The Mercury News

Here’s why in California labor unions are winning again

- By David Huerta David Huerta is president of Service Employees Internatio­nal Union, United Service Workers West. He wrote this piece for CalMatters.

Most California­ns understand that the economy is not working for them.

A recent statewide survey revealed disturbing pessimism about the state of things. Nearly two-thirds of us believe that children growing up today will be worse off financiall­y than their parents. More than twothirds believe the gap between rich and poor is growing wider.

While there is not a lot of hope among many, there is this: 78% believe it is important for workers to organize so that their employers don’t take advantage of them.

We are seeing that on an ad hoc basis in a phenomenon some are calling the “great resignatio­n.” A record number of workers quit their jobs in 2021, spawning a worker-driven labor shortage.

Job levels have not returned to pre-pandemic levels not because there is a shortage of lowwage jobs, but because of widespread dissatisfa­ction with the conditions that come with those jobs. Workers are fed up and feeling empowered.

We are seeing it also on an organized basis in a surge of work stoppages that has been termed by some “Striketobe­r” and “Strikesgiv­ing.” From John Deere to Kellogg’s and beyond, workers are asserting their interests in a way not seen for decades.

Here in California, fast-food workers are rallying to end unsafe working conditions and pushing for higher wages during the “Fight for 15” campaign, which includes advocating for passage of Assembly Bill 257, dubbed the “FAST Act,” which would require franchise owners to meet industry standards on working conditions, wages and working hours.

Also this year, more than 20,000 janitors across the state in my union fought for and ratified a new contract. It provides many with a fully paid, family health care plan, a $20 per hour minimum wage and employer contributi­ons to a pension plan that will provide them with the retirement security they deserve. This puts their compensati­on far above what a comparable nonunion janitor earns in California.

Americans are taking note of worker progress. The Gallup organizati­on, which has since 1936 periodical­ly polled Americans on how they rate labor unions, found in September that support for unions is now at its highest point since 1965. Support is particular­ly high among young adults and those with annual household incomes below $40,000.

Seeing all this, those who are satisfied with the status quo are beginning to push back, asserting that organized workers somehow have too much political influence.

But if you’ve watched what’s happened in Washington, D.C., or even Sacramento this year, you know that the evidence is otherwise. It wasn’t labor lobbying that scuttled attempts to lower prescripti­on drug costs by allowing Medicare to negotiate prices, and it wasn’t labor that blocked paid family and medical leave for workers, and it hasn’t been labor that has kept billionair­es and big corporatio­ns from paying their fair share of taxes. Corporate lobbying did all that.

Working people united in unions have, however, played a significan­t role in advocating for actions that have helped families weather the COVID-19 crisis — stimulus checks, increased support for child care, supplement­al unemployme­nt benefits, a federal eviction moratorium and more.

There have been periods in our history when dissatisfi­ed workers have successful­ly pushed for change. There were periods, such as after the World Wars or coming out of the Great

Depression, when working people made great contributi­ons to society and then insisted that they be rewarded.

For the essential workers — Black, Latinx, Asian, White — whose sacrifices made it possible for us to get through the worst of the COVID-19 pandemic, this is another such time.

To move our economy forward so that it works for all of us, workers need a stronger voice, not a muffled voice.

It will take collective resolve to bend the arc of inequality, to close the gap between rich and poor, to re-create a thriving, racially inclusive middle class that can again have faith that children will fare better than their parents.

That’s the union agenda. California­ns are on board.

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