IAM Calling on Congress for Rail Safety and Job Creation

The Machinists Union is strongly urging Congress to help secure the livelihood of the nearly 40,000 IAM members working in the rail industry by passing the INVEST in America Act. This legislation will improve safety, create thousands of good-paying union jobs, and provide much-needed stability and growth to the freight and passenger rail industry.

“This legislation improves safety and creates thousands of good-paying union jobs, while providing much-needed security, stability and growth to the freight and passenger rail industry” said Chief of Staff to the International President Richard Johnsen. “The INVEST in America Act is a great first step forward in protecting and securing the livelihood of the members we represent.”

The Act addresses a wide variety of issues, including responding to dangerous changes and the deployment of new technologies in freight railroad operations, ensuring that the Federal Railroad Administration is a safety-first agency that works in tandem with rail workers, and requiring the necessary presence of a certified engineer and certified conductor on most freight trains.

The bill also includes significant investments in passenger rail, including historic funding levels for Amtrak and its operational and capital needs. It supports the growth of new rail operations, including high-speed rail.

Earlier this month, The IAM along with a coalition of rail labor organizations wrote a letter to House leadership expressing strong support for the INVEST in America Act.

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Winpisinger Center Field Training at District 70 Shows Critical Role of Local Lodge Leaders

Winpisinger Center Field Training at District 70 Shows Critical Role of Local Lodge Leaders

IAM District 70 hosted Officer Training and Secretary-Treasurer Classes instructed by the Director of the IAM’s William W. Winpisinger Education and Technology Center Chris Wagoner, Education Representative Joe Gruber and Grand Lodge Auditor Suzette Trout for newly elected and re-elected officers within the district’s six local lodges in June.

“Local Lodge leaders play a critical role in the life of our organization,” said Wagoner. “We want members to be informed and engaged with their union. An informed and engaged membership requires an informed and engaged leadership.”

Local Lodge Officer Training included local lodge topics such as Officer Duties and Responsibilities, Meetings and Parliamentary, IAM Ritual, Bylaw Review, Mock Meeting Preparation, Finalization, and Participation, the Audit Process, Election Overview, Overview of Grand Lodge Structure and Services, and New Member Kits/New Member Orientation.

Shop Steward Jordan Westbury, who was recently elected to serve as Secretary-Treasurer for Local 839, attended the Officer Training and the Secretary-Treasurer sessions.

“The classes were very informative, providing a wide variety of good information and resource material for the veteran officer or to those of us who are newly elected,” said Westbury. “We went over a week-long Secretary-Treasurer class in a half-day, so I appreciate that we were given the material to reference. The education is invaluable.”

“It is essential to have our local leadership trained and it was less costly for the locals to have the training brought to them,” said District 70 Secretary-Treasurer Teressa Peart. “Of the six local lodges in District 70, three of the Secretary-Treasurers that were recently elected are new to the office of Secretary-Treasurer.”

“I cannot begin to express my gratitude toward District 70 Secretary-Treasurer Teressa Peart along with our outstanding team of Business Representatives and staff,” said District 70 President and Directing Business Representative Cornell Beard. “Without them, this would not be possible. Together, we appreciate the collaboration with the Southern Territory, IAM Headquarters, and W3 to make these classes possible for our proud Machinists in District 70. I am super proud of the men and women who’ve raised their hand to serve the membership in their locals and to attend these classes.”

“We want to make sure these officers have the resources, skills, tools and knowledge to do their jobs as efficiently as they can for the membership,” said Southern Territory General Vice President Rickey Wallace. “My thanks go to Director Chris Wagoner and the entire staff at W3 for making these field training classes possible.”

“It was my honor to personally be a part of this training for District 70,” said Southern Territory Chief of Staff Craig Martin. “The Southern Territory is proud to support any educational opportunity that will help us better represent our membership.”

 

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Local 709 Holds GDA Fundraiser, Kicks off Kourpias K9 Classic Ride

Local 709 Holds GDA Fundraiser, Kicks off Kourpias K9 Classic Ride

IAM Local 709 in Marietta, GA recently held a car show raising nearly $2,500 in support of Guide Dogs of America. The event was scheduled last year, but had to be cancelled. This was the first in-person fundraiser the local has held since the COVID-19 pandemic began.

The event also hosted the kick off rally for the Second Annual Kourpias K9 Classic, a six-day motorcycle ride which started in Marietta and finished in Fort Worth, TX.

“We believe in helping GDA give the freedom and independence to those who need it,” said Local 709 Vice President and event organizer Sandy Ledinsky. “And now that they have expanded it to helping veterans with PTSD and children with autism, I think that is even more reason to raise money because they are helping more people.”

“The first GDA event held at Local 709 under former president Jeff Goen in 2008, after Brother Geon passed away we made it The Jeff Geon memorial GDA event,” said Local 709 President/Directing Business Representative James Butler. “I was personally involved in that event and have been a participant and supporter ever since. GDA is a great organization, and I will continue to support them in any way I can. I would like to thank all the participants, volunteers and everyone who came out and help set up for the event.”

