
Hassan Juma'a Awad, President of Iraq Federation of Oil Unions, is interviewed while attending as a guest speaker the 3rd National Assembly of U.S. Labor Against the War in December, 2009.
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Chicago public transit riders and workers have become fed up with perennial funding crises that translate into service cuts and attacks on working conditions and jobs.
There needs to be a different, positive solution with adequate funding, and transit riders and workers need to control the process and the system.
With Mike Pitula, Little Village Environmental Justice Organization; and Erek Slater, CTA Bus Driver. Also Elwood Flowers, ATU 308; Carlos Acevedo, ATU 241; Dan Hrycyk, Financial Sec., ATU 241; Heather Benno, NoCTAcuts.org.



- 1. Pain Dry Ice Strike
Teamsters 705 members employed by Pain Dry Ice in Addison, IL were forced to strike over unfair labor practices.
In a campaign to put pressure on management, the union has implemented a strategy of following the scab trucks carrying dry ice to delivery locations and conducting ambulatory picketing there to inform customers about the strike.
- 2. Day One of Obama's War
Within 24 hours of President Obama's announcement of major US troop increases to Afghanistan, a coalition of anti-war groups on Dec. 2, 2009 assembled in Chicago's Loop (at Federal Paza) to denounce this move.
This is now Obama's war, not a leftover from Bush's military policies. One sign at the rally said it all: "So Much for the Peace Prize!"
- 3. Chicago Protests Sham Honduras Election
On the day so-called elections took place in Honduras (Nov. 29, 2009) protesters assembled in front of the Honduran Consulate in Chicago to decry the fraud of this electoral process set up after the military coup against the legally elected President of Honduras, Manuel Zelaya.

Rubina Jamil is President of Pakistan Working Women Organization. While attending as a guest speaker at the 3rd National Assembly of U.S. Labor Against the War in December, 2009, she gave this interview to Labor Beat.
In it she discusses her organization, the situation that working women face in Pakistan, the U.S. military occupation of the Pakistan region, and the political needs of the Pakistani working class.


(See the description for the later Labor Beat series show.)
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A rally against mass transit service cuts in Chicago took place on Dec. 9, 2009.
Carlos Acevedo, Amalgamated Transit Union Local 241, told a large protest crowd in front of CTA headquarters: "It seems the riding public gets numb to it because it seems not to happen, they get bailed out every year, but these cuts are real. You will be affected by them. It's a different style of service cuts they are making, that will make you stand on the corner for a long, long time. They are going to eliminate buses on each route. They can avert this. We need a real solution for mass transit, to demand proper funding for mass transit."
Heather Benno, NoCTACuts.org, added: "This is a cause of justice. They say that they're going to lay us off and cut our services. They say that there is nothing we can do. But by being here in the streets, we are fighting back."
Robert Kelly, President ATU Local 308, told the crowd of union and community activists: "Reducing services in this city, laying people off is a tragedy. We need to keep these jobs. We need the public involved."


(See the description for the later Labor Beat series show.)
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New one-hour shows every Monday begin with labor news headlines and continue with timely interviews.
Chicago's unique labor news and current affairs weekly radio program. Affiliated with The Committee for Labor Access and the Labor Beat television series.
Recent one-hour shows can be downloaded and played. The site offers podcasts and extra nonbroadcast content, too. Listen weekly at 10am Chicago time via internet streaming at wluw-fm.org, or on Chicago's North Side over WLUW-FM, 88.7 MHz.
Detailed information about the shows is at www.LaborExpress.ORG.

Third in the Labor Beat series on healthcare crises in Illinois.
Includes the Governor of Illinois, Pat Quinn, showing up on the Teamsters 743 picket line at SK Handtools. He puts on a Teamsters hat, grabs a picket sign, and gives a lengthy speech about why workers need healthcare reform, single payer in particular.
The SK Handtools strike over, among other things, the workers' loss of healthcare benefits is part of an historic national struggle over whether under this system good healthcare is a right for all or only for those who have money.

-1- ABA, You're the Worst
The Oct. 26, 2009 protest against the national meeting of the American Bankers Association in Chicago.
Actions, interviews, speeches. Begins at Chicago offices of Goldman Sachs (Goldman "Sucks") and then goes to the office building of Wells Fargo. There, hundreds of protesters occupy the lobby. Length 9:57.
-2- Showdown in Chicago
October 27, 2009, on the third day of protest during the national meeting in Chicago of the American Bankers Association, some 4-5 thousand labor and community activist marched down Michigan Avenue and then to the Sheraton Hotel, where the ABA was meeting, and held a protest rally.
This day of protest was called by its organizers "Showdown in Chicago: The American People vs. Wall Street Banks."
Speakers included Dennis Gannon (President, Chicago Federation of Labor), Tom Balanoff (President, SEIU Illinois Council), Richard Trumka (President, AFL-CIO), Armando Robles (President, UE 1110, of the Republic Windows plant occupation), Denise Dixon (Executive Director, Action Now).
Dixon noted, "Every 13 seconds, another home goes into foreclosure in urban areas all over the country that are already beaten down. ... Enough is enough!"
Tom Balanoff asked the rally, "why are we here today? We're here to send a strong message to the bankers and the financiers, it's time that they be held accountable."
-3- Chicago Street Sitdown for Boston Hyatt Workers
On Sept. 24, 2009, in front of the Chicago Ave. entrance to the Chicago Park Hyatt, hundreds of Chicago hotel workers (UNITE-HERE members) and supporters sat down in the street, in solidarity with Park Hyatt workers in Boston who were fired.
Interviews and scenes from the dramatic sitdown in the street.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=KfFWXVNJo6U. www.blip.tv/file/2679301.
[PLAY NOW using www.youtube.com/watch?v=KfFWXVNJo6U. www.blip.tv/file/2679301].


[See the description for the Labor Beat series show.]
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The second report in this series briefly recapitulates Episode 1 and then covers a series of speakers and interviews from the Labor Day event at Pullman on Sept. 7, 2009, where we hone in on the public option and single payer.
To those gathered at that commemoration, Dr. Claudia Fegan (Physicians for National Healthcare) spoke: "As we stand here today, there are 46 million people who are uninsured. And 75 percent of those people are working folks and their families."
Dr. Ann Scheetz, working with the Illinois Single Payer Coalition, explained in an interview, "the only healthcare reform that counts is the single payer program that is embodied at the national level as HR676, and at the state level in HB311. This is the only reform that will actually cover everybody because it makes coverage automatic. It is also the only reform that can contain costs. This can only come about through a massive movement of all the people, including of course the labor movement."
State Representative Mary Flowers, who is chair of the Healthcare Committee, said: "I see so many of my friends out here for single payer. We must send our leaders in Washington, DC a message. We must tell them that we don't want access to insurance, we want access to healthcare. Therein lies the difference."
Jorge Mujica, immigrant rights activist, addressed the issue of undocumented workers and the national healthcare debate. "Today on Labor Day immigrants came out to march as American workers, born elsewhere, but as American workers. ... Mr. Barack Obama said a month ago that the priority in his government is healthcare reform and we will talk about immigration reform in about a year. And our response is, we are willing to work of course for healthcare reform, but we want a healthcare reform that is inclusive, because you should know that this healthcare reform we are talking about excludes immigrants...Let's include every American worker in the healthcare reform."
Congressman Jesse L. Jackson, Jr. noted that "115 years after Pullman [the Pullman strike], there is still a debate about citizenship...there is no such thing as an illegal human being." Congressman Jackson then compared the issue of private vs public option to the systems for mail delivery: "We do not have in our mighty constitution the right to healthcare which every human being deserves. We are here to demand a more perfect union for every American...The private option is 'FedEx' and 'UPS'. The public option, for under 50 cents, is ...the 'US Postal Service'. The public option covers the barrios and the ghettos. The American people deserve coverage from one end of this nation to the other."
Other speakers in the video include: State Rep. Constance A. Howard; State Senator Donne E. Trotter; State Rep. Al Riley; John McHale, SK Hand Tools striker; Richard Berg, President, Teamsters 743.


This video is the first in a series of reports on the many aspects of the healthcare crisis in Illinois, first looking at Teamsters on strike over a healthcare issue, and then at an important community sampling, including healthcare professionals, speaking out at a healthcare rally in Evanston.
The strike began when SK Handtools stopped medical coverage for their workers, and didn't even bother to tell them. The workers found out about it when they started getting medical bills they thought were covered by their job.
The union, IBT Local 743, went on strike. David Biedrzycki, a 25-year employee and union steward, tells us "we need our healthcare for our families. People are in need right now." Danny, another 743 member on strike, says "I owe $20,000 in medical bills."
The crisis impacts many communities in Illinois. At a candlelight vigil for healthcare in Evanston on Sept. 2, Marcia Bernsten says: "We really need to be out in the streets signing petitions, calling our congressmen, whatever it takes to get meaningful healthcare reform passed, and passed in this Congress".
Among several speakers covered, Margaree Figaro, a pediatrician, says "slowly over the last six months I've become extremely disturbed by the national epidemic involving layoffs of doctors, nurses and medical support staff in both public and private hospitals."
This video unveils a healthcare crisis that is growing into an social epidemic in Illinois, taking multiple forms as it affects many different sectors of the working class.

(See the description for the later Labor Beat series show.)
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Detroit, Michigan - While Automotive CEO's meet at the Renniasance Center, the castaways of their previous 30 year policy appear at the front door.
Gregg Shotwell, Marion Cramer and Frank Hammer, among others, explain the economic situations that caused this present condition.

Intrepid Labor Beat reporters march with Peace contingents in Evergreen Park, Chicago-Archer Ave, Homewood, IL and stand with protesters in the Taste of Chicago July 2-4, 2009 measuring the mood of the citizenry concerning War.

(See the description for the later Labor Beat series show.)
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Before President Obama appointed Arne Duncan Secretary of Education, Duncan was the CEO of the Chicago Public Schools.
Under his control there, Chicago Public Schools endured a relentless wave of privatization, school closings, militarization, union busting and blaming teachers for the problems of urban schools.
Now the war on public education pursued during the Bush administration will only continue and intensify under the new Secretary of Education Duncan.
His Chicago Plan, as former teacher and editor of Substance News George Schmidt explains, is the template for a national strategy to dismantle public education.
Through revealing footage and comments from Chicago teachers, this video shows the resistance that has been growing among teachers and community organizations.
Here is a national alert for everyone who cares about the future of public schools, threatened now by Arne Duncan and his corporate vision for the nation's school systems.

Teamsters Local 743 set up an early sunrise strike line at SK Hand Tools in Chicago and McCook, Illinois on July 31, 2009.
The company "has unilaterally withdrawn health insurance, failed to extend the contract during negotiations, and demanded wage concessions that barely put members above the minimum wage," the union web site stated. The action was approved in a vote by a margin of 67 to 2.
Includes picket line scenes and interviews with IBT 743 President Richard Berg; Mark Meinster, Int'l Rep., United Electrical Workers; David Biedrzycki, IBT Local 743 Steward; Donnie Von Moore, IBT 743 Union Representative.

