Industrial Worker - Issue #1748, September 2012

Headlines:

  • Work People's College: Reviving An Old Tradition Of Educating IWW Agitators
  • Milwaukee Pizza Factory Workers Strike
  • Prisoners Stage Hunger Strike In North Carolina

Features:

  • Work People's College: Reviving An Old Tradition Of Educating IWW Agitators
  • Self-Employment, Or The Illusion Of Freedom
  • International Solidarity: Spotlight On Africa

Download a free PDF of this issue.

Industrial Worker - Issue #1747, July/August 2012

Headlines:

  • Snapshots Of The Student Movement In Montréal
  • Wobblies Support Fired IWW Jimmy John’s Worker In Florida
  • Workers Strike At French Telecommunications Subcontractor In Casablanca

Features:

  • Workers' Power: The Wages System
  • Organizing In The Nonprofit Industrial Complex
  • A Wobbly Report From Greece

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"We Are the Working Class" : Call For Art Submissions

Imagery of the working class has long been monopolized by drawings of white, muscle-bound men swinging hammers, but the truth is that the majority of the working class has never been made up of white men. If we seek to create a movemet that captures the whole working class, the imagery that we choose should also reflect the whole of the working class.

 Toward Gender Equality (TGE), a committee of the Portland IWW General Membership Branch is putting a call out for submissions for an art showing entitled, "We Are The Working Class." We hope to put together a collection of photos, posters and drawings that truly grasps the diversity of workers (and the work we do) that the working class is made up of. 

 Origninal Wobbly art would be of preference, but we won't be shy if it's from Wobbly supporters. We hope to have this exhibit up in time for the General Convention, and so are asking for submissions no later than August 20, 2012.

 Email: Turniptheheat@gmail.com

Snail Mail:Portland IWW, C/O TGE, 2249 E Burnside St.Portland, OR 97214

 

IWW General Convention Approaches!

Fellow Workers!

The annual IWW General Convention is a little more than 2 weeks away!  This annual event, set to take place this year in Portland, Oregon, Sept. 1-2, is an exciting opportunity to learn more about the structure of the union, ask questions of our administration, and meet fellow workers from all around the world.  

Voting rights at General Convention are restricted to elected branch delegates, but as an IWW member you can still attend and have voice in the sessions.  To do so, you need to register right away at our website: gencon.iww.org.  If you were already planning on attending, and/or you are an elected branch delegate to the GC, please register right now!

Trailer Park Evicted to Make Room for Fracking

The following campaign involved members of the IWW and Earth First!

By Xian Chiang-Waren - Mother Jones June 22, 2012

When the 32 families of the Riverdale Mobile Home Park in Jersey Shore, Pennsylvania, found out that they were losing their homes to the state's latest fracking operation, the news didn't come from their landlord, or an eviction notice in the mail—they read about it in their morning paper.

The February 18 article, published in the Williamsport Sun-Gazette, nonchalantly detailed the approval of three natural gas projects in Lycoming County, PA, including a water withdrawal station that would pipe millions of gallons of water from the Susquehanna River to fracking stations in the mountains further north. The article noted that an "added benefit" of the plans was "the removal of mobile homes," which were located in a potential flood plain.

Later that afternoon, Riverdale's landlord came by and confirmed what residents had already read in the paper: The property had been sold to Aqua America, a water company dedicated to fracking. The full magnitude of the blow came days later, when the eviction notices arrived, informing the residents that they had until May 1 to relocate so that work on the site could begin in June. Each family was offered $2,500 if they got off the property by April 1; $1,500 if they moved by May 1; and zero compensation after that. It wasn't nearly enough; lawyers for Riverdale residents later estimated that the cost of moving each trailer was, on average, between $8,000 to $10,000.

For communities on the Rust Belt, it's one of the oldest stories in the book: A new industry comes in and needs to build roadways or pipelines, and poor communities have to get out of its way. "This happens all the time in Pennsylvania," said Alex Lotorto, a Pennsylvania activist and delegate for the union group Industrial Workers of the World. "Industry comes in and uses our skilled labor. Then both government and industry end up abusing us because honestly, nobody even thinks about the people north of I-80."

But in Riverdale, something unexpected happened: People decided they weren't going to go quietly.