About Dave Katzman

Local 100, Transport Workers Union

Victory in Ohio

In a high turnout for an off year, voters in Ohio have overturned the anti-worker SB5 by a 61-39 margin.

In Ohio, the circumstance of a referendum brought to the fore the issue of collective bargaining, rather than submerging it in the program of a candidate or party. In response to the broad character of the assault on rights, the entire labor movement stood together: the private sector with the public sector; and within the public sector, uniformed with non-uniformed. Gathering over a million signatures to get the referendum on the ballot created an army of tens of thousands of union members, who remained active in the campaign that followed.

Multi-faceted communications work — honing the message, spreading the word within labor’s ranks, using actions to gain and maintain media coverage, producing flyers by the fistful, creating a powerful online presence and, in the final weeks, hitting the airwaves with broadcast ads – played a key role in the effort. The strength of this role lay in its close connection to solid, on-the-ground mobilization.

Of note, in the circumstances of the Ohio fight, labor did not hide its light under a bushel, but rather let its torch blaze for all to see.

Budget watchdog group careful who it bites

In “Gravity’s Rainbow,” novelist Thomas Pynchon wrote, “If they can get you asking the wrong questions, they don’t have to worry about the answers.”

For nearly 80 years, the corporate-backed nonprofit Citizens Budget Commission has asked the wrong questions about city and state financing: What government spending and taxes can we cut? What public sector workers can we lay off? What can we privatize?

Rarely has it looked at how to equitably increase public revenues or how to make public sector jobs more meaningful and more productive, not simply fewer and less well-paid.

The self-appointed “commission” markets itself as a good government organization, but it is far from a neutral body representing the interests of all New York City citizens. Continue reading