November 21, 2008

DAVID vs. GOLIATH:
HOW The Puerto Rico Teachers’ Union WON A BATTLE FOR DIGNITY, DEMOCRACY & QUALITY EDUCATION AGAINST THE BOSS, THE GOVERNMENT & ITS U.S. LABOR ALLY


FORUM & PANEL:
The Puerto Rico Teachers’ Union (FMPR), SEIU & US Labor

  • Rafael Feliciano, FMPR President
  • Mark Brenner, Labor Notes
  • Lisa North, ICE (Independent Community of Educators)-UFT
  • Marvin Holland, TWU (Transit Workers Union) Local 100 R&F Activist

A powerful coalition consisting of the Government, Boss, Courts—and a US Union that spent millions— couldn’t defeat the teachers of Puerto Rico, whose union stood firm defending quality public education, labor justice and union democracy in a stunning election victory in October of 2008.


What are the implications for other labor activists and the US Labor Movement as a whole?
Sponsor:

Federación de Maestros de Puerto Rico/FMPR Support Committee-NY fmpr.support.committee.ny@gmail.com


FRIDAY NOV. 21
6:30PM
NYU Silver Center
Room 714

100 Washington Square E.
Trains: 6 to Astor Pl—A, D, E to W 4 St
Silver Ctr: corner Washington Place
1 block north of W 4 St
1 block south of Astor Pl
East side Washington Sq. Park

October 24, 2008
The FMPR is a Fighting Union - Vote NO!

The FMPR is a Fighting Union - Vote NO!

SEIU Learns the Meaning of “No” By STEVE EARLY

CounterPunch/Weekend Edition, October 24 / 26, 2008

Puerto Rico’s Teachers Show the Way

SEIU Learns the Meaning of “No”

By STEVE EARLY

When last seen on the picket-line, Puerto Rican teachers were fighting their way through police barricades to appeal to fellow workers from the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), at its lavishly funded convention in San Juan in June. (See CounterPunch, June 3, 2008.)

The message of the Federacion de Maestros de Puerto Rico (FMPR) was simple: please stop SEIU President Andy Stern from colluding with the indicted governor of the island to replace FMPR with a “company union.”

At SEIU’s convention, only a handful of delegates dared to challenge Stern on this issue. When eight rank-and-file members from California tried to distribute a leaflet asking why the “top leadership has sided against the teachers of Puerto Rico in a gross case of ‘colonial’ unionism,’ ” SEIU staffers threatened several of them with reprisals. “They told us that this is a betrayal and that we could be suspended from the union if we continued handing out the fliers,” delegate Brian Cruz, from Local 1021 in San Francisco, explained to The San Juan Star.

Most of the 3,000 delegates and guests simply cheered when Stern and SEIU vice-president Dennis Rivera, a native of Puerto Rico, introduced their good friend, Anibal Acevedo Vila, the Popular Democratic Party governor. Acevedo Vila is still awaiting trial on federal corruption charges and it was his administration that precipitated a ten-day, island-wide public school strike led by the FMPR last winter. As The Star reported June 3, SEIU used its convention and the governor’s appearance to promote a rival organization, “which is hoping to become the new union representative for an estimated 42,000 public school teachers.”

In the view of SEIU and Acevedo Vila, teachers needed a new SEIU-affiliated union because FMPR no longer had legal recognition after its walk-out over wages, classroom size, and the threat of privatization. This month, however, the teachers themselves disagreed that it was time for a change. By a margin of 18,123 to 14, 675,  they voted on Thursday (10/23) against joining the SEIU-backed SPM (Sindicato Puertorriqueno de Maestros), which is closely aligned with another SEIU affiliate, the Association de Maestros de Puerto Rico, an organization of school principals and administrators.

The “Vote No” campaign was orchestrated by the FMPR which, as further punishment for its “illegal” strike, was denied a spot on the ballot. (FMPR was even barred from having observers at teacher polling places.) Prior to the start of the election, FMPR presented evidence to the labor relations commission showing that it still had voluntary financial support from 12,000 members (who have continued to pay union dues even though automatic deductions from all teachers’ paychecks were discontinued when FMPR was “decertified.”) Although SEIU favors “employee free choice” on the mainland and assured critics here there would be a multiple choice ballot, Stern and his local allies limited Puerto Rican teachers to just one union option, which they then rejected.

