NEW
HAVEN—Chanting and holding black and white signs reading “We
Can't Keep Up,” and
“One
Job Should be Enough,” 2,000 members of UNITE HERE Locals 35, 34,
and 33, New Haven Rising, and union and community allies marched to
the Yale School of Medicine on Cedar Street.
The
extraordinary solidarity set a tone of fight back in the midst of a
vicious attack on labor underway from the White House and MAGA.
After
meeting up on the New Haven Green in a spirited gathering filled with
music, t-shirts and solidarity, the diverse marchers called on Yale
University to pay good wages and contribute to New Haven,
highlighting how Yale workers and New Haven residents are struggling
in the post-pandemic cost of living crisis.
Contract
negotiations are currently underway between UNITE HERE Locals 34 and
35 and Yale. Rally attendees called on the university to settle good
contracts and contribute more to New Haven looking ahead to next year
when its current voluntary contribution agreement in lieu of taxes
expires.
“We
fought for a long time to make our jobs good jobs,” said Lisa
Stevens, President of Local 34-UNITE HERE. “But what was enough
before is not enough anymore. Since the pandemic, the skyrocketing
cost of living has caused our members to lose their housing, fall
into debt, and even cut back on heat and food,” she said noting
“Yale has a $40 billion endowment, and its workers are going to
food pantries.”
The
rally which packed Cedar Street put up a great cheer when the
graduate teachers in Local 33 who won their first contract last year
made the dramatic announcement that a majority of post-docs, have now
signed union cards, which would add 1400 more union members on
campus..
Bob
Proto, President of Local 35-UNITE HERE said “Our members are
committed to settling a fair contract, supporting post-docs as they
form their union, and standing with New Haven urging Yale to pay
their fair share.”
Getting
a union job at Yale changed my life said Elidia Lezama, a member of
Local 35-UNITE HERE service and maintenance workers. “Before I got
a job at Yale, I worked multiple jobs and couldn’t count on regular
hours. I had to figure out how to survive through pay periods where I
made as little as $25 per week and in other weeks, I had to work so
much that I was hardly able to see my kids.”
“Now,”
she said, “since the pandemic, many of my co-workers are back to
working multiple jobs and struggling to get by.”
Raven
Turquoise-Moon, a longtime member of clerical and technical workers
Local 34-UNITE HERE said “I have an education, a job at the city’s
largest employer, and yet buying a home in my neighborhood is out of
reach.”
“I’m
not alone.” she said. “Our members are getting priced out of New
Haven because their rents have gone up by $300, $500, $800 dollars –
and our wages haven’t caught up. I should be able to continue to do
the work that I have done for 19 years to uphold Yale’s mission, a
mission that I believe in, and buy a home here.”
Days
before, a large picket of food service workers at Southern
Connecticut State University, members of UNITE HERE Local 217 called
on the subcontractor Sodexo to settle the contract they are
neogiating. The night before marching from the Green to Cedar
Street, the workers voted 98% in favor of going on strike if they
have to.
Nick
McDonald, Vice President of Local 217 and a food service worker at
SCSU exclaimed “We, the Local 217 members who work at SCSU, CCSU
and WCSU, are in the struggle just like our brothers and sisters at
Yale. We aren’t going to give up until we get what we need.”
“We
don’t want to escalate but we are sending a clear message to Sodexo
and the Connecticut state universities: if we don’t get it, shut it
down.” he concluded as the rally chanted with him.
The
large crowd was inspired by Brandon Daley, a junior at Metropolitan
Business Academy, who declared that youth are organizing in New
Haven: “We’re fighting for all of us. For classrooms with the
resources we deserve. For jobs that let our families thrive, not just
survive. For a city where no student has to live in fear. For a
future where young people have the opportunities to lead and
succeed.”
The students are
supporting their teachers who were in the crowd as the New Haven
Federation of Teachers organizes to win it's new contract with the
Board of Education. Last year students walked out in support of
fully funded schools.
Tonya
Ricks, a member of Local 34- UNITE HERE, summed it all up when she
said, “I stand before you to let you know: my salary is not keeping
up! The price of everything is going up but my check is not making
ends meet. We need better pay and we need more union members!”