Story Archives 2011

Driving back down south to Southern Ute Lands

09/24/2021 - 09:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
mari
Original Body

This morning we woke up and dropped off melisa at her job, Azteca, a mexican supermarket. It was the first time I heard party music inside a grocery store, which was awesome! Then we left denver since it started to snow... We sang lots of songs, talked, and had some deep conversations about life with many breakthroughs!

We had a pit stop at a thai food restaurant, and saw bout 30 deer while driving back down. When we got to my house, we watched What Bleep Do We Know?. An awesome film, and I cooked food for rachel. To find out more about the film, go to http://www.whatthebleep.com/

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Don't Check in - Check OUT- The Hotel Frank Workers' Crisis

09/24/2021 - 09:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
PNNscholar1
Original Body

Who was the woman who changed the bed sheets and bed spreads the last time I stayed in a hotel? I saw her pushing a cart that hid her face, a face darkened by the sun, moving from room to room, seen in glimpses then forgotten. She could have been in her 20’s or 30’s or older. When I checked out of the hotel, I left a few dollars on the bed with a note that said “thank you”. I thought about the woman’s hands—how many bed sheets had she changed, how many tears had she wiped from a child’s face, how many indifferent glances had she pretended not to notice, how many journeys were cut into the landscape of her hands and face?

I looked at my own hands, hands that write while working as a door man at a high end apartment complex in San Francisco. My hands are soft, yet feel the hard water running over them. I followed the lines etched in my brown hands that led me to the Hotel Frank in San Francisco’s Union Square. I saw her, the woman who changed sheets; I saw bell persons, desk clerks, maintenance workers and room cleaners, gathered in solidarity, boycotting the hotel for not honoring its contract with union workers. I looked at the woman who changed the linens. I saw her brown face clearly. Her hand was a tight fist.

“There’s a boycott here…Check out! Go somewhere else!”

Workers at The Hotel Frank—represented by Unite Here Local 2-- are boycotting the Management Company Provenance. Workers say that Provenance has not honored the existing union contract between workers and management. At stake are the worker’s medical coverage, pensions, sick leave and rights to due process when addressing grievances.

The Hotel Frank is in the heart of downtown San Francisco in Union Square. A Street bearing the word Union should have union workers, one would think. It is a place where tourists visit restaurants, enjoy live music and take in the sights of a world class city—a city that is increasingly hostile to working people and families. Walking the Hotel Frank’s picket line are those who have worked as many as 40 years at the hotel. Marc Norton, who worked as a bellman for 12 years, was fired in September after the hotel was auctioned off in a foreclosure sale in May 2010 by Wells Fargo bank. The bank then sold the hotel to a financial speculator called AEW Capital Management. The hotel is now managed by a company called Provenance.

The new management has not honored the long standing contract with its workers. The company has not contributed to worker’s medical coverage and pensions. Workers are now forced to work an extra half hour without pay. Housekeepers now work more rooms, skipping breaks and meal periods. According to workers, staffing levels have decreased since Provenance took over. The management company has been charged with violating Federal Labor Laws by the National labor Relations board. Both sides await the decision of the board.

“When Provenance took over, we became new, at-will employees who can be fired at any time” said Marc Norton, longtime bellman as the Frank who has been a local 2 member since 1976. A petition was circulated at the Frank requesting that Mr. Norton be appointed as shop steward—a petition every local 2 member signed. Mr. Norton was fired shortly thereafter.

Benefits are a crucial issue for workers. Under the union contract, workers contributed $10.00 a month for healthcare if they had dependents, no cost for those without dependents. Management now wants members to pay $150.00 to $250.00 a month for their health coverage.

Josephine Rivera is an organizer with Unite Here Local 2. She worked for 16 years at the Marriot, helping organize workers in a fight for representation—a fight that lasted 7 years.  She walks the picket line at the Frank, her face reminiscent of Filipino workers whose work and struggle helped organize farm workers into the UFW.  Ms. Rivera spoke of the challenges in organizing workers. “Some workers, such as the Filipino workers, work very hard but have the attitude that the company is being good to them so they do not talk, do not speak up. They have learned not to question authority but to respect it”.  Because of unity and organization, the workers at the Frank are united and speak their minds. 