“I’m very proud of the leadership and members of Local 709 in their efforts to raise money and support Guide Dogs of America,” said IAM Southern Territory General Vice President Rickey Wallace. “The past year has been extremely difficult for everyone, so it’s great see our members stepping up with their time and money to help others in need.”

The event had a car show, food and drinks, raffles, a silent auction, and even chicken poop bingo. That’s where participants purchase numbered squares on a board, a chicken is placed in the pin with the board and walks around. Wherever the chicken decides to go number 2, the person who purchased that square wins the money.

Volunteers for the event were Sandy Ledinsky, Alfred Williams, Anita Floyd, Glen Adler, Rick Lemke, Bill Egan, Doug Vance, Danny Collier, Tony Kinnebrew, Susan Holmes and David Heard.

Guide Dogs of America is the IAM’s favorite charity. In 2020, GDA completed a merger with Tender Loving Canines, and now provides hardworking service dogs for people who are blind/visually impaired, veterans, children with autism and facilities to become trusted companions that bring confidence, independence and mobility. Their services are provided free of charge to residents in the U.S. and Canada.

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Machinists Union and Allies Fought for and Won Child Tax Credit Expansion for Working Families

The Machinists Union fought hard for the passage of the American Rescue Plan to bring relief to working families. One piece of relief coming soon for most IAM families will be the increased Child Tax Credit. The Child Tax Credit in the American Rescue Plan provides the largest Child Tax Credit ever and will make a big difference for many working Americans.

Starting on July 15, nearly all IAM members with children will receive an increased Child Tax Credit. The Child Tax Credit will deliver $300 per child each month for families with a shared income of $150,000 or $112,5000 for a single-parent household. So, in its simplest terms, help is on the way for IAM working families.

“The IAM continues to push for legislation that benefits IAM members and their families,” said IAM International President Robert Martinez Jr. “During the pandemic, it was workers and their families who made it possible for this country to survive and heal. The Child Tax Credit gives those hardworking families a benefit they truly deserve.”

Click here for a Child Tax Credit fact sheet.  

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A Rising Tide Lifts All Boats

A Rising Tide Lifts All Boats

Organizing is the heartbeat of the Machinists Union and always will be. But who we organize has changed over the years, and for good reason. That’s especially true in the IAM’s Western Territory. Today, its focus is about organizing what will be the next generation of trade unionists, in industries you may not think of when you hear the acronym IAM.

“A true trade unionist is someone committed to bettering the lives of people in their workplace and giving back to the process,” said IAM Western Territory’s General Vice President Gary R. Allen. “We are all very fortunate to have been put in a place where there’s a union and a union contract. We can’t take that for granted.”

After more than 40 years in the IAM, Allen lives by these words, as do his staff spread throughout the territory from Washington state to New Mexico. He believes in the adage “a rising tide lifts all boats” and he has a plan to make that a reality.

“What we are doing is trying to get people to realize it’s not just about paying dues,” said Allen. “Paying dues is the bare minimum of maintaining the union and making it stronger. We are asking people to start giving us time and commitment to cultivate the leaders we need for the future.”

One way the Western Territory is tackling such an important task is to organize in areas where the machinist moniker may not be synonymous now, but could be in the future.

The hospice and palliative Master Social Workers (MSW) and Bereavement Counselors working for Virginia Mason Franciscan Health in Washington state were having major issues at work. But what concerned them the most was that patient care was suffering because of it.

“It was a perfect storm of issues that came together and made us realize, we needed someone to speak for us,” remembered MSW Jordyn LaFreniere. 

After reaching out to a friend she knew from high school, IAM Grand Lodge Representative Gabby Rogano, the group of nearly 40 health care workers met with the Machinists.

“We needed someone to believe in us and have our back and that’s what the IAM did,” recalled LaFreniere. “After three interviews with different unions, we agreed, it’s obviously the Machinists. It just felt serendipitous.”

“They were so focused on caring for others that they weren’t focused on themselves,” said IAM District 751 President and Directing Business Representative Jon Holden. “By suffering through ownership and management changes, which ultimately hurt their patients, they finally realized they needed representation. They needed an advocate to be able to do the things that they needed to take care of their patients.”

Joining the Machinists Union was the catalyst for the nurses and the chaplains, all part of their working family, to also sign with the IAM. Today, this group is nearly 170 members strong, in two separate bargaining units. Negotiations began in April. As is the machinist way, higher health and welfare benefits will be on the table, but work issues like autonomy and strengthening patient care will top the list. This moral imperative to place patient care above their own needs, mirrors the Machinist practice of servicing the membership above all.

IAM members working for the Central American Resource Center (CARECEN) show their union solidarity.

“Ninety-nine percent of the health care workers I have met aren’t in it for the paycheck,” explained Allen. “They are in it to provide care and they want to help their fellow citizens. You can’t do that work unless you are committed on a certain level to helping other humans. They are already advocates.”

