A few days before it all went down the tubes, Art Pulaski, executive secretary-treasurer of the California Labor Federation, had this to say on the organization's website:
"Whether BART closes down this week will come down to one issue and one issue only: whether the BART Board of Directors shows leadership or continues to act to hold Bay Area transit riders hostage by using the same playbook a small minority of elected officials in Washington, DC have used to close down our federal government." BART riders and other denizens of the Bay Area so far haven't seen it that way. Quite the reverse: The unions are the hostage takers - a furious public has said so in overwhelming numbers. The unions are the ones who have closed down BART. And, like the Republican Party in Washington, the unions appear to have suffered some serious damage. "The danger to labor is if the strike goes on for a while, then the unthinkable begins to be discussed - like banning all mass transit strikes," said Harley Shaiken, a labor economist at UC Berkeley. That discussion has already begun, in letters from California lawmakers to Gov. Jerry Brown, from state Sen. Mark DeSaulnier, D-Concord, who said he "looking into legislation that could prevent future strikes," a petition drive by a Democratic Assembly candidate in the East Bay seeking the same, and a piece by editorial page editor John Diazin Sunday's Chronicle supporting a Republican proposal that BART unions be made to honor the no-strike clause in... |
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(c) 2010-2025 Jon L Gelman, All Rights Reserved.
Showing posts with label San Francisco Bay Area. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Francisco Bay Area. Show all posts
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
BART strike could have long-term impact on unions
Thursday, October 3, 2013
Report Finds 8 Million California Residents Lived in Poverty in 2011
There were about 8 million California residents living in poverty in 2011, according to a new report that factored in health care and other costs, the Riverside Press-Enterprise reports. The figure is significantly higher than federal estimates of nearly 6 million state residents living in poverty that year. Federal poverty estimates for California and other states use a formula from 1964 that defines poverty as income less than three times the cost of a "minimum diet," which would have been $22,811 for a family of four in 2011. However, some observers have called this method outdated because food is a smaller part of most families' budgets than it was 50 years ago. The study was conducted by researchers at the Public Policy Institute of California and the Stanford Center on Poverty and Inequality. Unlike federal figures, the study's poverty estimates include:
When the study factored in cost of living:
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- California has highest poverty rate in country (isteve.blogspot.com)
- Walters: 8 million in California living in poverty (fresnobee.com)
- 2mil more poor CAs: Stanford/PubPolicyInst does the math (californiaschildren.typepad.com)
- Tips and Poverty (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Thousands of California injury claims made by professional athletes (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Jobs are coming back, but they don't pay enough (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Report Recommends Raising Workers' Compensation Premiums (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
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