Marc Norton spoke of the connection with workers in Wisconsin, whose collective bargaining rights are under assault.  "We feel a lot of solidarity with the folks in Wisconsin who are fighting for worker's rights.  We have to stand together.  It's the only way we've won anything".

Support the workers of the Hotel Frank by supporting the boycott by its workers. Urge others to support workers and their families—workers who have put in many years to reap the benefits and equity they have earned. “There’s a boycott here! Check out! Go somewhere else!”

Join organizations like the California council of Churches and the National Urban Alliance who have pledged to boycott the Hotel Frank. Call Provenance and tell them to give their workers a fair deal:

Bashar Wali, President—(503) 295-2122 x101
Maribel Olmeda, Human Resources Manager—(503) 295-2122 x110
Stan Kott, Hotel Frank General Manager—(415) 986-2000
Dayna Zeitlin, Hotel Frank Assistant Manager—(415) 986-2000

To Listen the PNN Radio interview with Marc Norton click here

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Indigenous people don't say goodbye...

09/24/2021 - 09:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
mari
Original Body

Today Rachel left to go back home to do some organizing around childcare and pregnancy. She got home safely, and in two weeks we will meet in the east coast and do some Indigenous Peoples Highway work there, and might even go into Canada. We will both be speakers at a conference at Hampshire College in Amherst, MA. Mari for the next two weeks will be at a round dance in Utah and go to Florida with her sister. 

Mari and Rachel will both be documenting their everyday lives the two weeks they are apart physically but spiritually unified. 

Here is their favorite round dance song they both love to sing... Red and White (Driving Me Crazy) by Northern Cree. Hope it drives you crazy...

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La Mission/ The Mission

09/24/2021 - 09:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
POOR correspondent
Original Body

La Mission/ The Mission

La Mission es pa’ que nuestra gente que quede y no se aleje

The Mission is for our people to stay and don’t go away…

See cause the new conquistadores are here, developers,speaculeros,

hipsters with pockets full of greens, can you dig..

La Mission

Imposible seria no pelear o luchar por nuestros barrios, comunidades que poco a poco estan desapareciendo.

 

The Mission

Impossible is not to fight and struggle for our barrios, communities that little by little are disappearing.

A qui estamos y no nos Vamos

La Mission es mas que una calle o una Avenidad…

es un libro de historia y cada calle es una pagina que relata el pasado y el presente

 

The Mission is more than a street or an Avenue….

Is a book of history and each street is a page that narrates its pass and present

16th and Mission is our Gente plaza, I remember the beautiful weekends I have spent chopping it up with some elders  “ Oye hermano yo soy Cubano” as we bathe in the sun, a elder shouts out

As we break the law by sitting side by side

Sabrosa Cumbia playing in a old boomBox

While my eyes wonder as I contemplate la belleza de mi gente de color walking by, the beautifulness of folks of color...

The scent from three blocks away of hotdogs wrap with bacon…oh my god

I think am in heaven

No is just La Mission

Y sus perros calientes

La gente de diferentes paises, colores, pintando lo que llamamos La Mission

The people from different walks of life, colors, Flavors  paint what we call

The Mission

La Mission Sus calles, Maltratadas, mal cuidadas, como nuestras comunidades

The Mission your bruise streets, decay, poorly take care of, like our communities

A qui Estamos y no nos vamos

We are here to stay

See cause they are here the culture vultures, developers, real state agents, community haters, looking for the next community to flip, like an old house, clean the black and brown and poor, bring the condos and the white picket fences.

A qui Estamos y no nos vamos

We are here to stay

Like Sandra said we will be the last poor gente to get gentrified

y no nos dejaremos

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Useless Human Material - The Fascist Lies Behind the Social Security Cuts

09/24/2021 - 09:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

"They are referring to elders and people with disabilities as “useless human material,””  Michael Lyon sat in POOR’s community Newsroom speaking about how the right wing is framing the debate over Social Security. I immediately thought of Dr. Hajo Meyer, 86 year old elder activist in my Jewish community. He is a survivor of 10 months in Auschwitz, and recalls Nazis using the same language about people with disabilities, gay and lesbian people, Jews, trade unionists and all others targeted by the Nazis in the Holocaust. Refereing to people as “useless human material” is indicative of genocidal intent, and --when it comes to the proposed changes to SSI and Social Security, that is not a stretch.  