This show covers a spirited press conference/protest outside the University of Chicago administration building to halt the planned closing of the 47th Street women's clinic, and to call for a halt to the policies of the U of C Medical Center in pushing the poor out the door.
It took place on June 30, 2009, and was called by the Coalition for Healthcare Access, Responsibility and Transparency (http://www.stopchicago.org).
Other demands of CHART were:
- Immediate moratorium on clinic closures - Restore services - Restore and expand patient transportation from community to hospital - Expand staffing and beds in the Emergency Room and General Medicine - Open the hospital to new patients, regardless of medical insurance - Living wage jobs and good benefits for all staff
After the press conference, we follow the protest as it reconvenes to hold a BBQ and picket across the street from Univ. of Chicago President Zimmer.

Intrepid Labor Beat reporters march with Peace contingents in Evergreen Park, Chicago-Archer Ave, Homewood, IL and stand with protesters in the Taste of Chicago July 2-4, 2009 measuring the mood of the citizenry concerning War.

(See the description for the later Labor Beat series show.)
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Four segments.
- 1. Wells Fargo Foreclosure Protest. Protest about home foreclosures in front of Wells Fargo Bank Chicago, IL June 11, 2009.
Speakers: Mike McDowell of South West Organizing Project; Ted Wysocki, Moline, IL, National Community Reinvestment Coalition; and Fred of the Northside Action for Justice.
-2. CAT Shareholders - June 10, 2009. In the 6th year of protesting at Caterpillar Inc. shareholders meetings, demonstrators targeted Northern Trust bank in Chicago, IL to educate the public about how Caterpillar bulldozers are used to destroy Palestinian homes.
Among organizations participating were US Campaign, Chicagoans Against Apartheid in Palestine, Jewish Voice for Peace, Arab-Jewish Partnership for a Just Peace in the Middle East.
-3. Rally for Single Payer. While President Obama addressed the American Medical Association on June 15, 2009 in Chicago, Single Payer advocates held a demonstration.
"Single payer is the only option that is really going to provide healthcare for everybody," one supporter said. Interviews and scenes. PLAY VIDEO: www.youtube.com/watch?v=6nnxNItgTx0.
-4. Michael Moore Sicko Rally Speech. In 2007, to promote his new film, Michael Moore spoke at an outdoor rally in Chicago, making this powerful speech in favor of single payer. PLAY VIDEO: www.archive.org/details/CLALBMICHAELANDSTUDS.

While President Obama addressed the American Medical Association on June 15, 2009 in Chicago, Single Payer advocates held a demonstration. "Single payer is the only option that is really going to provide healthcare for everybody," one supporter said. Interviews and scenes.
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- 1. "Raises on the Backs of Lost UIC Jobs."
At the University of Illinois Chicago campus, on May 21, 2009, a broad coalition of students, campus workers, graduate employees, doctors, and union representatives picketed the meeting of the Board of Trustees.
Earlier, some of the protesters had been allowed to address the Trustees meeting. Video cameras were not permitted; but Labor Beat obtained stills of the meeting.
The protest was organized by the UIC-ABC Coalition; and it demanded that the "University's budget not be balanced on the backs of workers, students, and community members". It called for "no layoffs or bumping, no tuition or fee hikes, healthcare for all, access for all students."
Earlier in the month the University had declared that over 90 civil service positions would be eliminated or bumped. Many of these positions would affect SEIU Local 73 members.
Toward the end of the demo, it was announced that members of the Board of Trustees had agreed to meet with the protestors, the results of which are yet to be reported. Speeches, interviews, scenes of the protest.
- 2. "Keep Chrysler Jobs in Kenosha."
The spirited May 18, 2009 rally in Kenosha, WI to stop Chrysler's plans to close its engine plant there, leaving the work to be done in Mexico.
Scenes of the demonstration at the plant gate, interviews with autoworkers, plus speeches by Kenosha UAW Local 72 President Glenn Stark, and Dennis Williams, UAW Region 4 Director.
The autoworkers call upon President Obama to intervene to save their jobs. On-demand playback is available at laborbeat.org


- International Labor Conference. A 15-minute video report on the historic March 13-14, 2009 meeting in Erbil, Iraq.
A recent Labor Beat show featured the speech there of Iraq War Veteran Aaron Hughes ("Aaron at Erbil"). This show focuses on the main contents of the International Labor Conference.
Includes interviews and some brief speeches, as well as summaries of the final resolutions. It was attended by 200 delegates from Iraqi unions in 15 of 18 provinces, as well as 15 international delegates. This is an edited-for-English version of a video produced by Sana TV in Japan.
-Gaza Protest in Waset, Iraq. Here is a unique glimpse into a street demonstration in Iraq, as it protests the Israeli attacks on Gaza earlier this year.
The demonstration, organized by Iraq Freedom Congress (a political organization in Iraq (www.ifcongress.com/English), marches to the headquarters of a local politician ("Manager of the Azizya Court") and presents it demands. This is an edited-for-English version of a video produced by Sana TV, which is a production of Iraq Freedom Congress.

A spirited May 18, 2009 rally in Kenosha, Wisconsin to stop Chrysler plans to close its engine plant there, leaving the work to be done in Mexico.
Scenes of the demonstration at the plant gate; interviews with autoworkers; plus speeches by Kenosha UAW Local 72 President Glenn Stark and UAW Region 4 Director Dennis Williams. The autoworkers call upon President Obama to intervene to save their jobs. Video by Labor Beat.

- Defend Professor Capeheart. - Support Cintas Workers - No Games - Daley's Snowstorm
Note: Descriptions of these segments and their on-demand playback links are provided separately in the Labor Beat show listings.

On March 13-14 an important International Labor Conference was held in Erbil, Iraq, which is in the Kurdistan region. Along with the 200 delegates from Iraqi trade unions and international unions, attending was a delegation from the U.S., comprised of representatives of U.S. Labor Against the War, and 2 representatives from Iraq Veterans Against the War.
Among those IVAW attending was Aaron Hughes, the subject of this 25 minute video.
Aaron explains why he attended the Conference, and places his return to Iraq as an anti-war veteran in the context of a similar visit by Vietnam Veterans Against the War to North Vietnam.
At the center of Aaron's experience in Erbil is his short speech to the delegation apologizing for his role in the US military in oppressing the people of Iraq. This video is a documenting of that speech and the reactions of the audience, as well as Aaron's anxiety about what the reactions would be.
The work of the Conference is also summarized by Aaron, enhanced with footage from Iraq Peacetv in Japan and Aaron's own footage of the event. The experience of the Conference provides the basis of the IVAW delegate's re-dedication of their goal of war reparations for the people and workers of Iraq.

Press Conference in Defense of Professor Loretta Capeheart
A press conference was held at Northeastern Illinois University on April 23, 2009 to defend Professor Loretta Capeheart.
The NEIU administration has attacked her for playing a leading role in the faculty union (AFT) and 2004 strike; for her defense of students arrested for protesting a campus CIA recruitment event; and for her other statements supporting minorities, labor, and academic freedom.
She has been denied appointment to her duly elected post as department chair; denied merited awards; and defamed by NEIU's vice president in a faculty council meeting.
To sign the petition in support of Professor Capeheart: www.petitiononline.com/j4lc/petition.htm l.
Professor Capeheart is suing NEIUs President, Vice-President, and Provost for violation of her free speech rights and retaliation against her for exercising these rights in defense of labor, minorities, and academic freedom.
In this excerpt from the press conference, Professor Capeheart is joined by: Hector Reyes, Ph.D., Physical Science Dept, Assistant Professor, Harold Washington College; Susan Rosa, Ph.D. Associate Professor, History NEIU; Russell Bennjamin, Ph.D. Associate Professor, Political Science NEIU; Sharon K. Hahs, President NEIU; Samuel Vega, Union for Puerto Rican Students. For more information: 773-552-0394.

-1- Protesting the 6th anniversary of the war in Iraq, a march through Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood took place on March 14, 2009.
The marchers decried the laundry list of outrages now endured by working people as a result of the continuing war crimes: diverting of funds from education, community clinics, social support structures; attacks on immigrant workers; the foisting of more militarism onto Palestine, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the list goes on.
Numerous interviews, some speeches, scenes. "Obama has just announced that there are going to be 50,000 troops staying in Iraq. That's not a withdrawal plan" notes Shaun Harkin (ISO). About 19 minutes.
-2- Protest Against Chicago Board of Education Vote to Close 16 Schools / Feb 25, 2009
A big community, union and student protest at Chicago Board of Education as 16 Schools are slated for closing under Renaissance 2010. Feb 25, 2009. 10 minutes.

Maria Ramirez and Norma Flieta were fired for not meeting production quotas in the laundry sort area at the Cintas plant at 6001 73rd St, near Chicago.
They say the reason Cintas fired them was because of their national origin and that this was an unfair work assignment.
Though the plant is not organized at the moment, UNITE HERE is organizing there. A protest action is shown in this video. (See http://www.uniformjustice.org/news/detail.php?news_id=1071 for more info.)

(See the description for the later Labor Beat series show.)
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Title: Daley's Snowstorm.
It was no Daley lovefest when city workers, community, immigrant, human rights and anti-2016 activists gathered in Chicago Federal Plaza on April 2, 2009.
It was also the day the International Olympic Committee (IOC) came to town to survey the City's bid. As far as we know, none attended.

Protesting the 6th anniversary of the war in Iraq, a march through Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood took place on March 14, 2009.
The marchers decried the laundry list of outrages now endured by working people as a result of the continuing war crimes: diverting of funds from education, community clinics, social support structures; attacks on immigrant workers; the foisting of more militarism onto Palestine, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the list goes on.
Numerous interviews, some speeches, scenes. "Obama has just announced that there are going to be 50,000 troops staying in Iraq. That's not a withdrawal plan," notes Shaun Harkin (ISO).

Labor Beat.
Fraternal Order of Police Chicago Lodge 7 called out its off duty officers and surrounded City Hall demanding a contract from Mayor Daley after 21 months of delay.
Coincidently, it was the same day the International Olympic Committee arrived to survey the city for the 2016 games. Interviews with Mark Donohue, FOP President, Marilyn Stewart CTU President and Leroy Jones City Division Director of SEIU.

Kim Bobo, author of the newly published Wage Theft in America, talks about ways to detect and stop the growing trend of wage theft in the U.S.
Drawing upon years of practical organizational experience, Bobo is an engaging and informative speaker. She is the founder of Interfaith Worker Justice.
Her down-to-earth talk is enhanced visually by Labor Beat through tables and location footage.

Aaron at Erbil
Click here to view on bliptv: http://blip.tv/file/1989250
On March 13-14 an important International Labor Conference was held in Erbil, Iraq, which is in the Kurdistan region. Along with the 200 delegates from Iraqi trade unions and international unions, attending was a delegation from the U.S., comprised of representatives of U.S. Labor Against the War, and 2 representatives from Iraq Veterans Against the War. Among those IVAW attending was Aaron Hughes, the subject of this 25 minute video. Aaron explains why he attended the Conference, and places his return to Iraq as an anti-war veteran in the context of a similar visit by Vietnam Veterans Against the War to North Vietnam. At the center of Aaron's experience in Erbil is his short speech to the delegation apologizing for his role in the US military in oppressing the people of Iraq. This video is a documenting of that speech and the reactions of the audience, as well as Aaron's anxiety about what the reactions would be. The work of the Conference is also summarized by Aaron, enhanced with footage from Iraq Peacetv in Japan and Aaron's own footage of the event. The experience of the Conference provides the basis of the IVAW delegate's re-dedication of their goal of war reparations for the people and workers of Iraq.
====Iraq Veterans Against the War member Aaron Hughes talks about his speech at the historic March 13-14, 2009 International Labor Conference in Erbil, in the Kurdistan region of Iraq.
The Conference was also attended by representatives from U.S. Labor Against the War (USLAW).
This is a short excerpt from an upcoming video from Labor Beat with additional footage from Japan Peace TV/Sana TV.