The defeated SPM has almost no dues payers so SEIU had to pour hundreds of thousands of dollars into this losing effort, much of it spent on advertising. As one FMPR supporter reported, SEIU had “paid staff at each school giving out free t-shirts and coolers and the media and the government were clearly in its favor but still they couldn’t impose their union on us.” FMPR activist Edgardo Alvelo, who teaches at a vocational school in Rio Piedras, estimates that his union spent only “$50,000 on the whole campaign.” According to Alvelo, “that money was very hard to obtain, but it was enough to win. It was our people in the schools that did the job. Today, we are celebrating and tomorrow our struggle will continue in all our schools.”

The representation vote turnout was extremely high. Of the 36,000 teachers eligible to participate due to their permanent status, 33,818 actually voted, with a thousand of those ballots being challenged or voided. FMPR now faces the task of continuing to function as what’s called a “bonafide organization,” under P.R. labor law. While still deprived of the full collective bargaining rights it had before the strike, FMPR retains a strong shop steward structure, the ability to represent members, and mobilize around educational policy issues and day-to-day job concerns.

FMPR supporters in New York, California, and elsewhere aided the successful “Vote No” campaign by raising money to help keep this militant independent union afloat. (For more information, seehttp://mysite.verizon.net/ or the FMPR’s own website: http:fmprlucha.org) On October 14, some protested outside the Manhattan headquarters of United Healthcare Workers-East (the former SEIU/District 1199 long headed by Rivera), where they denounced Stern’s raid on FMPR as an insult to New York hospital workers “proud history of fighting for justice and dignity.”

During an August visit to the mountain community of Utuado, one New York Solidarity Committee member, Judy Sheridan-Gonzalez, brought money that was collected for FMPR members disciplined for their union activity. Reports Sheridan-Gonzalez, a registered nurse:

“The union, in collaboration with students and parents, had developed a progressive, inclusive curriculum that was extraordinarily successful. This collaborative structure was unilaterally dismantled by the government/school authority in 2007 and 17 teachers were suspended when they fought back.. They stood firm even without an income and the class of 2008 in Utuado even dedicated their graduation speeches to these teachers. Their energy and commitment was inspiring and reminiscent of the spirit of U.S. unions in the 1930s and Puerto Rican labor in years past.”

That same feisty spirit was on display in this month’s island-wide union vote, which gave SEIU an expensive lesson in the meaning of “No.”

Steve Early is a Boston-based labor journalist and the author of a forthcoming book for Monthly Review Press called “Embedded With Organized Labor: Journalistic Reflections on the Class War at Home.” He can be reached at Lsupport@aol.com.

Vote NO to SPM/SEIU!

Vote NO to SPM/SEIU!

FMPR Defeats SEIU Fake-Boss-Union!

On October 23, in Puerto Rico, the independent teachers union, FMPR, won an amazing victory against an SEIU affiliate, the SPM.

SEIU’s budget:   btw. $10 & 20 million; organizers on the ground 300+

FMPR’s budget: $65,000 ($30,000 borrowed); organizers: mostly volunteers

The school principal’s organization, Asociación de Maestros, created a union—SPM—to legally run against FMPR.  SPM affiliated with SEIU in December, 2007.  SEIU/SPM saturated the island with promises, food and gifts to gain support.  Seeing they would lose in a fair election, they engineered the courts to disallow FMPR’s participation in the election.  Thus the teachers had only two choices in the vote: SEIU or no union!

FMPR, under PR law, was serving as a “bonafide” organization—voluntary representative without exclusive collective bargaining rights—since its decertification in January 2008 for taking a strike vote in November 2007 (the union went out on strike for 10 days in February, 2008).  Even though a NO vote meant that the teachers were voting for “no union,” such a vote would allow FMPR to continue to play the role of “bonafide.”

FMPR launched an intensive VOTE NO campaign—and won.

The official results:     NO—18,123                    YES-14,675

FMPR was denied observer status during voting but independents who were able to observe the final count noted that cartons containing “YES” ballots had a significant number of “NO” ballots in the piles.  It is estimated that approximately 2000-3000 NO votes were thus converted to YES.  The actual vote would more likely be 20,500 to 12,000, a 63% margin of victory.

The FMPR Support Committee-NY picketed SEIU headquarters last week and discovered that many SEIU members were not aware of what their leadership was doing—members and staff stated they did not support raiding—many are disgusted with their leaders.    Our NYC Oct.14 picket at SEIU Offices and some shots of the FMPR picket (attacked by the police who were called in by SEIU) at SEIU’s June, 2008 convention on the island, can be viewed on our YouTube posting below.


