Metro will be hosting a Movie Night on Tuesday, July 1 at 6:30pm.
We’ll be viewing “Citizen Koch,” and film director Tia Lessin has graciously agreed to stop by and say a few words before the movie.
If you are planning to attend, please RSVP to Cara Noel, as refreshments will be provided, and we’d like to know how much to get.
Local will be the NYC Central Labor Council (275 7th Ave, 18th Floor)
Richard Steier, editor in chief of The Chief, received Metro’s Communicator of the year at the Metro Convention. He is pictured here with co-directors (l to r) Cara Noel, CLC and Anne Silverstein, CSA.
The Metro Convention was held on May 30th. The morning panel was on communications messaging and strategies for low-wage organzing. Michael Hirsch, longtime labor journalist, moderated the panel. We heard from Danny Massey, Berlin Rosen, about the fast food workers campaign and Janna Pea, Deputy Communications Director, RWDSU about the car wash workers.
The morning panel is scheduled for 10 a.m. The panel is titled, “Communications Messaging and Strategies for Low-Wage Organizing.” The panelists are Danny Massey, Berlin Rosen (fast-food workers), Janna Pea, deputy communications director, RWDSU (car wash workers), and Elaine Kim, communications director, 32BJ, SEIU (airport workers campaign). Longtime labor journalist Michael Hirsch will moderate the panel.
After the morning panel, you will have an opportunity to hear Richard Steier, editor, The Chief, who will be honored as Metro’s Labor Communicator of the Year. Steier will have copies of his recent book, “Enough Blame to Go Around: The Labor Pains of New York City’s Public Employee Unions,” available for purchase. Deidre McFadyen, director of internal communications at the United Federation of Teachers and a former reporter at The Chief, will introduce Steier.
The awards session is scheduled for 1:30 p.m.
At 2:30 p.m., the convention will feature a workshop, “Twitter Session: Leading a Revolution with 140 Characters.” Charles Lenchner and Elana Levin of Organizing 2.0 will lead the workshop.
Winners can be found in the Communications Contest page. Congratulations to all! Come pick up your awards at the Metro Convention – May 30th. Register today!
The Center for Community and Ethnic Media at the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism is partnering with Metro NY Labor Communications Council to host a panel discussion on covering labor issues.
Thursday, May 1st, 2014 @ 6:00 p.m.
CUNY Graduate School of Journalism
219 West 40th Street (Between 7th and 8th Avenues), Room 308
New York, NY 10018
Panel members: Cara Noel, Communications Director, NYC Central Labor Council, Co-Chair, NY Metro Labor Communications Council Lenore Friedlaender, Assistant to the President 32BJ SEIU Richie Steier, Editor of the civil-service newspaper “The Chief-Leader”
Moderator: Garry Pierre-Pierre, Executive Director, Center for Community and Ethnic Media
In recent years, new Americans have become the bedrock of labor union membership. These members are essentially your readers. And soon, the de Blasio administration is set to begin negotiations with municipal unions whose contracts expired long ago. So how do you cover labor issues and what exactly do your readers need to know about their unions? Please join us for a conversation with labor leaders and journalists about labor’s continuing role to empower new Americans.
Food and drinks will be served
At Newark Liberty International (EWR), John F. Kennedy International (JFK) and LaGuardia (LGA) airports, about 15,000 low-wage subcontracted airport service workers provide crucial services such as cabin cleaning, terminal security, baggage handling, wheelchair assistance, and sky cap services. They work for contractors hired by airlines and terminal operators and they struggle to get by on wages as low as $8.00 per hour with no affordable healthcare and no paid sick days in one of the most expensive cities in the country.
These service positions were once directly filled by airline carriers, and included paid sick days and holidays, vacation and health insurance benefits. In a bid to cut costs, airlines shed those jobs in favor of a race-to-the-bottom system where contractors fill jobs by reducing wages and doing away with employment benefits. These low-wage jobs, where workers may have to fill the gaps with government assistance programs such as food stamps, cash assistance, Section 8 rent support, and Medicaid, are not what New York City and New Jersey need.
The workers are struggling for justice, respect and a voice in their workplaces.