Labor Beat promoted and covered the 3/14/2009 Chicago Antiwar and Immigrant Rights Coalition march in the Pilsen neighborhood.
The following day, Labor Beat presented a 5 hour cable television broadcast of past marches. Some video clips from that broadcast are posted on the Internet.
The arrest of Mrs. Pat Vogel, local mother of a soldier in Iraq. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0wwif0tOmlE&feature=channel_page.
Jorge Mujica on immigrants organizing. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=inAsZHdaLo4&feature=channel.
Andy Thayer, march organizer. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jfSIaFShm2w&feature=channel.
Earl Silbar. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Apfd6eTtxGc&feature=channel.
Iraq Veterans Against the War. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BBVBsTlTguU&feature=channel.
Rich Berg, SEIU local president. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DQbXawdau0o&feature=channel.

1. Healthcare Crisis in the President's Backyard
On February 10, 2009, Teamsters Local 743 & Students Organizing United with Labor (SOUL) organized a layoff protest rally at the University of Chicago Campus.
The University is planning to layoff over 400 union workers at the UC Medical Center, while continuing multi-million dollar construction projects. Produced by Gary Brooks for Labor Beat.
2. Nothing About Us Without Us
Video coverage of the 2/10/09 STOP (Southside Together Organizing for Power) press conference at the Mayor's Office protesting the proposed closing of four mental health clinics on the Chicago's South Side.
Statements from Ed Shurna of Chicago Coalition for the Homeless, Mr. Fred Friedman of First Steps, Bill "Dock" Walls of Committee for a Better Chicago, along with several consumers of these clinics there to tell the Mayor, "treatment works."

- The Elder Studs Terkel, Activist for Labor
On Oct. 31, 2008 Studs Terkel died at age 96. The event was somewhat overshadowed by the looming Nov. 4 election just days away. It was Halloween, too, something Studs would have been amused by.
Studs' passing marked the end to an era. His public radio and writer's personality had been part of the national narrative in progressive and labor history going back to the 30s.
Labor Beat has compiled here selections from our own exclusive footage of Studs appearing at union picket lines and rallies for the past 20 years. Here is Studs speaking at a grape boycott rally with Cesar Chavez, and testifying with Tim Kazurinsky in the Chicago City Council chambers urging their support for the SAG-AFTRA strike.
We spend some time with Studs as he arrives at a big hotel strike rally on Labor Day in 2003 on Michigan Ave. He enjoys schmoozing the crowd and becomes again the old soap box orator of yore. And in 2007 we see Studs in his dotage, perhaps at his last outdoor labor rally--in Chicago's Millennium Park for Single Payer Health Care. Studs introduces filmmaker Michael Moore, his new film "Sicko" just released, and Studs and Michael crack a few jokes together. Michael Moore reminds the audience: "Studs, you're a national treasure."
Narrated by Al Harris Stein.
- Also, a second, short segment. Public Dollars, Public Schools
Well over 500 parents, children and teachers converged on the Chicago School Board protesting the proposed 20 school closings.
Recognizing the Renaissance 2010 plan of the business class's Commercial Club and its role in the union busting plan and the sabotage of neighborhood schools, they march to their front doors and rally before heading to City Hall to demand a meeting with Mayor Daley.

Nothing About Us Without Us
Video coverage of the 2/10/09 press conference at the Mayor's Office protesting the proposed closing of four mental health clinics on the Chicago's South Side.
Statements from Ed Shurna of Chicago Coalition for the Homeless, Mr. Fred Friedman of First Steps, Bill "Dock" Walls of Committee for a Better Chicago, along with several consumers of these clinics there to tell the Mayor, "treatment works."

Healthcare Crisis in the President's Backyard.
On February 10, 2009, Teamsters Local 743 & Students Organizing United with Labor (SOUL) organized a layoff protest rally at the University of Chicago Campus.
The University is planning to layoff over 400 union workers at the UC Medical Center, while continuing a multi-million dollar construction projects. Produced by Gary Brooks for Labor Beat.

The Chicago Antiwar and Immigrant Rights Coalition has organized a march through the Pilsen neighborhood on March 14, 2009.
The coalition called this February 10 press conference celebrating the January 23 court victory ruling that the City must grant a permit.

(See the description for the later Labor Beat series show.)
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The Struggle Against Renaissance 2010.
Here are excerpts from the Community Hearing at Chicago's Malcom X College on January 10, 2009, highlighting testimonies of teachers union members, community organizations, students and parents.
The hearing considered: At the current pace, 50% of all the Chicago Public Schools will be privatized by 2020. How will this impact students, parents, teachers, communities? The meeting was Sponsored by: Caucus Of Rank-and-file Educators (CORE); The Chicago Teachers Union; The Pilsen Alliance; PACT; CSDU; Substance News; Blocks Together; Kenwood Oakland Community Organization; Parents United for Responsible Education; Teachers for Social Justice; The Southwest Youth Collaborative.
Selections of speeches from Professor Pauline Lipman, Educational Policy Studies; Julie Woestehoff, Parents United for Responsible Education; Lourdes Guerrero, Teacher Representative; Jesse Sharkey, Social Studies teacher; Lanetta Thomas, High School student; Alina Mojica, former charter school student; Kristen Chapman, High School teacher; Marilyn Stewart, President, Chicago Teachers Union; Meg Sullivan, terminated charter school teacher; Lorenza Ramirez, parent of former charter school student; Carol Reynolds, charter school teacher; Lou Pyster, retired school teacher; Alfred P. Rodgers, Parents United for Responsible Education; and Debbie Lynch, Former President, Chicago Teachers Union.
Lynch, with much audience support, expresses disappointment over President Obama's appointment of Arne Duncan, responsible for so many of these destructive policies in Chicago public education, to become the new Secretary of Education.

(See the description for the later Labor Beat series show.)
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On Friday, January 9, 2009 a huge rally for Gaza assembled in Chicago's Daley Center and then marched to the Israeli Consulate.
Hear selected speeches and watch footage of this protest, part of a series of actions of growing intensity and size in Chicago.
"Yesterday, the United States Senate voted on a resolution that backs an Israeli attack on Gaza. They are cowards," said one of the speakers.
"We reject our government's complacency in these crimes, and we hold our government accountable just as we hold Israel accountable, because it is our government which feeds Israel one third of our foreign aid budget while we neglect our youth, our elderly and our disenfranchised communities," another speaker noted.

Joel Finkel from Jewish Voice for Peace was escorted away by the Chicago Police from a Pro-Israel rally January 9, 2009 at Federal Plaza. He carried a sign stating "Starving Palestinians is NOT my Judaism."
During the Palestinian rally later that day, Joel weighs in on the scripted Israeli government talking points.
Jewish Voice for Peace, www.chicago.jvp.org

On December 13, 2008, activists in Chicago's "Boys Town" neighborhood confronted the notorious bigots from the Kansas Westboro Baptist "Church."
Fred Phelps and his followers have been picketing the funerals of soldiers killed in Iraq, saying God hates America for its tolerance of homosexuals. His vile posters often include "Fags Die, God Laughs," and other such hate mongering.
When activists for LGBT Equal Marriage rights heard Phelps would soon protest their community center, they organized to shut down his message of hatred.


On January 2, 2009, some 4,000 supporters of the people of Gaza rallied at Tribune Plaza and then marched across the Michigan Avenue Bridge to hold a protest in front of the Israeli Consulate on East Wacker Drive.
They could not fit everyone into the cleared street on the block in front of the Consulate, so huge was the demonstration. Scenes and speeches.

The Oct. 28th, 2006 unveiling of the impressive new monument commemorating the Virden massacre in 1898 in Southern Illinois.
With interviews, coal miner memorabilia, a fire-breathing speech by UMWA President Cecil Roberts, plus the ceremony at the Mother Jones monument only a few miles away in Mt. Olive, Illinois.
Produced by Gary Brooks for Labor Beat, this video won an Honorable Mention Award at the 2007 Hometown Video Awards. Reprise of LB514.

Beauty Turner, A Writer and a Fighter, 1957-2008.
Ms. Beauty Turner, advocate for the people, was felled by a stroke at the age of 51. Short video from the 2007 antiwar demonstration in Federal Plaza gives a message of action. A great loss for the community here in Chicago.

Voices of Protest / December 13-14, 2008 / Chicago.
The antiwar, gay and lesbian, labor, and peace movements all intend to hold the Obama administration accountable in 2009.

Scenes and interviews from the powerful workers' protest at Bank of America Center in Chicago's financial district on Dec. 10, 2008. This protest represented a culmination of labor and community support of the members of UE Local 1110 who decided to occupy the Republic Windows and Doors plant because they were being laid off without legal notice or severance.
Interviews and speech excerpts include: Bob Kingsley, National Director of Organization, United Electrical Workers; Ricardo Cacetes, UE 1110 member; Raul Flores, UE 1110 member; Jorge Mujica, Immigrant Rights Leader; Richard Berg, President Teamsters Local 743; Larry Spivak, Regional Director of AFSCME District 31; Rev. Gregory Livingston, RainbowPUSH. 7 minutes.
That evening, Bank of America and other banks agreed to come up with $2 million to cover the union demands. The workers at the occupied plant voted to accept the agreement. The working class has now only scratched the potential power it has to change events.

When the workers at Republic Windows and Doors were notified their workplace would close in three days, they took matters into their own hands.
The union work force seized control of the factory for 6 days to demand the severance they are by law owed.
On the sixth day of their occupation, they won all their demands, and showed the world's working class a classic example of people power (something not seen in the USA for decades).

The 2008 election and the prospect of the upcoming exit of the Bush administration created a lot of discussion within the labor movement and among its allies about what is on the horizon for the working class.
In October, 2008 a forum was held in Chicago which represented a current within this debate, and Labor Beat presents a sampling of those speakers.
Here are David Moberg, Senior Editor, In These Times; Richard Berg, President, Teamsters Local 743; and Bill Fletcher, Jr., Past President of Trans Africa Forum and Education Director and Assistant to the President of the AFL-CIO. This forum was organized by In These Times and Chicago Democratic Socialists of America.


