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Union Busting! By CALPIRG!

by Tamara Rettino (Nimmue [at] earthlink.net)
The Fund for Public Interest, one of the nations largest non profits, has attempted to silence it's workers for organizing a union.
Union Busting. It’s the kind of thing we’ve come to expect from big business, but what if it’s happening in one of the largest progressive non profit groups in the country? The Fund for Public Interest (the parent organization for the state PIRG’s) claims to be an environmental and consumer watchdog organization. The Fund runs a fundraising canvass for groups such as Sierra Club, Greenpeace, and Human Rights Campaign. But the rights of their own workers are being held in total disregard. Canvassers work long hours; some put in a 12 hour day with little pay. Many (all staff in the L.A. Greenpeace office were promised health coverage) are being denied the benefits packages they are promised in their hiring contracts. In the Fund run Greenpeace office reimbursements for work related expenses, such as office supplies, often go unpaid. New employees nation wide are being paid approximately half of what original staff is (or was) making for performing the same job.
On Wednesday, January 23rd employees and directors of the L.A. Greenpeace Project office arrived to find the locks changed, the office cleaned out, and a sign on the door proclaiming the office closed. Office director Dan Binaei was fired without warning the evening prior, and assistant director Brande Jackson was terminated over her voice mail on the morning of the 23rd. All Greenpeace Project employees were informed that they would be receiving a two-week severance pay, or have the option to do a different job, with different hours, in a different city, with different pay, for a different organization.
The Los Angeles Greenpeace Fundraising office was among the highest grossing, and most efficient PIRG offices in the country. Both Binaei and Jackson had received high-ranking reviews and praise by both superiors and staff. There can only be one reason assumed for the overnight disappearance of the Los Angeles Greenpeace office…a union was being formed.
As conscientious directors, Dan Binaei and Brande Jackson spent months using established channels to obtain reimbursements, health coverage, and equal pay for their staff. All attempts ended in bureaucratic runaround. After much deliberation, the L.A. Greenpeace directing team filed a complaint with the labor board. The Regional and National Canvass Director’s were informed by email that a complaint had been filed and a union was being organized. One week later the office was closed.
On the 23rd 13 employees of the LA Greenpeace Project entered the still operating Fund for Public Interest/CALPIRG office on Wilshire Blvd. demanding to know why their exemplary office had disappeared, and why their directors had been terminated. Regional Director Ben Flamm stated that he could not release that information because of a confidentiality policy. Dan Binaei and Brande Jackson were both present, and adamantly waived their rights to confidentiality. When pressed Mr. Flamm’s only explanation was, "Because you have no trust in the Fund, you can no longer be trusted."
This behavior is frightening. By completely eliminating the office, the Fund appears to be attempting to smash all organizing attempts and attitudes of dissent. Not only is union busting illegal, it is morally reprehensible coming from an organization that claims to be working for human rights.
There should be no division between environmental, labor, and human rights movements. If we are to be effective in our fight against injustice, non-profits must not adopt the oppressive tactics of the very corporations we are struggling against.
Please voice your solidarity with the workers of the Los Angeles Greenpeace/CALPIRG Fundraising project. Call the PIRG administration offices at 617-292-4805 and complain loudly!
by Gregory Baker
CALPIRG and Greenpeace are both well-known for mistreating their canvassers. Greenpeace USA fired their entire New York canvass a few years back for union organizing.
What hypocracy that these supposed "progressive" groups would display such a ruthless hand towards young, eager employees. Union organizing was the backbone of the progressive movement in this country, from Mother Jones to the present. How ironic that American corporations would treat employees far better than the organizations who oppose Corporate America. Is it any wonder that we've really achieved nothing in the way of reform in the last decade?
by kronstadt
....when i was a college student in Massachusetts fifteen years ago, working for PIRG, Citizen Action, this type of behavior by "public interest" groups was common.

If you want to get exploited, work for a liberal group. The next time you read in The Nation about all the great grass roots lobbying by some citizen action group, keep in mind that it was probably by some underpaid college students who did all the organizing only to have the "leadership" sell them out to Democratic legislators.

Connecticut, where I used to live, is even worse. There's a group called LEAP that's got the national left press snowed about what a great leftist coalition it is; and it's really just an personality cult built around a couple pseudo-leftist politicians. Then there's 1199, the CT hospital workers' union, whose Communist poltical director used every Stalinist trick in the book to break an attempt at staff organizing some some years back.

The leadership of most of the progressive, citizen action political organizations are among the most corrupt political actors around. They should do us all a favor and blow their own fucking brains out.
by Free Radical (radical [at] easy.com)
Hi, I understand the apparent contradictions involved in employees of progressive organizations apparently being treated unfairly. Where it happens it is wrong, and the people involved should be fired. But, the point of the labor movement is to organize a voice for workers to enable a fair negotiation of terms of co-operation between workers and those who make a profit from their work. In the case of non-profits this is precisely no one. I suspect that some of those who criticise FFPIR, etc. are actually opposed to their political aims and would accuse them of being liberal reformists (with both "liberal" and "reformist" being intended as insults). I'm afraid this may include former employees who attempt to misplace the responsibility for administrative confusion.
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