Showing posts with label New York City. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York City. Show all posts

Monday, March 25, 2013

Today in Labor History--March 25

March 25, 1872 – Toronto printers struck for the 9-hour day — the first major strike in the country. (From the Daily Bleed)

March 25, 1893: A federal court issued the first injunction against a union under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act. The case was brought against the Workingman's Amalgamated Council of New Orleans for interfering with commerce. The law was a major victory for bosses. (From Shmoop Labor Timeline)
Coxey's Army Embarking for D.C.
 March 25, 1894Coxey's Army of (Common-Wealth Army) headed for Washington DC, to demand economic reform. Coxey was a wealthy businessman and Populist who proposed a plan of federal work relief on public roads to be financed by Treasury notes to end the depression of 1893. When Congress refused to pass this bill, Coxey declared, "We will send a petition to Washington with boots on." Coxey & his lieutenants were arrested by police & about 50 people were beaten or trampled. (From the Daily Bleed)
Triangle Shirtwaist Fire
 March 25, 1911: Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire  in New York City killed one hundred and forty-six people, mostly women and young girls who were working in sweatshop conditions. As tragic as this fire was for poor, working class women, it is estimated that over 100 workers died on the job each day in the U.S. in 1911. What was most significant was that this tragedy became a flash point for worker safety and public awareness of sweatshop conditions.

The Triangle workers had to work from 7:00 am until 8:00 pm, seven days a week. The work was almost non-stop. They got one break per day (30 minutes for lunch). For this they were paid only $6.00 per week. In some cases, they had to provide their own needles and thread. Furthermore, the women were locked inside the building to minimize time lost to bathroom breaks.

A year prior to the fire, 20,000 garment workers walked off the job at 500 clothing factories in New York to protest the deplorable working conditions. They demanded a 20% raise, 52-hour work week and overtime pay. Over 70 smaller companies conceded to the union’s demands within the first 48 hours of the strike. However, the bosses at Triangle formed an employers’ association with the owners of the other large factories. Soon after, strike leaders were arrested. Some were fined. Others were sent to labor camps. Armed thugs were also enlisted to beat up and intimidate strikers. By the end of the month, almost all of the smaller factories had conceded to the union. By February, 1910, the strike was finally settled. (From the Daily Bleed)

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Today in Labor History--March 25


March 25, 1872 – Toronto printers struck for the 9-hour day — the first major strike in the country. (From the Daily Bleed)

March 25, 1893: A federal court issued the first injunction against a union under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act. The case was brought against the Workingman's Amalgamated Council of New Orleans for interfering with commerce. The law was a major victory for bosses. (From Shmoop Labor Timeline)
Coxey's Army Embarking for D.C.
 March 25, 1894Coxey's Army of (Common-Wealth Army) headed for Washington DC, to demand economic reform. Coxey was a wealthy businessman and Populist who proposed a plan of federal work relief on public roads to be financed by Treasury notes to end the depression of 1893. When Congress refused to pass this bill, Coxey declared, "We will send a petition to Washington with boots on." Coxey & his lieutenants were arrested by police & about 50 people were beaten or trampled. (From the Daily Bleed)
Triangle Shirtwaist Fire
 March 25, 1911: Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire  in New York City killed one hundred and forty-six people, mostly women and young girls who were working in sweatshop conditions. As tragic as this fire was for poor, working class women, it is estimated that over 100 workers died on the job each day in the U.S. in 1911. What was most significant was that this tragedy became a flash point for worker safety and public awareness of sweatshop conditions.

The Triangle workers had to work from 7:00 am until 8:00 pm, seven days a week. The work was almost non-stop. They got one break per day (30 minutes for lunch). For this they were paid only $6.00 per week. In some cases, they had to provide their own needles and thread. Furthermore, the women were locked inside the building to minimize time lost to bathroom breaks.

A year prior to the fire, 20,000 garment workers walked off the job at 500 clothing factories in New York to protest the deplorable working conditions. They demanded a 20% raise, 52-hour work week and overtime pay. Over 70 smaller companies conceded to the union’s demands within the first 48 hours of the strike. However, the bosses at Triangle formed an employers’ association with the owners of the other large factories. Soon after, strike leaders were arrested. Some were fined. Others were sent to labor camps. Armed thugs were also enlisted to beat up and intimidate strikers. By the end of the month, almost all of the smaller factories had conceded to the union. By February, 1910, the strike was finally settled. (From the Daily Bleed)

Friday, March 25, 2011

Today in Labor History: March 25


March 25, 1893: A federal court issued the first injunction against a union under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act. The case was brought against the Workingman's Amalgamated Council of New Orleans for interfering with commerce. The law was a major victory for bosses.

March 25, 1911: Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire  in New York City killed one hundred and forty-six people, mostly women and young girls who were working in sweatshop conditions. As tragic as this fire was for poor, working class women, it is estimated that over 100 workers died on the job each day in the U.S. in 1911. What was most significant was that this tragedy became a flash point for worker safety and public awareness of sweatshop conditions.