Three Segments:
- 1. "Friends Family Healthcare Victory" - The IBT 743 workers at Friends Family Healthcare Center have won a victory! Working without a contract since 2002 and not given a raise since 2006, they had enough. Thanks to a recent transformation of Teamsters 743 into a rank-and-file-run union in an election victory last year, the members mobilized themselves and a coalition of community and labor supporters to show management that they were not going to give up or give in. And on October 3rd, FFHC workers and friends celebrated a victory with a new contract.
- 2. "Fighting for Peace at the RNC" - Teamsters Local 743 from Chicago loaded up a bus and drove up to St. Paul, MN to join the big national protest at the Republican National Convention last September. This 9-minute video joins IBT 743 President Richard Berg and 743 members on the trip, listening to their words that explain why they are going. Issues raised in their action include ending the war, health care, union rights, immigrant rights, more
- 3. "Teamster Rally In Support of Anheuser-Busch Workers" - The Teamsters sponsored a labor rally in downtown St. Louis on August 16, 2008 to demand that InBev, the international brewing giant, honor its "pledge to protect the workers and communities" which have made Anheuser-Busch a success. InBev recently bought up Anheuser-Bush, an icon of the "American Dream" closely linked with St. Louis history. The rally also had an international flavor, with labor speakers from Canada, Brazil, and Europe.

(See the description for the later Labor Beat series show.)
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Although Halloween is over, the scariest stuff is yet to come. Join the annual "Capitalism Gives Us the Creeps" Halloween march in Wicker Park in Chicago, presented by local anarchists who dressed up as nightmarish capitalists.
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Dick Reilly of Chicago Committee Against War and Racism, comments on Mayor Daley's appearance at the American Israel Public Affairs Committee luncheon this very day and how the issues of Palestine are front and center to police brutality and war protests.
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Torture victims of Commander Jon Burge describe treatment they received. Jonathon Jackson of Operation PUSH discusses reconciliation process with Alderman Ed Smith. Family, friends and supporters enter Dirksen Center to finally begin Justice.
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- Old Wars, New Wars, and Election '08.
Both McCain and Obama are pro-war candidates.
"Some people tell us don't protest - go register voters. And we tell them, to vote for who?" says Jorge Mujica, immigrant rights leader.
"I firmly believe that Obama...is the greatest threat to the movement for progressive change since JFK," notes Jonathan Hutto, Sr., author of Anti-War Soldier.
"Barack Obama if he wins is going to bring more business to these [war industry] companies. He's gong to keep in place the major outposts of the occupation to bring money to the contractors," warns Jeremy Scahill, investigative journalist.
- Includes scenes from No War on Iran protest in Chicago.

In July, 2008 the American Federation of Teachers held its convention in Chicago. Present there was a national rank-and-file teachers group, the Peace and Justice Caucus (www.aftpeaceandjusticecaucus.org). Their work at the Convention was to promote resolutions on peace, immigrants rights, support of Puerto Rican teachers, and other issues.
This video explores aspects of their work, as well as issues raised by Chicago rank-and-file teachers concerned with the actions of Chicago Teachers Union President Marilyn Stewart, co-chair of the convention and AFT Vice President.
Stewart had invited Chicago Public Schools CEO Arne Duncan, who had eliminated many teachers' jobs and closed schools, to speak at the convention, while she was trying to fire her CTU Vice President, who had been elected to that position by the membership.
The P&J Caucus also protested that the convention was opened by military student color guard with guns. Scenes and interviews.

Col.(ret)Ann Wright stands in support of Gloria Barrios, mother of Senior Airman Blanca Luna, murdered on Sheppard Air Force Base March 7, 2008. This from a press conference October 3, 2008. She also addresses the violence against women at other bases in the military, stateside and overseas.
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Blanca Luna was murderd on Sheppard Air Force Base on March 7, 2008. Her mother, Gloria Barrios, shows up at the front gates 7 months later looking for answers. She leaves unsatisfied, but first warns youth of making military a way of life.
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(Send this right away to your "representative" in the U.S. House of Representatives -- On YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xLr-AOndq2w&fmt=6.)
On Oct. 1, 2008, labor and community organizations held a protest in front of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago against the rush to bail out Wall Street.
Speakers included: James Thindwa of Chicago Jobs with Justice; Elena Marcheschi of UNITE HERE Chicago/Midwest; and Rev. Gregory Livingston of Rainbow PUSH. Video is 6 minutes.
More info: Chicago Jobs with Justice, Chicago@jwj.org.
"
The protest at the 2008 Republican National Convention (RNC), largely ignored by the big media.
The mass march from the Minnesota State Capitol toward Xcel Center, site of the Republican National Convention.
Scenes from the march, showing the enormous police presence, and speeches, as activists from around the country protest the policies of the Bush administration (and the US Government), amid rising repression against freedom of speech.

(See the description for the later Labor Beat series show.)
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This segment is described in the show's description.

This segment is described in the show's description.

-1- First, scenes and interviews from the Bud Billikin 2008 parade in Chicago to remind students that school is about to start. But one Chicago school teacher wonders: where is the Chicago Teachers Union?
-2- The second segment covers the informational protest by anti-war activists at the recent 2008 Air and Water (War) show in Chicago. The police are there to help this costly military advertisement flex its muscles on the beach, while the bill of rights gets sand kicked in its face.

The Peace and Justice caucus in the American Federation of Teachers held a roundtable discussion on "Fighting Back in the Schools" during the July 2008 AFT Convention in Chicago.
Labor Beat edited excerpts from those presentations, including dramatic footage of student protests, in the face of police repression, against the privatization of the public schools in Detroit and St. Louis.
The message is clear: public education, a long-fought-for gain of the working class over the last century and a half, is targeted for annihilation by corporate America.
The speakers are: Gloria Brandman, Teacher, NYC Public Schools; Steve Conn, teacher, Detroit Public Schools; Jim Hamilton, Missouri AFT; George Schmidt, Chicago, editor of Substance Newspaper; Julie Washington, Elementary Schools Vice President, United Teachers Los Angeles; Pablo Rodriguez, instructor, San Francisco State University.

The Teamsters sponsored a labor rally in downtown St. Louis on August 16, 2008 to demand that InBev, the international brewing giant, honor its "pledge to protect the workers and communities" which have made Anheuser-Busch a success.
InBev recently bought up Anheuser-Bush, an icon of the "American Dream" closely linked with St. Louis history. The rally also had an international flavor, with labor speakers from Canada, Brazil, and Europe. Produced by Labor Beat, the Chicago-based labor tv series.

Vintage footage from August 1989 featuring Abbie Hoffman.
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An anti-commercial. LB revisits military/recruitment extraveganza on Chicago's lakefront.
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Chicago Trade Unions attended (or stayed away) from the annual Bud Billiken Parade, August 9, 2008.
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(See the description for the later Labor Beat series show.)
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Highlights from the National Assembly to End the Iraq War and Occupation, June 28-29, 2008 in Cleveland, OH.
In this 26-minute video, Labor Beat presents a sampling of the speeches and floor discussions from this important conference.
Attended by over 400 people, the Assembly's main objective was to urge united and massive mobilizations in the spring to "Bring the Troops Home Now," as well as supporting actions that build towards that date.
To read the final action proposal and to learn other details, visit www.natassembly.org.

Counter recruitment effort at the Taste of Chicago July 5, 2008.
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3 Segments
- 1. "1% Is Not Enough."
Chicago's Teamsters Local 743 held on 7-1-08 a spirited protest demo at Friends Family Health Center calling for a fair contract, after going 3 years without one.
They were calling for protection from harassment, a grievance procedure to solve problems at work, and wage increases that keep up with inflation.
Action was called by Friends Family Teamsters, University of Chicago Teamsters, University of Chicago Hospital Teamsters, Barnes and Noble Teamsters, SEIU 73 members, student, neighborhood and clergy allies, sisters and brothers (and others).
- 2. "Congress Hotel Strike 5th Year Anniversary."
The fifth anniversary of the longest active strike in the nation. UNITEHERE Local 1 is joined by faith based, social justice and labor organizations to rally at the front doors on June 13, 2008. On-demand playback is available at laborbeat.org.
- 3. "Labor Beat Remembers Utah Phillips."
Legendary labor singer and IWW activist Utah Phillips died peacefully in his sleep on May 23, 2008. Labor Beat celebrates his memory with clips from our video archives over 20 years.

Members of Teamsters Local 705, the big Chicago-area United Parcel Service local, voted today (Sunday, July 20) to authorize a strike against UPS.
Local 705 has its own contract with UPS, separate from the National Contract. The vote was overwhelming: 2993 for a strike, 232 against.

A report on how Democratic Party politics stopped a citizens-backed resolution against U.S. war on Iran.
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Internationally acclaimed labor folk musician Anne Feeney entertains her fans at Chicago's Heartland Cafe on May 18, 2008. Find out more about Anne Feney's music at www.annefeeney.com.
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The fifth anniversary of the longest active strike in the nation.
Chicago's UNITEHERE Local 1 was joined by faith based, social justice, and other labor organizations in this rally at Congress Hotel's front doors on June 13, 2008. (This video became a segment of LB553.)

(See the description for the later Labor Beat series show.)
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1. No Peace No Work! The Historic May Day 2008 Longshoremen's Strike Against the War
On Mayday 2008 members of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) shut down all 26 ports on the west coast of the United States for at least eight hours in opposition to the US war against the people of Iraq.
So far as we know, there has never before been a strike of US workers to stop a war, making this action historically unprecedented.
Workers stayed off the job and in major port cities they marched, proud in their union jackets, with banners unfurled. Scenes and speeches from the port of Seattle.
"Longshoremen Strike Against the War" was produced by Pepperspray Productions. To get a dvd of this video, contact Pepperspray Productions, www.peppersprayproductions.org, pepperspray@mac.com.
2. Rally to Save Cook County Health Care. Community Leaders rallied to fight for decent healthcare in Chicago's county, February 18, 2008.



1. Workers, Immigrants, Veterans - May Day 2008 Chicago
The Chicago May Day 2008 march added an important element to marches of previous years: opposition to the war.
Through walking interviews within the march, Iraq Veterans Against the War discuss their solidarity with the immigrants.
The issue of full rights for immigrants is expanded beyond Mexican immigrants to include many other nationalities, showing the truly international character of May Day. Union members from UNITE HERE, SEIU, and Teamsters also speak.
This spirited march shows that the movement for immigrants, workers and peace is not going away. 15 minutes.
2. Anita Chan-Should we establish contacts with the Chinese trade unions?
Anita Chan addresses the April 2008 Labor Notes conference. Anita Chan is a Research Fellow at the Contemporary China Centre, Research School of Pacific & Asian Studies, The Australian National University. Edited for length, 12:30.


'Labor Beat Remembers Utah Phillips.'
Legendary labor singer and IWW activist Utah Phillips died peacefully in his sleep on May 23, 2008. Labor Beat celebrates his memory with clips from our video archives over 20 years. (This video became a segment of LB553.)



The Chicago May Day 2008 march added an important element to marches of previous years: opposition to the war.
Through walking interviews within the march, Iraq Veterans Against the War discuss their solidarity with the immigrants. The issue of full rights for immigrants is expanded beyond Mexican immigrants to include many other nationalities, showing the truly international character of May Day.
Union members from UNITE HERE, SEIU, and Teamsters also speak. This spirited march shows that the movement for immigrants, workers and peace is not going away. 15 minutes.

