It's that time again. Time to pick the
people who will decide how much money goes in your pocket, how often
you'll see your kids, and when and where you work - and whether you
work at all. Yep, it's election time. And in addition to electing a
President, the entire U.S. House of Representatives is up for grabs.
Most BMWE members know, like it or not, if you work for a railroad
and if you care about your wallet or your kids, you have to be
political. You don't have to like politics, you just have to do
politics - and do smart politics. That's the lesson of PEB 219 in '91.
WHY?
Your contract, your safety, and your pension depend on being
political.
Contract. '91 taught us we virtually can't strike. The Railway
Labor Act, passed by a Republican Congress in 1926, lets the U.S.
President appoint a Presidential Emergency Board if rail labor and
rail management can't reach an agreement. A PEB is three arbitrators
appointed by a politician. Their report sets your wages and tells you
where, when, and if you work. The report of the PEB is not binding,
but if BMWE doesn't accept the gist of it, Congress can pass a law
imposing the PEB report as your contract-without your consent-as it
did in '91.
Since 1980, major railroads have de facto refused to bargain,
dragging out negotiations the RLA requires, but eventually creating an
impasse. Nothing has changed in this 2000 round of bargaining. Rail
management's strategy relies on getting a PEB report which helps them
and hurts you. This will obviously be the likely result if management
can stall long enough, hoping to get a Bush-appointed PEB.
Even if management doesn't like the PEB report, it can ask Congress
for a new panel of arbitrators to make the report management wants.
The process can be repeated until a pro-management report is produced.
But if BMWE's friends ARE IN THE White House and run the Congressional
Committees, we can get fair arbitrators, a reasonable report, and
prevent a new board. This is the lesson of PEB 229 in '96.
"There's a direct relationship between the breadbox and
the ballot box. And what the union fights for and wins at the
bargaining table can be taken away in the legislative halls." -
Walter Reuther, UAW
Safety. The Federal Railroad Administration and the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration come from Acts of Congress. Neither
helps us workers as much as it should, but can you imagine a railroad
workplace with no federally enforceable safety rules? How long could
you work unhurt? And would your bosses care?
Congress also created the Federal Employees Liability Act to force
your boss to care about keeping you safe. Unlike Worker's
Compensation, FELA can make injuries to railroaders very expensive -
potential lost profits being a strong incentive for your boss to
provide you a safe place to work. Congress created FELA for your
safety. Congress can take it away.
Pension. Your pension comes from the Railroad Retirement Act,
another creation of Congress. Social Security is modeled on Railroad
Retirement and since 1974, linked to it. You pay in nearly twice as
much as people on social security, but you expect a much better
pension. As BMWE members know all too well, because Congress created
it, Congress can change Railroad Retirement - with or without your
consent.
It's easier to influence Congress if you pick the Congressmen. With
your wages, your work location, your safety, and your pension
depending on Congress, doesn't it make sense to make the effort to
VOTE for a representative in Congress who will help you?
Register. VOTE. The paycheck and the family you save may be your
own.
AFL-CIO Working Families Agenda for 2000
America's workers are the backbone of our country. We deserve to
live and work in dignity, to be able to provide for our families and
to give our children a chance for a better future. We also deserve to
have our government respect and stand with us, not with the wealthy
special interests who would sacrifice our families and weaken our
communities in pursuit of greater profits, power and wealth.
We are working hard to build a stronger voice for working families
- not only in our workplaces, but in our government and communities
and in the global economy. On behalf of all of America's working
families, the AFL-CIO and its member unions are organizing and
mobilizing to advance a Working Families Agenda and to hold elected
officials at every level of government accountable to protect and
promote the interests of working men and women and our families.
We will work hard to:
- Fight for quality, affordable health care for all.
- Call for high quality public education for our children, with
smaller classes and sound, modern schools.
- Work for fair, family-supporting wages and equal pay for women.
- Fight for job safety and health protections in America's
workplaces.
- Assure a sound retirement system that includes pensions, private
savings and a strong Social Security program as well as a sound
Medicare program to protect older Americans' health.
- Call for a national manufacturing policy that invests in
family-supporting jobs in the manufacturing industry.
- Ensure corporate responsibility to protect workers, the
environment and our communities.
- Fight for trade policies that benefit rather than harm working
men and women around the world.
HOW?
So you're going to vote. But who's your Congressman? And where do
you vote? Call 1?888?VOTE-SMART. Give them your home address. VOTE
SMART will identify your Congressional District and tell you which
local election official to call to find your voting place. Call that
local election official. Give them your address. This local election
official will tell you where to vote.
Isn't your paycheck and the chance to see your family worth two
phone calls and a quick stop on election day?
Registration. In all states, you can't vote unless you're
registered at your current home address. Some enlightened states now
allow registration on election day, but most still require
registration several weeks in advance. When you read this, time will
be short. If you know or you're not sure you're registered, run, don't
walk, to the nearest telephone, call your local election official, and
register! If your state allows election-day registration, check what
proof of residence you need.
Time Off to Vote. Each state is different, but the general rule is
that if you're working near home, your boss must give you enough time
off on election day to get to your voting location. Some states, like
Minnesota, require the railroad to provide paid time off to vote.
