Feature Story

Crafts Demonstrate in Orange County for the Right to Organize
On Jan. 8, Building Trades unions demonstrated in the City of Brea in support of the right of union representatives to access a private construction job which is allowed by the California law. The Supreme Court has upheld this right several times.


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Sprinkler Fitters Local 709 at Playa Vista
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Story & photos by Roy San Filippo, Steff Writer

Sprinkler Fitters Local 709 are working Phase II of the New Horizons Office Campus at Playa Vista. Development in the Playa Vista territory – a tiny stretch of coveted property near the Pacific Ocean in West Los Angeles – has met with significant difficulties over the years, and labor leaders often complained that when there was work, too much of it went to non-union contractors. But Horizons is being built under a 100-percent union labor agreement.

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Plumber's Local Union 78

From the Executive-Secretary

Conspiracy from California to D.C.

ImageJust when working families were gearing up to challenge another California ballot initiative to muzzle their and their union’s ability to affect policymaking in the state, the U.S. Supreme Court came out with a stunning blow to the individual having any impact on elections. Last Jan. 10, the Court issued its decision in “Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission,” and declared that business profits, with no limit on the amount, can be used to fund political campaigns.

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An Open Letter to all Elected Officials Print E-mail
By Richard Slawson, Executive-Secretary   

ImageUnemployment is the problem!

For months now, all of you, as elected Representatives of the People, have been dealing with business bankruptcies, budget shortfalls and covering your behinds because the depression/recession that has hit the United States, your own state and businesses. We understand that you are concerned with ways to stop the economic slide that would balance your budgets and hopefully limit any employees being laid off who provide service to the public. However, you have it all wrong.

The only way that nationally and locally we are going to kick start this economic crisis is by putting the millions of people to work who have lost the jobs already. These are people who are trained, skilled, experienced and ready to immediately go to work. These are people in the construction industry – these are skilled craftsmen and women.

As with past recessions and especially during the Great Depression, governments learned very quickly that it is jobs in the construction industry that have the quickest and biggest impact on employment. Great projects were undertaken during the bleakest economic times. Bridges, road, public buildings, hospitals and parks were undertaken to puts people to work. They created jobs, in many cases, where there were none. These projects brought new economic growth to the most depressed areas of the country.

If you want to immediately turn the economy around for the better then development or public works projects need to be targeted. The stimulus funding that President Obama authorized will be a fantastic start, however, the oversight necessary to make sure that the funding is getting to local areas needs to be implemented immediately with five mandates.

1. Commit to the projects that have been identified that will benefit our communities and the country with no changes for one year; 2. See that the stimulus funding is reaching these projects; 3. Make absolutely sure that the jobs that are created are good-paying and long term; 4. Streamline the process for getting projects started; 5. Take politics out of the process with a bi-partisan, Stimulus Implementation Commission.

We hear that stimulus funding has been approved. We hear that it will be creating opportunities for business and working families, however, it isn’t working. The best of intentions won’t create one opportunity if there is no plan in place for distribution of the funding to new projects.

Many professions will be effected by a push from all levels to kick-start projects. Architects, engineers and project management along with craftsmen and women can be put to work tomorrow. All they need are the directions to the jobs.

Too many of you are concentrating on layoffs instead of employment. Too many of you are looking at cutting jobs as a means to balance budgets. And, too many of you are arguing over ideology about big government versus small government instead of doing something about putting people to work.

If you want tax revenue and balanced budgets – put America to work! If you want to stop home bankruptcies – put America to work! If you want American manufactures to begin selling products – put America to work! If you want consumers to spend money – put people to work! If you want the respect and admiration of the American people – put America to work! We know that it can be done because it’s been done before. It’s been done in weeks rather than months and months rather than years. President Franklin Roosevelt faced a greater threat to our future than we do now and turned it around with forceful action. He said on June 16, 1933 upon signing the National Industrial Recovery Act; “The law I have just signed was passed to put people back to work, to let them buy more of the products of farms and factories and start our business at a living rate again. This task is in two stages: first, to get many hundreds of thousands of the unemployed back on the payroll by snowfall and, second, to plan for a better future for the longer pull. While we shall not neglect the second, the first stage is an emergency job. It has the right of way.”

You might say that the federal government has passed the stimulus funding package and that will take care of everything. Well it is not happening fast enough for men and women who are currently unemployed and losing what they have built and saved. We are at the “First Stage” and it is an emergency! Put America back to work!

 
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Trades Headlines

Metro Blue Line resumes service to downtown LA

89.3 KPCC, March 9

The Metro Blue Line resumed service to downtown L.A. this morning after this weekend's construction work closure, officials reported. Blue Line trains were not running in downtown Los Angeles this past weekend due to construction that will eventually tie the future Expo Line into existing Blue line tracks, said Gayle Anderson, a spokeswoman for the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority.

 

Port of Los Angeles roadway gets improvements

ABC 7, March  8

L.A.-area elected officials broke ground on a $22 million renovation of a roadway that connects the Port of L.A. The street improvements along a 1.3-mile stretch of Harry Bridges Boulevard is a federally funded project expected to create more than 250 local construction jobs

 

California employers add 32,500 jobs in January

LA Times,  March 5

California employers added 32,500 to their payrolls in January, a sign that the state's moribund labor market might finally be stirring to life. The gains came as sectors throughout the economy, including construction and manufacturing, started to hire workers, according to numbers released Friday by the Employment Development Department.

 

 

Irvine’s Suffolk Construction lands $35.5 million school project

OC Metro, Feb 23

Suffolk Construction Co.’s Irvine office this month will break ground on a new $35.5 million campus for the Los Angeles Unified School District. It’s the fourth project that the district has awarded to Suffolk.

 

LA officials break ground on massive $1.5B expansion of LAX international terminal

LA Times, Feb 22

Construction began Monday on a $1.5 billion project to expand the international terminal at Los Angeles International Airport — a facility ranked one of the worst in the nation.

 

Downtown Celebrates Convention Center Hotel Opening

LA Downtown News, February 16

A chorus of Los Angeles political and business leaders turned out this morning to celebrate the opening of the $1 billion Convention Center headquarters hotel. Officials described the structure at L.A. Live as the completion of a long-awaited dream, one that will allow the city to compete on the top tier of the country’s convention industry.

 

Los Angeles eyes Owens Lake for huge solar project

Reuters, February 10

An old battleground of California's water wars could turn into one of the largest solar farms in the world, with thousands of shiny black and blue panels mounted across the desiccated, salty white crust of Owens Lake.

That's the plan by the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (DWP), the largest public utility in the United States.

 


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