(See the description for the later Labor Beat series show.)
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1 - Chicago Public Schools vs The Community, Part II: Citizens of Chicago Wake Up!
As the assault against public education continues in Chicago, strategies for a fight-back are brought forward, including building a city-wide campaign to change from an appointed to an elected Board of Education.
The leadership of the teachers union must also organize, where it has failed to do so heretofore, a serious challenge to the destruction of jobs and shattering of community control of schools.
Anthony Travis, Kenwood High School Local School Council member, warns in the video: "Citizens of Chicago, you need to wake up and realize our community is under siege by some elitist bankers, business people, who do not care about the education of our children."
Includes running commentary by George Schmidt, editor of Substance newspaper and footage of community actions. 20est mins.
Play the video: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-3100075850542265041&hl=en.
And play the video of Part I of Labor Beat's coverage of the current fight agains wholesale closing of schools by the Chicago Board of Education: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-3100075850542265041&hl=en
2 - American Axle Strike: Workers Drawing the Line.
Hundreds of participants at the April 11-13 Labor Notes Conference in Detroit join the American Axle workers' picket line. American Axle workers had been on strike for nine weeks. Interview, speeches. 7 minutes.
Play the video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=54lSXO5mrTc


1. Chicago Protests 5 Years of War. The March 19, 2008 rally and march in Chicago for Troops Home Now, Stop Funding the War.
Edited scenes, and interviews from the spirited action, with Rich Berg (IBT 743), Jorge Mujica (March 10 Coalition), Beauty Turner (community activist), Andy Thayer (CCAWR), Chris Ardent (IVAW), Chicago Media Action, student anti-war, more. Labor Beat and Labor Express endorsed the Chicago march. Reports were posted at www.chicagomassaction.org. 14 minutes.
2. Trade Union Movement in Iraq. Gene Bruskin, of U.S. Labor Against the War, gives a short, informative talk on the trade union movement in Iraq. Videotaped in 2003. 14 minutes.


(See the description for the later Labor Beat series show.)
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3,600 members of the United Auto Workers Local 2093 at the five plants of American Axle and Manufacturing (AAM) went on strike February 26, 2008.
This auto parts company was spun off from General Motors (GM) in 1994, and they've been expanding their international operations ever since.
The issues this strike addresses go to the heart of the disintegration of the standards of living that unionized jobs have brought to the US in the past 70 years.
If AAM gets their way, many workers stand to lose everything, since the company is demanding drastic pay and benefit cuts.
Labor Beat visited the picket line in Three Rivers, Michigan, to witness how, in one tradesman's words, the workers there "are making a stand. We won't step backward 30 years."



Three segments.
- 1: It's a Done Deal. Despite broad protests from the affected communities throughout the city, the Chicago School Board closed 18 schools in March, 2008.
- 2: Picketing the Monarch Ball. Nurses at Chicago's Resurrection Health Care hospital conduct an informational picket on Feb. 29, 2008 at the Hilton hotel to protest intimidation by management of nurses trying to organize AFSCME. Picket scenes and interview with Kelly Beringer, RN. More info: www.reformresurrection.org.
- 3: Mouseland. "It's a story about Mouseland" But it may be about a lot more. In Mouseland the mice elect only cats, until one little mouse has an idea. Low budget animation created by NDP in Canada. If you haven't seen it before, you're in for a treat.

Despite broad protests from the affected communities throughout the city, the Chicago School Board closed 18 schools in March, 2008.
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In late December 2007 Richard Berg was elected president of Teamsters Local 743 in Chicago. Every union election is an important event, but the reasons this particular election became national labor news had to do with the extraordinary circumstances.
Richard Berg, over three elections, had led a rank-and-file challenge to a corrupt union leadership (they were recently indicted). Each of these elections were rigged and declared invalid by the government.
This video narrates, with interviews and observations from family members and union supporters, Berg's determination not to give up.
Finally, in December 2007 a re-run of the election was carefully overseen by the Department of Labor, and Berg's New Leadership Slate won -- officially this time. And on New Years Day 2008 they walked into a union office with important documents shredded and computer hard drives missing, as they feared.
An inspirational story told through exclusive documentary footage, and showing the hard battle, on the personal level, for union democracy--a battle that now continues to rebuild the union.

See the Freightliner Five and hear their comments at a support meeting for them in Chicago, Feb. 2, 2008.
These five workers at the Freightliner truck plant in Cleveland, N.C., are fighting for a stronger UAW --and to get their jobs back. The company fired 11 members of United Auto Workers Local 3520's negotiating committee. And UAW's international office is accepting the firings, saying a strike April 3, 2007 was a wildcat strike. But it was after the contract had expired.
Six leaders have been reinstated. But five, Robert Whitside, Allen Bradley, David Crisco, Glenna Swinford and Franklin Torrence, are still out of their jobs. They had to fight for unemployment benefits, which have run out. They are campaigning nationwide to win UAW support for reinstatement, and for much stronger UAW contract negotiations in general.
For the issues and tour information, visit www.justice4five.com.

The leading slate of Democratic Party Presidential candidates (Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and John Edwards, before he dropped out) have proposed free-market answers to the health insurance tragedies most of us know are caused by the for-profit nature of the American health care system.
Since the release of Michael Mooreˇ¦s film SiCKO in 2007, the debate about the lack of access to health care has come to the fore. A national movement has sprung up to demand that the United States adopt a ˇ§single-payer, government-sponsored system like those in much of the industrial world.
In this episode of Labor Beat, we feature the dynamics of that growing movement in Chicago, including actions by the National Nurses Organizing Committee/California Nurses Organization and the Chicago Single-Payer Action Network in 2007 and early 2008.

On January 29, 2008 a spirited protest took place in front of a North Side Chicago theater that was hosting a benefit for the "young leadership of the Friends of the Israeli Defense Forces".
The IDF has blocked humanitarian supplies going into to Gaza, which has been put under siege by the Israeli government. This type of collective punishment is a war crime.
The action was endorsed by a number of organizations, including International Solidarity Movement, ANSWER-Chicago, Palestinian Solidarity Group, ISO, and others.

Senn High School on Chicago's North Side had one of its wings taken over by a Navy academy and now an alderman is pushing a scheme to divide Senn High School up into small schools open only to those who meet restricted requirements. In December 2007 some 300 Senn students, faculty and community members held a rally at the school to support a plan to save and enhance Senn as a diverse community school open to all students.
Also, Patricia McCann of Iraq Veterans Against the War and George Schmidt of Substance news discuss the growing opposition to military recruiters having free run of Chicago high schools and the disturbing grown of military high school academies, such as the Navy academy at Senn.
Senn High School is at the forefront of a national battle to defend public education against militarization and denial of universal access to quality education. More info: www.savesenn.org, www.ivaw.org.

TDU - The Past, Present, and Future.
Teamsters for A Democratic Union celebrated its 32nd Annual Convention in Chicago in October 2007. This video captures the history of this important national rank-and-file organization up and outlines some objectives for the future.
It begins with a good thumbnail recent history of the Teamsters narrated by Sandy Pope, President of IBT 805, followed by talks by TomGeoghegan, labor attorney and author of "Whose Side Are You On?", and TDU National Organizer Ken Paff, who outlines objectives for TDU in the post-2007 election period.

TDU - The Past, Present, and Future.
This video was also the Labor Beat series show "TDU - The Past, Present, and Future." See the description at that entry.

Members of the Chicago Trade with Justice Working Group paid a visit to the Obama for America headquarters in Chicago on Dec. 15, 2007. They wanted to tell Senator Barack Obama that they are concerned with his failure to appear at the recent Senate vote on the US-Peru "Free Trade" Agreement.
They left a statement for Obama, a current candidate for U.S. President, and expressed their disappointment that he skipped the vote on the Peru trade pact. They were even more concerned that Obama, along with Sen Hillary Clinton, made public statements supporting the Peru Trade deal and that Illinois Senator from Illinois, Dick Durbin, voted in favor of it.

Nurses, medical staff, patients, clergy and commissioners hold a healthcare vigil on Nov. 27, 2007 as Cook County IL commissioners vote on the Patients' Budget Amendment.
Sponsoring commissioners were Suffredin, Claypool, Maldonado, and Quigley. For more information contact The National Nurses Organizing Committee (NNOC), 312-491-4902.

Repeating one of Labor Beat's most popular Internet streaming videos.
In this presentation, Steve Macek-- author of the book "Urban Nightmares: The Media, The Right and the Moral Panic over the City" (University of Minnesota Press, 2006) - analyzes the hysteria over the central city and the urban poor that permeated American politics and popular culture in the 1980s and 90s.
Macek dissects the way mainstream politicians (Rudolph Giuliani, Bill Clinton, Ronald Reagan, George Bush Sr.) , conservative intellectuals and the corporate media conspired to demonize inner city neighborhoods and their residents.
In particular, he discusses the way that TV news reproduced and validated the right's stigmatizing, victim blaming images of the urban poor. Ultimately, he critiques the reactionary political interests served by this divisive discourse on urban pathology and points to what activists can do to counter its destructive influence. Includes assorted visuals.
A related video is Labor Beat's "Grove Parc Today, Tomorrow It Will Be You" (Go to www.youtube.com/watch?v=qbyLqy_T-Z4Search 'Labor Beat' videos on YouTube, or search for 'Labor Beat' videos on YouTube). Residents from the Grove Parc Apartments subsidized housing complex on Chicago's South Side held a spirited demonstration at the Federal Plaza in Chicago's Loop on Nov. 19, 2007. Their homes, at the proposed site of the 2016 Olympic Stadium, may get bulldozed by the city's gentrification plans. More info: 773-753-9674.

"Grove Parc Today, Tomorrow It Will Be You" Residents from the Grove Parc Apartments subsidized housing complex on Chicago's South Side held a spirited demonstration at the Federal Plaza in Chicago's Loop on Nov. 19, 2007. Their homes are at the proposed site of the 2016 Olympic Stadium and may get bulldozed for gentrification and the Olympics.
Another video has a related background discussion. See also "Labor Beat: Demonizing the Inner City", #LB515, at http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-1808948055843475610.

Who Will Stop The War? -- Issues In The Midwest Anti-War Action, Oct. 27, 2007.
The organizers of the Midwest anti-war action on Oct. 27, building on a national United for Peace and Justice call, created controversy by inviting to speak at this event Chicago's Mayor Daley, and Illinois Senators Durbin and Obama, among other Democratic Party politicians.
Also, much of the established left that had organized the earlier Chicago area anti-war marches were not invited to the initial planning meetings. Many felt that the organizers by doing so attempted to block the Oct. 27 action from targeting the critical failure of the Democrats in Congress to fulfill their 2006 election promise to stop the war in Iraq.
This 25-minute video interviews participants in this debate while following the scenes in and around the day's activities, including a police attack on the "Imperialist Bloc" feeder march; a separate action of the International Solidarity Movement at an expressway overpass; background scenes of invited speaker Democrat Rep. Jan Schakowsky, one of the invited speakers, endorsing installing a military academy at Senn High School; speeches and much more. Five Labor Beat videographers provide the footage.

