Chicagoland was well represented on Friday’s opening night session. Uylonda Dickerson of Warehouse Workers for Justice(WWJ) opened the conference on Friday night with an impassioned welcome speech. Warehouse Workers for Justice is centered in Joliet IL. The big box stores like Target and Walmart rely on these workers to route shipments across the USA, but reward them with poverty wages, unsafe working conditions and sexual harassment from the labor contractors they hide behind. WWJ has challenged their practices with rallies, one-to-one organizing and court actions. Groups in California and New Jersey are doing similar work.



Warehouse Workers for Justice of IL, Warehouse Workers United of CA and New Labor of NJ receive an award for taking on the big shippers and the big box stores.

Warehouse Workers for Justice of IL, Warehouse Workers United of CA and New Labor of NJ receive an award for taking on the big shippers and the big box stores.

Alfredo Galdenez of the Restaurant Opportunities Center-Chicago (ROC-Chicago) also spoke Friday evening. ROC is confronting mega-resturant chains like Darden which owns and operates approximately nearly 2000 restaurants worldwide; including Capital Grille, Red Lobster, Olive Garden, and Longhorn Steakhouse. ROC is suing Darden based on allegations of racial discrimination, wage theft, and creating a hostile work environment. Both WWJ and ROC have gone to court on behalf of workers, but also partner with community groups to publicize the cause of worker justice.

Partnering with community groups was also the theme of the workshop on how transit workers and transit riders are creating alliances to save and improve public transit. Transit workers from Louisiana, Massachusetts, Florida and New York talked about the successful coalitions they have built with community groups. Both the Amalgamated Transit Workers(ATU) and the Transport Workers Union(TWU) were present.



Jackie Jeter President of ATU Local 689 of Washington DC.

My brother Craig, a retired bus operator, worked closely with her as legislative liaison. Jackie Jeter President of ATU Local 689 of Washington DC.My brother Craig, a retired bus operator, worked closely with her as legislative liaison.

Chicago bus and train operators listened to their stories and discussed Rahm Emanuel (aka “Mayor 1%”) and his recent efforts toward privatization of public services, including transit. The bus operators represented by Chicago’s Amalgamated Transit Union 241 were especially concerned. They are in a local which is under trusteeship because of poor financial management by the previous union leadership. They reported confusion and demoralization among Local 241 members which make it difficult to create and maintain strong ties with riders and community groups.

That afternoon, Jesse Sharkey, vice-president of the Chicago Teachers Union Local 1 took the microphone in a workshop so packed that hotel staff had to bring extra chairs into the meeting. Sharkey is part of CORE (Coalition of Rank-and-File Educators) which swept into union office dedicated to union reform and grassroots activism with parent and community groups. Sharkey spoke of the immense challenges ahead as Mayor Emanuel (whose name elicited a chorus of boos) continues his union bashing and privatization efforts. Union activists from LA, NYC and other cities were clearly looking to Chicago as Ground Zero in the fight to defend teachers and public education.



The Chicago Teachers Union information table was a busy location The Chicago Teachers Union information table was a busy location

Occupy Wall Street got glowing endorsements in both speeches and informal discussions. You could see the influence everywhere from the transit workers’ orange “Occupy Transit” t-shirts to the many references to the 1% and the 99%. In fact the official theme of the conference was “Solidarity for the 99%.” Occupy Chicago was represented by Jan Rudolfo of National Nurses United and Andy Manos. At a labor education workshop, Steve Ashby of Occupy Chicago’s Labor Outreach spoke of the cordial relationship between Occupy Chicago and labor that helped create a number of solidarity actions including a march of thousands against the Mortgage Bankers Association who met at the Art Institute last fall.

Overall there was a spirit of optimism throughout the conference, but no one was underestimating the challenges ahead. The wave of legislation against public employees led to huge demonstrations in Wisconsin, Indiana and Ohio, but they have also resulted in layoffs and a full frontal attack on the very existence of unions. Private sector workers like Longview Washington’s longshore workers from Local 21 of the IWLU who sat down in front of trains to protest job losses and Verizon CWA and IBEW employees who hit the picket lines last summer were defending not just themselves, but workers everywhere who want to end the “race to the bottom” that the dominates the global economy today.

Troublemakers know how to party and laugh too. There was music and dancing to the sounds of Mwelwa and Quinto Imperio Rebel Diaz delivered some scorching political hiphop. Anne Feeney and Elise Bryant led the acoustic music crowd in two song sharing sessions. There was even a special workshop on making labor mischief to spark organizing with humor, skits and songwriting.

You can be sure that the 1500 “troublemakers” who met in Rosemont IL will be in the front lines of resistance. During the Saturday noon break, hundreds of Labor Notes conferees skipped lunch to march over to the nearby Hyatt Hotel to support the hospitality workers who are confronting the powerful Pritzker family(owners of the Hyatt chain. The Pritzker family is hellbent on turning hospitality work into a hellish nightmare of injuries and rock bottom wages. Did I mention that the Pritzkers are close allies of both Mayor Emanuel and President Obama?

The mid-day Hyatt protest near the Labor Notes conference The mid-day Hyatt protest near the Labor Notes conference

But of course Labor Notes readers are not really the “troublemakers.” That role falls to powerful global corporations and their hired politicians like Wisconsin’s Scott Walker(Republican) and Chicago’s Rahm Emanuel(Democrat). Labor Notes is really a journal for "The Troubleshooters", the first responders who will take on the toughest labor conflicts. They thrive on difficulty and meet obstacles with creativity and courage. In today’s ongoing class war, they carry on the tradition that was expressed in the most desperate days of World War II,”The difficult we do right now; the impossible will take a little longer.”