Holden agreed.

“That compassion and willingness to serve is going to make our union better,” said Holden. “They are already activists and we will see a lot of them get more involved over time.”

“The motto of the Machinist Union is ‘justice on the job, service to the community,’” said Allen. “So it just makes sense for us to want to organize workers with the same values.”

“In the nonprofit world, there’s a sense of ownership for what we do,” said IAM District 947 Business Representative/Organizer Jennifer Marin Esquivel. “You love the fact that you are serving the community and advocating for your clients. It’s a special place if you have the heart for it.”

That sense of community and advocating is a good fit for the Machinists Union. Something IAM District 947 President and Directing Business Representative Sal Vasquez realized right away. He saw a leader in Marin Esquivel and an opportunity to do some good.

Originally, Marin Esquivel was the event coordinator for a nonprofit called CARECEN which stands for the Central American Resource Center. This group offers low to no cost immigration services in the Los Angeles area. Although she had a solid relationship with management, disparate treatment, employees without a voice and a lack of equality, were obvious in the office. They knew they needed help and went looking for a union.

“The Machinists Union said to us, ‘you advocate for your clients, why wouldn’t you want someone to advocate for you?’ and that just made so much sense to the group as a whole,” said Marin Esquivel.

CARECEN employees voted overwhelmingly to join the IAM and word quickly spread. Here was a union who understood the underlying principles of nonprofit work and what the employees needed. Today, the Western Territory is working with seven separate nonprofits, both local and national, two of which already negotiated a first contract. Wage equality, prison reform, refugees and community resource centers are just a few arenas in which these nonprofits operate.

With Marin Esquivel’s expertise, supported by her machinist colleagues and GVP Allen, IAM District 947 is becoming a staunch leader in organizing the activists of the nonprofit world.

“We are talking about paralegals, lawyers, organizers, so they know what it feels like to advocate,” explained Marin Esquivel. “When we meet with these groups, I always tell them we are here to give you options, that’s our job. All I can give you is a voice – and a way to amplify that voice.”

“For these nonprofit activists and the health care advocates, it’s not just about a paycheck or benefits or working conditions,” said Allen. “It’s about helping them provide quality care to their patients and clients. They are advocates, first and foremost.  Everything else is secondary.”

The conversation of how we look at the future of the labor movement is changing in the Western Territory. Everyone agrees, we all need to do our part.

“The question isn’t, can we deliver?  But rather, can we together make a movement that will create real change?” asked Marin Esquivel of herself and other advocates. “You have to put in your grain of sand because those little grains of sand create the beach.”

Being part of something bigger than yourself is what union means to many people. 

Justin Mauldin, Director of Organizing for IAM District 725 said he believes most people want to make a difference.

“I feel 90 percent of the world wants to help their fellow man. We are meant to help each other, to have a sense of community,” said Mauldin. “So, if we show them how they can do that and here’s how it will also help you, they will do it.”

Creating that sense of community in the Western Territory has proven advantageous when it comes to organizing and negotiating Service Contract Act (SCA) agreements. IAM’s District 725 President and Directing Business Representative Larry Olinger has honed this idea in his area for years, making his group a leader in organizing for this territory.

Shop Steward Training at IAM Local 1125 for members working under the Service Contract Act.

That bodes well for those working under SCA agreements. These bargaining units often contain a large number of veterans like Mauldin. As a former U.S. Marine, he can relate to wanting to find that sense of community so many veterans seek.

“Once you get out of the U.S. Marine Corps., you miss that sense of camaraderie. You miss being around like-minded people, working toward a common goal,” related Mauldin. “So with the IAM, you have a common goal. You have that sisterhood and brotherhood and it gives you that community you’re looking for. If we can show them that we are there for them, that’s everything.”

Much like nonprofits and the health care workers, creating a community that believe in taking care of each other is key to cultivating a new breed of activists for our future union family. 

“When you see someone riding around with an IAM sticker or wearing a Machinist shirt, it makes you feel like you are part of a community,” noted Mauldin. “When you feel like you are part of that community, you are willing to do things to better that community,”

The work done by the Western Territory staff in recent years is setting the bar for the future of the labor movement. Organizing, servicing and providing good contracts is the trifecta of this area and always will be. But making sure the labor movement is strong for the next set of leaders is paramount to the entire working class.

“Now it’s time to build a base of volunteers and more actual union members, not just dues payers,” said Allen. “I sincerely believe the things you focus on come to fruition. As long as we have the right message, we are going to appeal to the right people. I believe this is the future of the labor movement, not just the IAM but all of it.”

“A rising tide lifts all boats” is a phrase that can be heard throughout the territory. It’s why the union members in the West are willing to give up a little for themselves in order to benefit the group. Or how being union isn’t about earning a bigger paycheck but making sure those good, paying union jobs are secure for the ones who come after. It’s about advocating for those who don’t have voice and leaving a legacy that is the foundation for the prosperous future.

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