(See the description for the later Labor Beat series show.)
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A panel discussion with members of Teamsters Local 726 Fighting for the Future slate, focusing on issues in their soon-to-be victorious upset fall 2007 election campaign.
Members of the local work for the City of Chicago, Chicago Transit Authority, Illinois Toll way, the State of Illinois, Police Departments, Fire Departments and other public sector workplaces.
The panelists are Leo "Duke" Clark, Jr., candidate for Vice-President; Vince Tenuto, candidate for Secretary/Treasurer; Joey Vercillo, candidate for President; John Martinac, North Side Coordinator. For more information on the election, visit: www.fightingforthefuture.com.
This 30-minute show was taped at the studios of The Evanston Community Media Center, and was hosted by Labor Beat's Wayne Heimbach. Produced by Labor Beat.

Labor Express is Labor Beat's weekly hour-long radio series.
Original broadcasts are via www.wluw-fm.org and WLUW-FM, 88.7 MHz, on Chicago's north side). Go to www.laborexpress.org.

On Friday, Sept. 28, 2007 a spirited rally took place at the University of Chicago in support of campus workers and members of Teamsters Local 743.
The University had offered their workers a sub-standard contract. The rally was organized by Students Organizing United with Labor (http://soul.uchicago.edu) and was attended by campus workers, students, faculty and community members.
Produced by Garry M. Brooks for Labor Beat.

(See the description for the later Labor Beat series show.)
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Labor Beat remembers Bill Davis, trade unionists and veteran against war, who died on Sept 4, 2007. Here is a 9 minute interview he gave us at the March 18, 2006 Chicago march against the war. Many will remember him for numerous qualities; for us, Bill Davis was always a great interview, with insight, information and humor. Thank you, Bill. We'll miss you. -Labor Beat
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1. Teamsters Fighting for the Future. On Aug 13. 2007 members of International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 726, with the Fighting For The Future slate, organized a peaceful protest at Teamster City, 300 S. Ashland in Chicago.
This video shows how Local 726 members are working to improve their union and to fix a list of problems for city workers.
The issues include: a proposed unfair 10-year contract, loss of healthcare in 6-year, loss of union jobs from privatizations, weak representation by the current union leadership, weak enforcement of seniority rights, weak enforcement of pensions, loss of pensions at Brookfield Zoo, unfair union pay raises and waste of union funds, and unfair union practices.
2. Victory! Cygnus Strike. An extremely significant labor victory, won under new threats of stepped-up attacks on immigrant workers.
Over 100 workers at Cygnus Corp., all of them Mexican immigrants, went on strike on July 27, despite the fact that they had no union and the majority of them were classified as temporary employees. The company, manufacturer of private-label soaps and owned by Marietta Corp., told them that if they couldn't re-verify their Social Security information they would all be replaced.
The workers immediately went on strike, and on August 10, following community support and being backed up by the IAM, they won their demands. With picket line footage and analysis of the victory by Jorge Mujica of the March 10 Committee.
3. Barack the Bomber. On August 7, 2007 the Democratic Party candidates were in Chicago to hold a national debate at Soldier Field. Barack Obama scheduled earlier in the day a fundraiser at a restaurant in Chicago's Pakistani neighborhood on the north side.
Many representatives of the Pakistani community held a protest there, opposing his bellicose pronouncements on invading Pakistan if he were elected President. Obama didn't come out to talk to them or to apologize. Later in the day, at the location for the AFL-CIO-sponsored debate at Soldier Field, anti-war protesters continue to criticize Obama, and Kucinich too. 8 minutes.

On Aug 13. 2007 members of International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 726, with the Fighting For The Future slate, organized a peaceful protest at Teamster City, 300 S. Ashland in Chicago.
This video shows how Local 726 members are working to improve their union and to fix a list of problems for city workers.
The issues include: a proposed unfair 10-year contract, loss of healthcare in 6-year, loss of union jobs from privatizations, weak representation by the current union leadership, weak enforcement of seniority rights, weak enforcement of pensions, loss of pensions at Brookfield Zoo, unfair union pay raises and waste of union funds, and unfair union practices.

On August 7, 2007 the Democratic Party candidates were in Chicago to hold a national debate at Soldier Field. Barak Obama scheduled earlier in the day a fundraiser at a restaurant in Chicago's Pakistani neighborhood on the north side.
Many representatives of the Pakistani community held a protest there, opposing his bellicose pronouncements on invading Pakistan if he were elected President. Obama didn't come out to talk to them or to apologize. Later in the day, at the location for the AFL-CIO-sponsored debate at Soldier Field, anti-war protesters continue to criticize Obama, and Kucinich too.

After working without a contract since April 1, 2007, NABET Local 41 newsgathering crews, editors and some producers held a protest in front of ABC Channel 7 studios in Chicago on August 15, 2007.
Disney, which owns ABC, is trying to freeze the pension plan, dismantle the seniority system, offer wages less than COL, and force other anti-worker measures.

An extremely significant labor victory was won under the cloud of new threats of stepped-up attacks on immigrant workers.
Over 100 workers at Cygnus Corp., all of them Mexican immigrants, went on strike on July 27, 2007 despite the fact that they had no union and the majority of them were classified as temporary employees.
The company, manufacturer of private-label soaps and owned by Marietta Corp., told them that if they couldn't re-verify their Social Security information they would all be replaced. The workers immediately went on strike, and on August 10, following community support and being backed up by the IAM, they won their demands.
Including picket line footage and an analysis of the victory by Jorge Mujica of the March 10 Committee.

1. Standing My Ground. On July 12, 2007, Teamsters Local 726 members held an informational picket at Oak Forest, IL city hall, to show their opposition to the proposed contract for police and clerical workers. At issue are very low pay raises and a meager health care package. The City of Oak Forest is also trying to take back a $1,000 pay raise awarded to the clerical workers following an unfair labor practices decision. Although the action was attended by 60 protesters, rank-and-file 726 members felt that the the leadership of Local 726, which has 5,500 members, could have done more to organize a large turnout in this important struggle. Video by Gary M Brooks.
2. This Labor Beat show also presents a second segment about the 'barn-raising' of KPCN-LP, a low-power radio station built and run by farmworkers in Oregon.

On July 12, 2007, Teamsters Local 726 members held an informational picket at Oak Forest, IL City Hall, to show their opposition to the proposed contract for police and clerical workers. At issue are very low pay raises and a meager health care package. The City of Oak Forest is also trying to take back a $1,000 pay raise awarded to the clerical workers following an unfair labor practices decision.
Although the action was attended by 60 protesters, rank-and-file 726 members felt that the the leadership of Local 726, which has 5,500 members, could have done more to organize a large turnout in this important struggle. Video by Gary M Brooks.
(This news video became a segment of LaborBeat: Standing My Ground".)

Jeremy Corbyn (Labour Party MP) discusses Prime Minister Tony Blair's exit, and asks Blair on his last day in office when will British troops leave Iraq.
Hashmeya Muhsin Hussein, President, Electrical Utility Workers Union anti-war speaks before the United for Peace and Justice 3rd National Assembly in June of 2007.
Ewa Jasiewicz, journalist and internationally recognized authority on Basra oil workers, gives useful background on this important sector of the Iraqi working class.
Faleh Abood Umara, General Secretary Southern Oil Company Union, Basra Iraqi Federation of Oil Unions, speaks before the UFPJ National Assembly and discusses a recent oil workers strike against the proposed Iraqi Hydrocarbon Law.

Michael Moore speaks at the "Sicko" rally for National Health Care in Chicago, June 23, 2007. Mike is introduced by author Studs Terkel. (This news video is also a segment in the Labor Beat series show #LB528.)
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Michael Moore speaks at the "Sicko" rally for National Health Care in Chicago, June 23, 2007. Mike is introduced by Studs Terkel.
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Iraq Oil Workers Leader: "Troops Out Yesterday"
Faleh Abood Umara, General Secretary, Southern Oil Company Union - Basra, Iraqi Federation of Oil Unions is asked what he thinks about the debate in the U.S. over whether the U.S. troops should leave Iraqi immediately, or on some timetable. The answer: "Troops out yesterday!"
This became a segment in a subsequent Labor Beat video.

Humanitarian Crisis in Gaza
Dr. Mona El-Farra, Vice-President Red Crescent of Gaza, speaking at 3rd Annual Assembly of United for Peace and Justice, Chicago, June 23, 2007.
Produced by Labor Beat.

On May 23, 2007, at the Vietnam Veterans memorial fountain in downtown Chicago, the local chapter of Iraq Veterans Against the War assembled and, following a few short speeches, left to join other IVAW members in New York City in something called "Operation First Casualty."
Aaron Hughes, head of the Chicago chapter of IVWA, explained that, "the first casualty of war is said to be Truth, and we’re here to bring the truth of the war home, to wake people up and hopefully bring some urgency to end this war."
This will be done through street theater actions dramatizing the impact of an occupying army. (Stills of the actions are shown). Barry Romo, national coordinator of Vietnam Veterans Against the War, showing the support of the previous generation of veteran anti-war activists, also provided an historical perspective.

1. May Day 2007. Labor speeches, big march scenes and music by Bucky Halker at Chicago's Haymarket Square, where the legacy of May Day began in 1886.
The 2007 Chicago Immigrants Rights March passed through Haymarket Square on its way to Grant Park, and the turnout was over 200,000, despite an ICE raid a few days before in Chicago's Mexican community of Little Village.
Featuring speeches by James Thindwa, Chicago Jobs with Justice; and Jorge Mujica, March 10 Committee. Speech themes include the failure of both Democrats and Republicans to come up with a just immigrant rights reform, the relationship of NAFTA trade agreements to the current immigrant crisis, support of the Employee Free Choice Act.
2. "Rally for Workers Justice at Resurrection Health Care." Excerpts of speeches from a March 3, 2007 union Rally for Employee Free Choice at Resurrection Health Care hospital.
Speeches promote the Employee Free Choice Act and focus attention on the struggle to form a union at Resurrection Health Care in Chicago. Speaking are: Henry Bayer, Executive Director, AFSCME Council 31; John Sweeney, President, AFL-CIO; and Kelly Berringer, RN, West Suburban Hospital.

May Day 2007. Labor speeches, big march scenes and music (Bucky Halker) at Chicago's Haymarket Square, where the legacy of May Day began in 1886.
The 2007 Chicago Immigrants Rights March passed through Haymarket Square on its way to Grant Park, and the turnout was over 200,000, despite an ICE raid a few days before in Chicago's Mexican community of Little Village.
Featuring speeches by James Thindwa, Chicago Jobs with Justice; and Jorge Mujica, March 10 Committee. Speech themes include the failure of both Democrats and Republicans to come up with a just immigrant rights reform, the relationship of NAFTA trade agreements to the current immigrant crisis, support of the Employee Free Choice Act.
Produced by Labor Beat. Labor Beat is a CAN TV Community Partner. Labor Beat is affiliated with IBEW 1220; views expressed are those of the producer, not necessarily of IBEW.
For more info, and to purchase the dvd: mail@laborbeat.org, www.laborbeat.org, 312-226-3330.