Check with your local election official, your local lodge legislative
representative, your BMWE state legislative director, or the political
party of your choice for the rules on voting in your state.
Weekend Voting. Some states allow voting on the Saturday before
election day. If you work on the road but get home each weekend, this
may be an option for you. Check with your local election official
several weeks before election day to see whether weekend voting is
available to you.
Absentee Ballot. You're on the road. No way can you get home
election day. You read about absentee ballots in the Journal but
didn't write to get one. You may still be able to vote absentee!
Call your local election official. Ask him to FAX you an absentee
ballot application. FAX the completed application back. If you act
when you get this Journal, you should still have time to receive and
return an absentee ballot. But call now! The ballot must be mailed to
you and be mailed back - and it must get to your voting location near
your home by election day, November 7, 2000.
Some states have absentee ballot applications on-line, usually with
your state's Secretary of State. Check with your local election
official or use the search engine to find the appropriate site for
your state. If you're on the road, many public libraries or other
similar facilities provide public Internet access. Don't know how to
use the net? The library staff can help you.
If deer season or another semi-sacred holiday will keep you away
from home on election day, use this same procedure to get an absentee
ballot and vote. Hunting is a legit reason for getting an absentee
ballot but not for missing an election.
Where do I vote?
Call
1-888-VOTE-SMART
for a quick answer!
WHO?
You're going to vote. And you know where, when and how. But WHO do
you vote for?
Two things to consider: who has helped you and who will help you.
This JOURNAL lists each Congressman's vote on a number of issues
BMWE and labor consider important. Check out how your representative
voted. If you like your incumbent Congressman's voting record, vote
for him or her. If you don't, vote for his or her opponent.
Voting records don't tell the whole story however. Congressmen can
count votes. If a Congressman introducing a bill (the author) can't
count on enough votes to ensure its passage in Committee or in the
whole Congress, usually he or she will drop it. The author talks to
other Congressmen privately before any vote is taken, asking for a
commitment to vote for the bill. Some Congressmen have helped BMWE by
declaring that they will vote against bills which would hurt you,
effectively stopping the bill. But because no vote was taken, no
voting record exists to show how these representatives helped you.
But BMWE's legislative people know which Congressmen helped you -
and who hurt you - both openly and quietly. This information is the
basis of BMWE's endorsement of incumbent Congressmen, some of which
are printed in this JOURNAL to help you make your decision. BMWE's
"endorsement" of an incumbent is simply a recommendation
that you help with your vote the Congressmen who helped you. A vote
against the ones who tried to hurt you.
When an incumbent doesn't run, a seat is "open." You have
no voting record to check. Do you have time or access to examine all
the new candidates for the seat?
To help you, BMWE, with other unions, checks each candidate's
background, positions, and attitude toward rail labor issues. BMWE
then chooses the one most likely to help you and help BMWE help you
and endorses - recommends that you vote for - that candidate.
Congressional Committee Chairs decide which bills get heard. The
party with the most Congressmen - the majority - picks the Committee
Chairs.
Historically when Democrats have the majority in the House,
Committee Chairs are willing to hear bills (like reduction in
retirement age) which BMWE supports. When Republicans are in the
majority, these pro-worker bills are never heard and bills designed to
reduce your job security and your standard of living are frequent. PEB
219 notwithstanding, a Democratic majority in the House makes passage
of pro-worker railroad bills possible.
@ BOX #3 = HOW IT WORKS
Any Congressman can introduce a bill, but before the whole House
can consider it, a House Committee must hear and pass each bill. The
Chair of each Committee controls which bills the Committee will hear
and which will die. Each Committee Chair, usually the senior
Congressman on the Committee who belongs to the party in the majority,
is appointed by the Speaker of the House in conjunction with the
majority party caucus. The Speaker is elected by the whole House on a
straight party line vote.
Whether Democrats or Republicans are in the majority in the House is
the difference between BMWE trying to get what you want (like
reduction in age of retirement) or fighting hard to keep what you've
got (like existing Railroad Retirement). Democrats screwed up on PEB
219 in 1991, but by 2000 they had seen the light (BMWE helped
re-educate them). A Democratic majority puts BMWE's friends, not your
enemies, in charge of the House Committees.
Wouldn't you rather have Congressman Jim Oberstar (D-MN), a proven
friend of BMWE members and their families, as Chairman of the
Transportation and Infrastructure Committee which has jurisdiction
over rail issues than someone who must ultimately pay homage to Tom
DeLay and Dick Armey?
Although there are a few pro-working family Republicans and some
anti-working family Democrats, by and large the Democrats are much
more supportive of the interests of working families in general and
our members in particular than are the Republicans. Precious few
Republicans will buck their leadership and the corporate interests
their leadership serves to support issues that benefit working
families. That is why most Republicans oppose the patients' bill of
rights and always support things like cramdown.
Changing six House seats out of 435 from Republican to Democratic
hands will make someone who understands and sympathizes with rail
labor, Jim Oberstar, Chair of the House Transportation Committee. No
bill which affects railroaders can be passed without clearing this
committee. Six seats is the difference between a pro-labor and
anti-labor Congress. Six between a Congress which helps you or hurts
you. |