1St Grade Reading
Posted Dec 01, 2011 8:44pm
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Posts with the tag Inland Empire
Carl Wood is the Democratic candidate for the CA 65th Assembly District, the most depressed area in the nation after Detroit. Carl is a lifelong labor guy with deep roots in the community. As Public Utilities Commissioner, Carl Wood helped guide the state through the disastrous energy crisis, protecting the interests of workers and working class utility consumers. Wood is unapologetically liberal and direct, in a very pleasant way. Here he is at the California Democratic Convention last April 2010:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=juWCJN2JeLc&feature=channel
Crossposted from Calitics
Read More »The geography of Depression is spreading. Yesterday we looked at how Mendota and other Central Valley towns are facing Steinbeckian scenes of poverty. Today brings another account of dire economic straits - this time in the San Bernardino/Riverside region of Southern California long known as the "Inland Empire".
Tom Woodruff, director of Change to Win's Strategic Organizing Center, offered this overview of the Depression in the Inland Empire, where unemployment is above 12%, and how the Employee Free Choice Act can help improve dire conditions:
The Inland Empire became a warehousing and shipment center for the nation - handling the products shipped from China to LA/Long Beach and putting them on trucks and trains to the nation's big box stores. The basic economic model was unsustainable; the employment itself was temporary and lacking in most basic benefits. And it goes without saying that most of these jobs were non-union.
Just as pro-labor legislation like Section 7(a) of the 1934 National Labor Relations Act and the Wagner Act of 1935 helped pull the nation out of Depression and ensure that the recovery would build a strong and lasting middle class, the Employee Free Choice Act can play a similar role in places like the Inland Empire:
I have to confess that I am not sure the goods movement industry's future growth in SoCal will be so vast, and I am skeptical that relying on imports from China at the expense of domestic manufacturing (the Inland Empire used to be a major center of blue-collar work in the US, including the Kaiser Steel mill in Fontana) is a smart move. But in any case, we need to ensure that California's workers have the opportunity to organize unions for economic recovery.
Because we are learning the same lessons today that we learned 75 years ago - that we will not have economic security and shared prosperity unless the people of this nation have the power to wrest wealth back from the oligarchs.
Tom Woodruff, director of Change to Win's Strategic Organizing Center, offered this overview of the Depression in the Inland Empire, where unemployment is above 12%, and how the Employee Free Choice Act can help improve dire conditions:
The area's fractured employment model has turned a recession into a depression. There are now tens of thousands of laid off warehouse workers with no unemployment, no safety net at all, just barely getting by.
Ignacio Sanchez lost his warehouse job in October and now struggles every day to feed his family. Ignacio was a "lumper," unloading the large containers that come to the warehouses from the ports. He now spends his days watching over his five year-old daughter and searching dumpsters for cans and food. When he finds food, he has to hide where he got it from his daughter because if she knew, she might not eat it.
Olga Romero, who worked 14 hour days repacking shoes at a warehouse, was laid off three months ago with no warning or cause and has been unable to find work since. She can only afford to feed her family rice and beans for dinner, and worries about the days ahead. "There's no future with these bad jobs," she says. "I need a real job to take care of my family, not another temp job."
As conditions worsen in the Inland Empire, the big retail companies that created the broken business model have not accepted responsibility for the damage they have done. They hide behind the temp agencies and third-party logistics firms in an elaborate shell game.
The Inland Empire became a warehousing and shipment center for the nation - handling the products shipped from China to LA/Long Beach and putting them on trucks and trains to the nation's big box stores. The basic economic model was unsustainable; the employment itself was temporary and lacking in most basic benefits. And it goes without saying that most of these jobs were non-union.
Just as pro-labor legislation like Section 7(a) of the 1934 National Labor Relations Act and the Wagner Act of 1935 helped pull the nation out of Depression and ensure that the recovery would build a strong and lasting middle class, the Employee Free Choice Act can play a similar role in places like the Inland Empire:
More than one million new jobs will be created in the goods movement industry in Southern California by 2030, according to projections. For only pennies on the dollar, the retail industry could turn them into high quality, middle class jobs that support a family. These are jobs that cannot be outsourced and could play a major role in revitalizing our reeling economy. But only if the nation's biggest retailers are held responsible for the treatment of all the workers in their supply chain.
I have to confess that I am not sure the goods movement industry's future growth in SoCal will be so vast, and I am skeptical that relying on imports from China at the expense of domestic manufacturing (the Inland Empire used to be a major center of blue-collar work in the US, including the Kaiser Steel mill in Fontana) is a smart move. But in any case, we need to ensure that California's workers have the opportunity to organize unions for economic recovery.
Because we are learning the same lessons today that we learned 75 years ago - that we will not have economic security and shared prosperity unless the people of this nation have the power to wrest wealth back from the oligarchs.
Disclosure: I've been with this campaign since the 2007 CDP convention.
This has been a district made for Democrats to win since the last redistricting, and yet we've lost over and over. But now California Democrats are heading into the general of a key battleground for our 2/3 majority fight with four major factors in our favor: numbers, nominee, polling and ground game.

Maps, polling, links galore over the flip. (Originally posted at Calitics.) Read More »
Manuel Perez has a significant, double-digit lead over his Republican opponent andThat's the latest polling we have (Source: Heidi von Szeliski and Associates), and it looks good all over.
is well-positioned to win back the seat for Democrats in California's 80th Assembly
This has been a district made for Democrats to win since the last redistricting, and yet we've lost over and over. But now California Democrats are heading into the general of a key battleground for our 2/3 majority fight with four major factors in our favor: numbers, nominee, polling and ground game.

Maps, polling, links galore over the flip. (Originally posted at Calitics.) Read More »
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