The Road to Haymarket, The 1986 Labor Beat Haymarket centennial documentary
On the 100th anniversary of the Haymarket tragedy, Labor Beat produced a documentary, "The Road to Haymarket". At the time, and to this day, we are astonished that, at least in English, there seem to be no other documentaries about Haymarket.
Our budget was "seat of the pants", with only $300 raised from one union source (AFSCME 31). The actors, with a waiver from Actors Equity, donated their work. Despite all this, some 20 years later the piece remains entertaining and informative, upholding a refreshing class-struggle outlook, as compared to the ambiguous attitude peddled at the Chicago Haymarket Square monument dedication a few years ago.
In "The Road to Haymarket" you will hear authentic anarchist speeches delivered by trained actors in period costume with appropriate scenery. "The Road to Haymarket" presents, through re-enactments and graphics, the events leading up to May 4, 1886: The large immigrations of Eastern European workers, the Chicago Fire reconstruction scandals and corruption, the city's harassment of labor leaders and the left, the movement for the 8-hour day.
But the documentary also addresses the aftermath of 1886. In 1986 we tried to relate the Haymarket story to contemporary issues, so you will see scenes from the Chicago Tribune strike for example. Viewers today will recognize constant themes however, both with events of 20 years ago as well as 120 years ago, the victimization of immigrant workers being one of the most obvious.
This classic was newly digitized as we commemorated the Haymarket tragedy and its enduring legacy in May 2007.

As the debate intensifies over the Iraq war funding, this new Labor Beat video examines the complicity of the Democratic Party in the war, against the backdrop of recent 4th anniversary of war protests.
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Labor Beat covers the demonstrations in Washington D.C.January 27, 2007.
Part 1. Activists with U.S. Labor Against the War talk about the resolutions they have put forward calling for their local organizations and the national movemement to demand "Troops Home NOW."
Part 2. Author Anthony Arnove speaks about the skewed Iraq debate in the media, and why we should all demand immediate withdrawal and reparations for the Iraqi people.
Part 3. Members of the group Iraq Veterans Against the War speak out about what they saw in Iraq, and why they say the only way to support the troops is to bring them home.

Thousands of War Protesters in San Francisco (Jan. 27, 2007) joined the Longshoremen picket line at a ferry boat company which takes tourists to Alcatraz Island.
The edited video initially explains through interviews with union pilots and crew what their strike is about, then highlights key labor and anti-war speeches connecting the illegal Iraq war with the domestic war against working people.
Todd Stroger, President of the Cook County, Illinois Board, wants to cut 17% from the county budget, targeting jobs and services. Many protests are taking place, such as this one in downtown Chicago on January 29, 2007.
6:00 minutes. Produced by Labor Beat. mail@laborbeat.org. www.laborbeat.org. 312-226-3330. Labor Beat is based in Chicago and affiliated with IBEW 1220. The views are not necessarily those of IBEW. Labor Beat is a CAN TV Community Partner.

Steve Macek, author of "Urban Nightmares: The Media, The Right, and the Moral Panic Over the City", talks about how the right wing has -- through re-packaging the 19th-century Victorian capitalists' demonizing of the economic lower-rung -- developed through the media an ideological attack on the urban poor. Assorted visuals. Produced by Labor Beat
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The Oct. 28th, 2006 unveiling of the impressive new monument commemorating the Virden massacre in 1898 in Southern Illinois.
With interviews, coal miner memorabilia, a fire-breathing speech by UMWA President Cecil Roberts, plus the ceremony at the Mother Jones monument only a few miles away in Mt. Olive, Illinois.
Produced by Gary Brooks for Labor Beat, this video won an Honorable Mention Award at the 2007 Hometown Video Awards.

Rank-and-file worker comments on a Detroit labor monument. 6:04 minutes. This segment was part of a subsequent Labor Beat show. Cf. laborbeat.org.
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Produced by SEIU 503 in Oregon.
On Monday, 10/30/06 protestors gathered at the Mexican Consulate in Chicago to protest military state repression of Oaxaca, and the paramilitary murders of community members there, as well as the cold-blooded gunning down of Indymedia reporter Brad Will. This video also includes footage of arrest of Chris Geovanis of Chicago Indymedia.
Produced by Labor Beat.

- Brewing Solidarity. A Profile on the IWW-Starbucks Workers Union
This new video by Andrew Freund spotlights the new IWW-Starbucks Union at Logan Square, a neighborhood on Chicago's north side. Interviews with baristas Christine Morgan and Joe Tessone show why they decided to form a union and what happened next ....
- This Labor Beat show adds a 4-minute segment by the Coalition of Immokalee Workers about a day in the life of "Ronaldo McDonald" working in the tomato fields.
Labor Beat presents the national cable-tv premiere of the new documentary about the 2006 International Brotherhood of Teamsters Convention, the Tom Leedham campaign for International President, and the successful fight to nominate the Leedham reform slate ("Strong Contracts, Good Pensions") running against the James Hoffa machine.
Presented in October 2006 as ballots for the national election are being mailed out. Produced by Gary Brooks for Labor Beat. DVD available, mailto:steward705@comcast.net.

The California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing Committee leads a protest action in Chicago against hospital industry push to get the National Labor Relations Board to re-define direct care registered nurses as supervisors.
As such, they would not be declared in the union bargaining unit, therefore reducing the number of union members that could be organized.
This action took place on August 8, 2006. 9 min, 4 sec. This segment was part of a subsequent Labor Beat show. Cf. laborbeat.org.

In Chicago, August 11-13, 2006, over 400 activists and organizers of the recent Immigrant Workers Rights marches (held in March, April, May, and July of 2006) met in Chicago to debate strategy and tactics for the way to move forward in their quest to ensure equality, amnesty, and citizenship for the millions of undocumented workers contributing to the American economy. The convention was called by the March 10 Coalition (www.movimiento10demarzo.org), and endorsed and attended by dozens of organizations in solidarity with the nationwide struggle.
This early brief report on the Convention is 9 minutes. This segment was part of a subsequent Labor Beat show. Cf. laborbeat.org.
1. In response to the brutal attacks against Lebanon by the Israeli war machine, a significant protest of several thousand demonstrators took place at Tribune Plaza in Chicago Saturday, July 22, 2006. It was part of many such protests worldwide. After the speeches and picket at Tribune Plaza, the demonstration marched across the Michigan Avenue Bridge to the front of the Israeli Consulate. The protest was sponsored by a broad selection of major Palestinian, Arab and Islamic community organizations as well as activist organizations. Interviews, speeches and protest actions.
2. Seattle Jobs With Justice join with the nurses to hold a rally at Virginia Mason Hospital to demonstrate against the hospital's attempt to re-classify the employment status of its registered nurses. Includes speech by Stewart Acuff, national organizing director of the AFL-CIO.
3. A short segment on a rank-and-file appraisal of a labor monument in Detroit.
Nurses in Chicago present demands and a deadline for a strike at the end of June 2006. The Cook County Nurses (organized with the National Nurses Organizing Committee of the California Nurses Association) threaten a one day strike if negotiations don't yield satisfactory results.
An exclusive Labor Beat report on the issues that the nurses are concerned with, featuring Sheilah Garland-Olaniran (NNOC Midwest Coordinator) and Stroger Hospital nurses.
Google playback is 23 mins.

Chicago's Immigrant Rights/Workers Rights March, May Day 2006
On May Day, 2006 the largest march ever in Chicago took place--to support the rights of immigrant workers. Estimates of the size of the march ranged from 400,000 to 700,000!
Labor Beat's 27 minute documentary about that event and what led up to it: The earlier March 10 massive march which kicked off a national immigrants rights movement; Follow-up community planning meetings for the next big march; The emerging role of the unions in this struggle, including the press conference on April 24 at Haymarket Square, with Chicago Federation of Labor (AFL-CIO) and Change To Win speakers; The last minute preparations of the organizers on the eve of the march; The launch point activities at Union Park on march day.
The video contains interviews with union spokespeople from UNITE HERE, UFCW, SEIU, Carpenters, U.E., and others, including Jorge Mujica of the March 10 Committee, and a speech at the Haymarket Square ceremony by James Thindwa (Chicago Jobs with Justice) reminding us that the negative effects of NAFTA have been forgotten in the national discussion about border crossings from Mexico. The message of the video also criticizes guest worker schemes, and it calls for unionization, not just legalization, of immigrant workers, and for living wage legislation.
The march participants remind us with their signs and in eloquent statements that this protest was not only about Mexican/Hispanic immigrants, but about all immigrants, from Poland to India to the Philippines. Labor Beat's video about this historic day in the movement for social justice.
On-demand plabacks: A broadband connection is needed for the (http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-3663927984454687227) Google playback. An .avi slideshow (a 29MB file download from www.laborbeat.org/3/lb499poh-slideshow.avi). Will work on many more systems.
Labor Beat looks at the March 18, 2006 anti-war protest in Chicago and the state of organize labor's activities against the war, locally and nationally.
Carl Rosen, President UE District 11, discusses the growth of US Labor Against the War and its current activities. Steve Edwards, President AFSCME 2858, discusses the need for labor's political independence in fighting the war. Bill Davis, President IAM 701, and other labor activists are also interviewed. Lots of footage of the march.
NOTE: A broadband connection and Google's free player are needed to view internet videos posted on Google!

This half-hour tv show, produced by Labor Beat, follows Tom Leedham (the 2006 rank-and-file challenger to Jimmy Hoffa, Jr. for IBT General President) during his March 2006 campaigning in the Chicago area. It includes his stump speech in which he outlines campaign issues.
Also, in an interview, Leedham discusses the AFL-CIO split, Andy Stern's labor-management model for the Change To Win coalition, and the UPS strike.
This Labor Beat documentary follows the story of the creation of a moment in labor history. At its 2005 Convention, the AFL-CIO for the first time passed a resolution against an ongoing war--the war in Iraq.
The video shows the preparations for this breakthrough, how U.S. Labor Against the War worked at the Convention to strengthen the Resolution Committee's initially weak resolution. It shows how USLAW used the momentum of its 2005 Iraq Labor Tour and the 18 anti-war resolutions passed by labor bodies around the country; how Resolution 53 was amended; how the discussion was moved up to a prominent point of the Convention agenda through Jesse Jackson's call to "bring the troops home"; how Resolution 53 was debated on the Convention floor; and the celebratory Iraq Forum, with labor representatives from Iraq and Kurdistan immediately after the resolution passed.
"Resolution 53: How the AFL-CIO Stood Up Against the War" captures two days in July 2005 that will be remembered as a turning point in labor's fight against the war.

The Sunday July 24th Episode of Labor Express focused on the debate over reform of the AFL-CIO. Stewart Acuff, National Organizing Director for the AFL-CIO, explained the position of the current AFL-CIO leadership. Alan Benjamin, Executive Board member of the San Francisco Labor Council, explained the third position in the debate which sees neither Sweeney's nor Stern's approach making the fundamental changes necessary to revive the labor movement. This program includes a live in studio appearance by labor journalists Steve Zeltzer and Wes Brain.
Check laborexpress.org for more audio of convention events.

This July is the 70th Anniversary of the Wagner Act which was suppose to guarantee workers the right to form unions.
This week's Labor Express focuses on the "Right to Organize", and how that right barely exists in the U.S. today. Interview with Stewart Acuff, National Organizing Director for the AFL-CIO. Interview with Thai Nygen, a worker fired for trying to organize a union at Verizon Wireless. And an interview with IBEW Local 21 member Kevin Bealis on the anti-union tactics of Comcast.