The Triangle workers had to work from 7:00 am until 8:00 pm, seven days a week. The work was almost non-stop. They got one break per day (30 minutes for lunch). For this they were paid only $6.00 per week. In some cases, they had to provide their own needles and thread. Furthermore, the women were locked inside the building to minimize time lost to bathroom breaks.

A year prior to the fire, 20,000 garment workers walked off the job at 500 clothing factories in New York to protest the deplorable working conditions. They demanded a 20% raise, 52-hour work week and overtime pay. Over 70 smaller companies conceded to the union’s demands within the first 48 hours of the strike. However, the bosses at Triangle formed an employers’ association with the owners of the other large factories. Soon after, strike leaders were arrested. Some were fined. Others were sent to labor camps. Armed thugs were also enlisted to beat up and intimidate strikers. By the end of the month, almost all of the smaller factories had conceded to the union. By February, 1910, the strike was finally settled.

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Nuke Hysteria: U.S. Threatened By Its Own Plants


It will probably be a while before we know how bad the Japanese nuclear disaster really is, and even longer before we know how much the fallout will affect people in the U.S. According to the experts, the effects in California should be negligible.

Maybe they are right. After all, the affects of Chernobyl were small beyond 1,500 miles, and Japan is several thousand miles away from California. However, as a father of a three-year old, I am very concerned. Children in Scandinavia did have an elevated risk of birth defects and developmental damage as a result of Chernobyl and the Japanese disaster will certainly increase background radiation levels. But what concerns me much more than this and what should really concern Americans is not the fallout from Japan, but the risks of our own nuclear industry, which has had dozens of near crises and is equally susceptible to severe earthquake damage.

The California plants in San Onofre and Diablo Canyon were built to withstand earthquakes of 7.0 and 7.5, respectively, according to SFGate. But California is known to have had quakes in excess of 8.0. Furthermore, both nuclear plants are on the coast, making them susceptible to tsunami damage. According to the Huffington Post, Diablo Canyon is less than 1 mile from an offshore earthquake fault. The Cascadian subduction zone is thought to be able to generate quakes in the 9.0 range, along with cataclysmic tsunamis. It did, in fact, cause a tsunami that devastated what is now Humboldt County in 1700. Furthermore, the San Onofre plant sits less than 100 miles from San Diego and Los Angeles, with a total population of well of 10 million in the near vicinity. Then there is the additional threat of the rising sea levels and increasingly violent storms accompanying climate change.

It is not just California that is at risk. Regulators have known for six years that the nuclear plants in the central and eastern U.S. are at far greater earthquake risk than previously assumed. The New Madrid fault in Missouri, for example, has had quakes in the 19th century that are thought to have surpassed 8.0 on the Richter scale. In 1986, a quake in Cleveland damaged the Perry Nuclear Power Plant, according to a report in Common Dreams. Also, a recently discovered fault runs beneath the Indian Point plant less than 50 miles from New York City, making it arguably the most dangerous nuclear power plant in the country.

Compounding the earthquake risk is years of lax regulation and maintenance. Democracy Now reported that the backup diesel generators at the Fermi 2 reactor in Michigan were inoperable for 20 years. Had there been a disaster in that plant, there would have been no backup energy and potential disaster for Toledo and Windsor. Likewise, the Palisades reactor in Michigan has been storing radioactive waste in silos along Lake Michigan since 1993, in violation of NRC regulations, putting at risk the drinking water of millions of people. There are also dozens of nuclear power plants in operation in the U.S. with obsolete containment systems that could fail in an accident. In 1985, the NRC warned of this risk, saying plants like Dresden, in Illinois, or Vermont Yankee, had a 90% chance of failure in a severe accident.

Compounding the risk even further still are the woefully inadequate and ill-conceived general disaster-preparedness plans in the U.S. For example, there are only evacuation plans for 10 miles around U.S. plants, yet the U.S. is insisting on evacuating U.S. citizens within 50 miles of the Japanese plants. Even this could be inadequate. A one-hundred square mile zone around Chernobyl is now uninhabitable it is so radioactive. Should one of the U.S. plants go level 6 or level 7, particularly near a densely populated region such as Indian Point or San Onofre, it might be impossible to quickly evacuate everyone within 50 miles, let alone 100. Also, in light of the pathetic U.S. response to hurricane Katrina, it is hard to believe that the government is in any shape to deal with a disaster of the magnitude of the one unfolding in Japan.

Hopefully the current hysteria around nukes, whether misplaced or well-founded, will reinvigorate the anti-nuclear movement and inspire mass protests like we saw in the 1980s and we are currently seeing in Europe. Ralph Nader seems to think the move to increase nuclear power in the U.S. is temporarily dead in the water. However, Obama has asserted that the Japanese disaster will have no effect on U.S. plans to increase its nuclear power plants. He made true on similar threats in the wake of the Deepwater Horizon disaster, okaying deepwater oil exploration less than a year after, so there is no reason to think he won’t continue to push nukes, too, unless the anti-nuclear movement grows rapidly in size and militancy.