The words to the song in the Youtube say:

“Tell them no, tell them no. The teachers tell them no. The employer unions are dues-suckers (literal translation)—Without representation. Teachers, vote NO to the company union.  Fight for quality education, your rights, etc.”

HELP US CONTINUE THE FIGHT FOR UNION DEMOCRACY AND SOCIAL COMPACT UNIONISM! FMPR IS IN DEBT FOR $30,000!

Your generous contributions can be sent (checks payable to “FMPR”) to:

FMPR
Urb. El Caribe
1572 Ave. Ponce de León
San Juan, Puerto Rico 00926-2710

October 22, 2008

Protesting SEIU Dennis Rivera’s UNION Busting Attempt of FMPR, Puerto Rico Teachers

I did not know SEIU was raiding the Teachers Union in Puerto Rico. That is not right.


Why is Dennis Rivera raiding the Teachers Union in Puerto Rico? Rivera is Puerto Rican and should respect what the teachers in the island want rather than imposing SEIU down there.

Two workers as they left the SEIU offices.

FMPR Support Committee Protests at SEIU’s NYC Offices

Oct. 14, 2008 - FMPR Support Committee denounced the actions of SEIU’s leadership in Puerto Rico, including their betrayal of 42,000 striking teachers earlier this year and their subsequent raid against the teachers’ elected bargaining representative, the Federación de Maestros de Puerto Rico (FMPR). Now they have successfully excluded FMPR from competing in the ongoing elections for representation.

The teachers’ only choice is to vote yes or no to SEIU. We say vote NO! An election with only one slate is a SHAM! Andy Stern and Dennis Rivera have turned on a sister union and its members. They see Puerto Rico as a gateway to their absorption of trade unions in Latin America.

SEIU’s members did not direct this decision that insults their proud history of fighting for justice and dignity. We condemn the anti-worker and colonial-expansionist actions of SEIU’s leadership and reaffirm our solidarity with FMPR and those who defend democratic trade unions! We appeal to our brothers and sisters in SEIU – tell Stern and Rivera: Stop the raid!

An election to choose a union to represent the 42,000 teachers of Puerto Rico is taking place from October 1-22 — but there is only one option on the ballot: SEIU’s Puerto Rican affiliate, the Sindicato Puertorriqueño de Maestros (SPM). The organization that has represented teachers for over 40 years, the Federación de Maestros de Puerto Rico (FMPR), Puerto Rico’s largest union, has been excluded from the election. Teachers can choose SPM or no union. This is a sham election which offers teachers no real choice.

THE TRUTH ABOUT SPM & SEIU: SPM was created two years ago by the Asociación de Maestros, an organization which represents school principals and administrators, to serve as a management-friendly union. The SPM/Asociación affiliated with SEIU in December 2007. It is well-known on the island that the Asociación serves as the voice of the ruling Partido Popular Democrático (PPD) in the Department of Education, the teachers’ employer. Thus the teachers of Puerto Rico have been offered a choice in this election between a union handpicked by their bosses which serves the interests of their bosses!— or no union at all.

THE TRUTH ABOUT GOV. ANIBAL ACEVEDO VILA & DENNIS RIVERA: Dennis Rivera, Vice President of SEIU, is a key supporter and campaign contributor to PPD Governor Anibal Acevedo Vilá—who was instrumental in excluding FMPR from competing in the current election. The two met frequently in 2007, amidst tumultuous negotiations between FMPR and the government. According to the NY Daily News, Acevedo Vilá promised support for an SEIU raid against FMPR. Meanwhile, FMPR was negotiating to improve teachers’ abysmal salaries and working conditions, address serious deficiencies in the school system and to thwart off privatization of education and militarization of the schools. SEIU’s leadership should have supported this important labor struggle.

Oct. 14 ‘08 Protest at SEIU Leaders Offices (NYC).  Over 30 people denounced SEIU’s unionbusting campaign against the Puerto Rico Teachers’ Federation (FMPR) which has been a strong democratic union for quality education & worker rights on the island nation.

Oct. 14 ‘08 Protest at SEIU Leaders Offices (NYC).  Over 30 people denounced SEIU’s unionbusting campaign against the Puerto Rico Teachers’ Federation (FMPR) which has been a strong democratic union for quality education & worker rights on the island nation.