Follow up the legal situation of the 25 day laborers arrested in the Chicago suburb of Cicero in a Home Depot parking lot as they sought employment. Interview with Kim Scipes on AFL-CIO foreign policy and the "Building Trust and Unity Among Workers Worldwide Resolution".
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Interviews with Stanley Aronowitz, labor activist and Sociology professor at CUNY, and Jose La Luz, AFL-CIO Assistant Organizing Director, about the "third position" in the AFL-CIO debate which argues neither the Change to Win Coalition, nor the current federation leadership is addressing the real crisis facing labor. These interviews were provided by our friends over at Building Bridges in NY...http://www.buildingbridgesonline.org/.
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- Chicago area day laborers are arrested for seeking work in a Home Depot parking lot.
- The 100th Anniversary of the IWW is celebrated in the city of its founding.

- Rally at the annual Candy Expo in Chicago protesting CAFTA and the candy industry's pressure tactics against Illinois legislators to get CAFTA passed.
- Interview with Richard Berg on reform of Teamsters Local 743.
- Rally at the Congress Hotel in Chicago on the 2nd year anniversary of the Congress Hotel Strike.

- Special WIN feature interview with Stewart Acuff, Organizing Director for the AFL-CIO who defends the current AFL-CIO leadership from critics and warns of the dangers of a split in the AFL.
- Rally by Frederick Cooper workers in Chicago to win a better severance package from the closing manufacture and efforts to keep the property industrial.

- Special WIN feature interview with SEIU President Andy Stern about reforming the AFL-CIO.
- Interview with Amjad Ali Aljawhry the North American representative of the Federation of Workers Councils and Unions of Iraq (FWCUI).

Interview with Alfonso Diaz, organizer at the Casa de Pueblo grocery store in Chicago about the firebombing of his car in possible retaliation for his union organizing efforts.
Interview with Chicago Jobs With Justice Executive Director James Thindwa about his detention by hotel security at a May 2005 rally to support striking workers at the Congress Hotel.
Interview with activists working to prevent cuts in public transit service in Chicago.

Interview with James Jordan about challenging the AFL-CIO's Solidarity Center to give up it's government funding, it's support of Bush Administration foreign policy and build real international workers solidarity. Interview with Sarah Nelson De La Cruz, spokesperson for the Association of Flight Attendants at United Airlines, about United management's efforts to abrogate their responsibility for their employees pensions and void their union contracts, via the bankruptcy courts.
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Speeches from the re-dedication ceremony on May Day of the new Haymarket Memorial in Chicago including powerful solidarity statements by two exiled Colombian Trade Unionists.
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Our MAY DAY 2005 Episode. Interview with UNITE-HERE organizer and Filipino solidarity activist Terri Smith on the struggle of workers at Hacienda Luisita in the Phillipnes and the deaths of 7 workers on their picket line. Follow up story on Casa de Pueblo grocery store workers attempt to organize in the Pilsen neighborhood of Chicago. And some extra music in honor of the holiday.
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Victory in SEIU Local 880's campaign to organize Illinois' child care workers. The dangers of CAFTA (the Central American Free Trade Agreement).
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Interview with Dr. Anita Chan, Research Fellow at the Contemporary China Centre of the Australian National University, co-editor of The China Journal and author of China's Workers Under Assault: Exploitation and Abuse in a Globalizing Economy on working conditions in China. WIN feature story on poet Martin Espada's turning over of $1,200 honorium presented him by the Coca-Cola corporation to SINTRAINAL, the Colombian union, Coke has tried to eliminate in that country. And a little traditional and contemporary Chinese music.
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Rally at the Offices of Charles Schwab in downtown Chicago, against the privitization of Social Security. Schwab, one of the country's largest finicial services companies, recently announced their plan to invest millions in a campaign to privitize social security. Members of dozens on Chicago unions held a rally outside their offices to let Schwab know their are not going to let Schwab profit over the destrtuction of social security. Interview with Chicago Teacher's Union president, Marilyn Stewart about a new coalition that has been organized to change how public education is funded in Illinois. Part 2 of my interview with Katie Jordan, UNITE retiree, on CLUW (Coalition of Labor Union Women).
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In this episode: Interview with Gaby Gonzalez of the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights (ICIRR) and Martin Manteca of SEIU on the current state of immigrant's rights. Part 1 of an interview with Katie Jordan of the Coalition of Labor Union Women (CLUW) on the history of CLUW and the concerns of working women. And a special WIN feature on organizing by women in the global sex trade.
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Interview with Gerardo Reyes, Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) member, about modern day slavery in the agriculture industry and the philosophy of the CIW - Interview with independent journalist Eva Jasiewicz, about the struggles of oil workers in the Southern Iraqi city of Basra. - Teamster's President James Hoffa and UNITE-HERE President Bruce Raynor talk about the Teamster's reform proposal, aimed at putting more of the federation's funds back into organizing. And even a little Irish music in honor of St. Patrick's Day.
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Topics covered in this episode include: A peek at Chicago's incredible labor history with the release this month of the Labor Trail a map of 140 Chicago landmarks important to the labor movement and the establishment of a park on Chicago's Northwest side named for labor activist Lucy Parson's, widow of Haymarket martyr Albert Parsons.
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This is the full version of my interview with MST activist Vanderly Scarabeli. It originally aired on the Labor Express radio program in two parts. The first on 2-13-05 the second on 2-27-05. The MST (Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra) is the Landless Workers Movement of Brazil. An organization dedicated to winning landless rural Brazilians access to land through land seizures and the establishment of agricultural cooperatives. In this interview, conducted in November of 2004, Mr. Scarabeli talks about the history of the MST, the philosophy of their movement, their relationship to the Worker's Party government of Lula Da Silva and their role in the World Social Forum process.

Topics covered in this episode include: Interview with MST (Brazilian Landless Workers Movement) activist Vanderly Scarabelli and an interview with Peter Hudis, Chicago journalist who participated in the 2005 World Social Forum.
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Jerry Mead, host of Labor Express radio in Chicago interviews Ashim Roy and Chandra, Indian Trade Unionists about the NTUI, The New Trade Union Initiative in India.
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Topics covered in this episode include: Illinois' Health Care Justice Act, a step toward universal coverage in Illinois and a rally by City of Chicago workers for a fair contract with the city after over a year of fruitless negotiations.
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Topics covered in this episode include: Interviews with Indian Trade Unionists who are members of the NTUI, The New Trade Union Initiative and a protest in the wealth Chicago Suburb of Lake Forest outside the home of a Dow Chemical board member on the anniversary of the Bhopal India Union Carbide disaster which has killed twenty thousand working class Indians to date.
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USLAW's Gene Bruskin at UNITE Hall Chicago 04 - Jerry Mead Speech by Gene Bruskin of US Labor Against War at UNITE Hall in Chicago, Summer of 2004
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Charleston dockworkers fight racism and union-busting
Leonard Riley, ILA member, discusses last year's police riot and workers against South Carolina Confederate Flag. Speech at International Socialist Organization education conference. 2001-Mar-01 in Chicago. Producer: Wayne Heimbach, wayneh@interaccess.com.
Keywords: labor, Charleston, civil rights. For non-profit use only.

An interview with Ramon Ramirez, founding member and President of PCUN, Oregon farmworkers union. Also, a discussion of a planned March 9 international day of solidarity with PCUN. Producer:Wayne Heimbach. For non-profit use only.
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Three members of Chicago Teamsters Local 743 discuss their opposition slate for national Convention delegates. 2001-Feb-02.
The interview with members of the New Leadership Slate in Teamsters 743 runs about 25 minutes, and began at the halfway point of the hour show. This rank-and-file slate is running delegates to go to the International Convention to support Tom Leedham for International President in the next International election, and to bring out other reforms.
Producer:Wayne Heimbach. For non-profit use only.

The AFL's Stewart Acuff spoke at the Chicago Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Local 73's 7th annual rally for Martin Luther King. January 15, 2001. 6:02. Produced by Wayne Heimbach.
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Member Jim Pfipps spoke at Chicago Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Local 73's 7th annual rally for Martin Luther King. January 15, 2001. 11:09. Produced by Wayne Heimbach.
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Angela Davis speaks to a December 2000 Chicago meeting of the Committees of Correspondence on the death penalty and the criminal justice system. The need to fight the death penalty as part of a larger struggle.
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Labor Express' Jamie Daniel interviewed Lance Compa, the author of the Human Rights Watch book that describes U.S. labor laws' variances with international human rights standards. November 20, 2000. Produced by Wayne Heimbach.
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Meet striking Chicago union printers as they discuss the Taft-Hartley Act in a January 23, 1948 broadcast on WCFL Radio, then owned by the Chicago Federation of Labor. Produced by Wayne Heimbach.
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A 1948 speech on the Taft-Hartley Act at the Illinois Federation of Labor Convention in Chicago. By Reuben Sonderstrom in September 1948. Labor Express producer: Wayne Heimbach.
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A welfare caseworker for the Illinois Department of Human Services and a member of AFSCME talks with Labor Express' Clif Brown about the effect of the Welfare Reform Act of 1996 and of the poor in the world's richest country. Produced 4/99.
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An interview with Kim Scipes, the author of KMU: Development of Genuine Trade Unionism in the Phillipines, 1980-94.
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An interview with FedEx union organizer Pilar Burton.
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Bruce Colburn of the Midwestern AFL-CIO on neoliberalism and the need for worker solidarity across borders. Jobs With Justice Forum - Tape 2.
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Cheri Honkala of the Kensington Welfare Rights Union. Jobs With Justice Forum - Tape 3.
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Dave Ranney speaks on the way globalization drives down all kinds of standards--environmental, workplace safety, and wages, to name a few. Jobs With Justice Forum - Tape 1.
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Bob Zellner, the longtime activist, talks about labor organizing at the height of the civil rights movement.
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What the MAI is, and why we haven't been hearing about it.
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The historic founding convention of the Labor Party in 1996 in Cleveland, Ohio.
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Early draft begun. A 120-second PSA with Labor Beat and Labor Express broadcasts times currently, 20061023. Text as a full width roll.
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A 60-second PSA. Labor Beat broadcast times roll up while slides from shows change quickly. Thumbnail video. 5 minutes to download via broadband internet. 25 MB. Avi file playable by Windows Media Player, QuickTime, RealPlayer and other software.
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A 30-second PSA alerting workers about the sarcastic anti-labor ads appearing on the national media networks. Corporate bosses fund the 'Center for Union Facts' (unionfacts.com) and pay the broadcast companies.
Content: Viewers see and hear a "Union Bosses" ad and are offered a link to learn more about independent labor media. Full broadcast quality. With slate and leader. Rights: Producers and editors of pro-labor media may freely copy and adapt this PSA. We can edit the bottom text for you.

A 30-second PSA promoting the Labor Beat web site. Please use this often within your video productions and link to it on your websites.
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Labor Express Radio.
Original broadcasts are streamed worldwide at www.wluw.org (And broadcast over the air to the northern part of metropolitan Chicago on 88.7 MHz, WLUW-FM).
Each show begins with labor news from around the world.
Complete information on Labor Express and archived shows are at: www.laborexpress.org. Contact us with program material and your financial support.
Deatiled information about shows is at www.LaborExpress.ORG.