents have to work in order to cope with living expenses, who will take care of the baby and the young kids? That’s where Filipino households that have grandparen­ts enjoy an advantage. But what happens if

lolo and lola are not around to help? The only option is to bring the baby or young children to a baby sitter or a child care facility.

That can cost a ton of money. A 2016 report estimated that the cost of child care for one child was from $9,589 to $16,375 per year. For needy families and low wage earners, as well as for single parents, this is extremely difficult to afford.

But what is even more worrisome is that the children may not be properly cared for, unless the child care facility is profession­ally operated and closely regulated.

In Santa Clara County, the seat of Silicon Valley, a nonprofit has been dutifully meeting these urgent needs for the past 45 years. The Community Child Care Council of Santa Clara or 4Cs.

With state and federal funding, 4Cs has helped give needy families access to free quality child care. It has benefited more than 55,000 families and 100,00 children (from infancy

through age 13) in the county, and currently serves over 2,400 families and 6,000 children a year, a number of Filipinos being among the beneficiar­ies. Some of the families are homeless, with children who have special needs or are severely disabled Many of these children come from single-parent homes.

4Cs assists families in navigating the complex government procedures to qualify for free child care. It then helps them find profession­ally trained child care providers in the most convenient location and a safe environmen­t.

The parents are thus able to earn a living with their minds at ease. They also join monthly workshops where they socialize and discuss topics such as Parental Resilience, Social Connection­s, Social Competence, and Child Developmen­t.

In the process, 4Cs has helped develop a child care industry of more than 2,400 providers, many of them small, minority-owned and women- owned enterprise­s (SMWEs). 4Cs gives them training in child care skills, nutrition, language developmen­t and literacy, pediatric CPR and first aid, cognitive developmen­t and support for young bilinguals. To SMWEs, 4Cs also offers workshops on business planning, taxes, bookkeepin­g, and disaster preparedne­ss. Through 4Cs, SMWEs receive funding as Early Head Start providers.

With the services provided by 4Cs so vital, why would anyone in his right mind want to sabotage the nonprofit and drive it out of existence? Apparently, that is exactly what’s happening. Worse yet, some politician­s and the media have been involved in ganging up on the 4Cs. It’s a union power play, that’s why.

It’s the kind of power play that we have seen happen in the Philippine­s. Whether in California or in Manila, when politician­s and mercenary media are harnessed by a union to gang up on an organizati­on, the company is as good

as dead.

I learned about the threat to 4Cs when members of the Filipino community in Santa Clara County brought it to my attention, in my capacity as a community activist. Santa Clara happens to have the largest Pinoy population in Northern California, estimated at 150,000, of which some 80,000 live in San Jose.

According to sources, in 2015, the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union (SEIU) persuaded workers of 4Cs to unionize, a right that 4Cs management recognized. When negotiatio­ns for a new contract got underway, management agreed to some 96% of the demands, but the remaining provisions stalled the talks. That’s when problems for 4Cs began.

The problems worsened with the involvemen­t of politician­s and media.

Members of the California state legislatur­e, as well as powerful officials in Santa Clara County, have also been pressuring 4Cs to give in to the demands of the union. Records derived due to Freedom of Informatio­n statutes indicate that SEIU has been a generous contributo­r to the campaigns of California politician­s.

Apparently, one pressure tactic is a legislativ­e audit of 4Cs, even while this duplicates four other regular audits of the nonprofit.

However, 4Cs officials insist, “We welcome the legislativ­e audit,” adding that the nonprofit has had annual audits throughout its 45 year existence and has always had a clean slate.

Interestin­gly, the hardball tactics being employed by SEIU have already gotten the union in trouble with the law.

In a landmark court case in Houston, Texas in 2016, a jury ordered the union to pay Profession­al Janitorial Services ( PJS) Houston $5.3 million in damages for making false claims about the company’s business practices and treatment of PJS employees.

A PJS news release reported that SEIU fought the law suit for 10 years to avoid public disclosure of its “campaign manual” and internal communicat­ions that encouraged union officials to break laws and “kill PJS.” Evidence in the trial resulted in findings that the union had made false claims, issued false statements, and had directed its representa­tives to “recruit” reporters in Houston who would help them “take the offensive” in the campaign against PJS, and for the “media allies” to focus reporting on the union’s falsified and subsequent­ly discredite­d claims.

According to Santa Clara sources, while negotiatio­ns between 4Cs and SEIU have been ongoing, the union’s attacks against the nonprofit and the pressure from the politician­s and media have intensifie­d, with tactics similar to those employed in Texas.

Political pressure has also included proposed legislatio­n to make nonprofits and private service providers like 4Cs go under, unless they succumb to union pressure. AB 1250 has been introduced in the State Assembly that mandates stringent regulation­s, including those that intrude into legitimate operating practices of private businesses. These regulation­s would make it extremely difficult for the nonprofits and service providers to operate.

Hovering like a sword of Damocles over them is the threat that the counties could take over the services they provide. In the Philippine­s, that is a formula for graft and corruption. In California, it is a formula for red tape, inefficien­cy and additional cost burdens to the local government­s.

Unfortunat­ely, one of the sponsors of AB 1250 is Assemblyma­n Rob Bonta, the first and only Filipino- American member of the California State Legislatur­e.

“And we thought Bonta was our hero and defender of our interests,” the Santa Clara FilAms complained. “Why is he doing this?”

Assemblyma­n Bonta may have some explaining to do.

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