Chicago Sun-Times

Until celebs said # MeToo, nobody listened to blue- collar women about assault claims

- BY KARLA ALTMAYER

On Chicago’s Southwest side, a group of parents who are community volunteers recently shared with me a surprising insight about # MeToo.

“Finally! It’s not just us — it happens to rich people too,” one woman told me. “Now nobody can say that we’re lying or that we’re to blame for what happened.”

One positive outcome of the # MeToo campaign has been the overdue spotlight it has put on workplace sexual violence, particular­ly in bluecollar industries. But the public narrative has failed to recognize that women who work on farms, in restaurant­s and hotels and on the night shift already have been publicly sharing their experience­s, risking retaliatio­n, deportatio­n and losing their families. Their voices, even collective­ly, have created a mere ripple in the public conversati­on about systemic gender discrimina­tion and violence.

For instance, society doubted the credibilit­y of a hotel worker in Manhattan who had physical evidence of sexual assault at the hands of the French politician Dominique Strauss- Kahn years ago. News stories insinuated that she had provoked the assault, and headlines fueled a narrative that she was a “maid” looking to make a quick buck.

After a farmworker, Maricruz Ladino, shared her story of rape at the hands of her manager in the documentar­y “Rape in the Fields,” strangers called to harass her, and her fiance broke off their engagement. The documentar­y itself, powerful and provocativ­e, did not get 800,000 tweets the day after it aired. Nor did Ladino receive equitable or swift justice; instead, a jury trial refused to believe her and the 20 other plaintiffs who came forward.

After a six- year legal battle with one of the largest fruit producers in the United States, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the jury decision, and the women received a settlement of $ 272,000.

Our collective response to these stories was halfhearte­d at best because of how we as a society value blue- collar workers. We condone an economic structure resting largely on the backs of black and brown women workers who earn frightenin­gly low wages with no economic security. We promote the invisibili­ty of these workers with the fallacy of the “gig economy,” ensuring their labor happens behind closed doors, in private homes or at night. By failing to value the labor of women workers in restaurant­s, farms and hotels, we fail to value their voices when they speak out against injustice.

This is why the upcoming Supreme Court decision in Janus v. AFSCME matters. Unions have fundamenta­lly shifted the power dynamic for millions of women workers, closing wage gaps for unionized workers and passing legislatio­n to combat sexual harassment. Unions have advanced issues that matter most to women, such as access to health care, reproducti­ve justice and community violence. If the Supreme Court agrees with the plaintiff Mark Janus, who likes to say “the union fight is not my fight,” then the Court would ignore how the union- backed policies Janus opposes actually reflect the needs of women blue collar workers — who make up 40 percent of union membership and 47 percent of the U. S. workforce.

Admittedly, unions have their own moment of reckoning in the # MeToo era. Stories from the Chicago Ford plants undoubtedl­y illustrate the long road unions have yet to take in meaningful­ly addressing sexual harassment. But gutting unions is not the solution. We need to keep unions strong so they can address this deep- rooted problem affecting the lives of millions of workers.

Hollywood actors, coming forward with their own accounts of being abused, have validated the experience­s of others, but it’s thanks to unionized janitor workers in California and hotel workers in Chicago that # MeToo has its current political momentum. Until a hotel worker can get 800,000 responses to their tweet on their own, unions are an essential force to ensure that each woman worker, no matter the color of her collar, has the same culture- shifting power. Karla Altmayer is a Chicago labor and immigratio­n attorney. She is a co- founder of Healing to Action and the Coalition Against Workplace Sexual Violence.

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