In November, Alan Simpson and Erskine Bowles the co-chairs of the National Commission on FIscal Responsibility and Reform created by President Obama, proposed major cuts to Social Security. Specifically, they recommend raising the retirement age to 69, slashing retirement benefits by up to 35 percent for middle-income earners, reducing Social Security's annual cost-of-living adjustments, cutting healthcare benefits, including Medicare, and raising fees for veterans. Although they are distancing themselves from George W. Bush’s vendetta to privatize Social Security, their restructuring plan is indeed a move towards privatization.

What would cuts to Social Security and Medicare mean? “Bad News” Bruce Allison, poverty scholar and activist is on SSI and Social Security. “I get roughly $840 a month to live on in a city that costs me $580 to rent, $20 for PG&E and the rest of the money goes to food or future functions.” About 8 years ago, Bruce was had to stop working due to a back injury. After being a homecare attendant for about 20 years, lifting people people out of beds and into wheelchairs and carrying them up and down flights of stairs when the SROs they lived in did not have elevators, two of his vertebrae fused together. Without SSI, “I would be pushing a grocery cart, sleeping on the streets or using an unorthodox way of renting known as squatting,” he says.

The proposed cuts would effect millions of children, disabled youth and adults and elders like Bruce, and what’s more- raising the age of retirement would only exacerbate the unemployment problems. With older folks working longer, those jobs do not become available to other people who are trying to work. Thus, the of the Senior Action Network, California Alliance of Retired Americans and the Gray Panthers have come together under the banner “Hands off Social Security- Jobs Now!”

The plans to cut Social Security and the impact that will have on the millions of people who currently rely on it or will be relying on it are bad enough. But what is even more sinister is that Simpson and Bowles have admittsed that Social Security does not actually add to the deficit.Michael Lyon, of the Senior Action Network asks “How can you justify raising the age to collect Social Security, when it’s an average 13% benefit cut, when it’s only the wealthy who are living longer, when older people find it almost impossible to find jobs, when many older people’s bodies are already worn out, when it would make it harder for younger people to find jobs, and when you say Social Security doesn’t add to the deficit?”

Right now, the right-wing is circulating lies that Social Security is in crisis. They are hoping that in a panic, we will make some bad decisions and actually end the system as we know it. They are also referring to Social Security as “entitlement,” implying that those who receive it need to “toughen up” and “get real,” that elders and folks with disabilities do not deserve to have their basic needs met. To them, the idea of someone who is not directly engaged in capitalist production receiving what they need to stay alive is a waste. No matter what wisdom, life experience, kindness, curiosity, relationships or thoughts someone is contributing to the world, if they aren’t making money for someone else, they are treated as “useless human material.”

To get involved in defending Social Security, contact mlyon01@comcast.net

http://www.socialsecuritymatters.org/Resources.html

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La Mujer Obrera: Afternoon with Cemelli y Ameyalli

09/24/2021 - 09:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
mari
Original Body

Today back in El Paso,  I had lunch with my childhood friend Jackie who works at La Mujer Obrera (which translates The Woman Worker). La Mujer Obrera is a space/center/organization which holds a special place in my heart. It is a place where no matter what I always learn something new from the women who are there.
 
This time the building was quiet, Cemelli de Aztlan was in an office with her baby girl, so I stopped to say hello.  As  I started talking to Cemelli I learned many things, like how like me she decided to return to her homeland of El Paso to learn the indigenous practice of midwifery!

Cemelli shared her history with the work she is doing and how La Mujer Obrera has changed over its 29 years. Standing in the second poorest district in the country, the Chamizal District the organization started off as part of the labor rights movement with its members working in factories who were displaced after work moved to Mexico after NAFTA.

Cemelli also shared that as a teen in El Paso, there were not a lot of safe spaces for youth and she first came to Mujer as a teenager attending punk shows. Now Cemelli as a mother, organizes events for the Centro, like this years Mexica New Year event which she explains in the video.

It was great reconnecting with Cemelli and meeting Ameyalli (which means 'water that springs from the earth) today on our Indigenous Peoples Highway! A blessing to see how places just as people, grow and transform!

 

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