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DESCRIPTION:HOW SOLIDARITY CAN WIN\n\nCome hear four of the victorious Boston School 
 Bus Drivers talk about their fighting strategies, as part of their west 
 coast tour!\n\nFriday, July 22, 6:00 pm\n\nATU Local 1555, 132 9th St, 
 Oakland\nAcross from Lake Merritt 
 BART\nhttps://www.facebook.com/events/1759901497614669/\n\nAfter more than 
 two years of hard-fought struggle, last year the militant, fighting rank 
 and file of the Boston School Bus Drivers Union — ¬United Steelworkers 
 Local 8751 — won a historic victory against global giant Veolia/Transdev, 
 one of the most notorious union busters, as well as Boston Public School 
 bosses and Mayor -Marty Walsh.\n\nFour fired union leaders, out of work 
 since October 2013 on bogus charges of leading a wildcat strike, went back 
 to work on Dec. 23, 2015. In addition to rein¬statement of the four with 
 full senior¬ity rights and a substantial monetary payment, the local won a 
 contract with economic justice and the protection of 40 years of the 
 collective bargaining process.\n\nSolidarity is key to the Boston school 
 bus drivers’ success. “Team Solidarity” has been building power among 
 the working class through a 40+ year commitment to militant unionism, 
 racial justice, disability justice, LGBT*Q rights,  and anti-imperialist 
 struggle including solidarity with Palestine.\n\nVeolia has been in the 
 business of union busting for centuries. How did the Boston school bus 
 drivers prevail?\n\nA commitment to racial justice: USW 8751 is a rank and 
 file union with roots in the anti-racist struggles of the 1970s and the 
 desegregation of Boston schools in 1974. Today the union is 98% people of 
 color, mostly Haitian and Cape Verdean immigrants and African American, 
 Latin@ and Asian. Members, including President Andre Francois, are active 
 in the Black Lives Matter movement and the Haitian liberation party, Fanmi 
 Lavalas of Boston.\n\nA commitment to anti-imperialist struggle: USW 8751 
 sent money to support the ANC in South Africa fighting apartheid. The union 
 consistently stands in solidarity with our Palestinian trade union brothers 
 and sisters, marching in the streets to stop Israeli assaults, free 
 political prisoners, and put an end to apartheid and colonization.\n\nA 
 commitment to LGBT*Q rights: The very first contract of USW 8751 in 1977 
 had domestic partner benefits of drivers in a “marital-like 
 relationship”. The contract extended medical insurance, life insurance 
 and all other benefits to partners. This past year USW 8751 invited 
 national trans* justice organizers to write the language around trans* 
 inclusion and LGBT*Q rights which now appears in the new contract.\n\nA 
 commitment to disability justice: The union since its formation has worked 
 in alliance with disabled folks under the leadership of the Disabled 
 People’s Liberation Front. The union has worked with disabled activists 
 to serve the disabled student population in Boston and in the broader 
 disability rights movement marching for full accessibility and to defend 
 gains they’ve been a part of winning, including full-service on the MBTA, 
 and other state programs. USW 8751 has been a part of the campaign against 
 so-called “sheltered workshops”, which exploit the labor of disabled 
 people.\n\nA commitment to local community in struggle: USW 8751 
 consistently stands and puts bodies on the line with those who are 
 struggling in the community — with other workers, students, parents, 
 teachers, indigenous communities, communities being gentrified, disabled 
 folks, LGBT*Q, immigrants, all who are oppressed. \n\nJoin the movement to 
 fight corporate power and 
 imperialism!\n\nhttps://www.facebook.com/events/1573335282960281\n\nUSW 
 8751 Tour DELEGATE BIOS\n\nGeorgia Scott is the first African American 
 woman treasurer of the union. She was first a bus monitor and then a bus 
 driver for 20 years. In 1965, when Scott was only nine years old, she 
 participated in the historic “Bloody Sunday” march for voting rights 
 over the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, where she was 
 born.\n\nNora Braggs was born in Mobile, Alabama. She was a school bus 
 monitor for 10 years, and like Georgia, was able to become a bus driver 
 because of USW local 8751’s extraordinary contract language providing 
 special priority upgrade training and “absolute preference in hiring”. 
 The local fought for and won this language early in contract negotiations, 
 as a remedy for the company’s past history of racism and sexism. Nora is 
 a shop steward and leader in many of the contract committees and is a lead 
 organizer of Team Solidarity. Nora is very active in organizing her 
 community thru her church.\n\nStevan Kirschbaum is a 42-year veteran 
 driver, founding organizer and Vice President of USW 8751. He’s one of 
 the four union leaders who were illegally fired by Veolia in November 2013. 
 All four were voted into leadership again in April 2015, despite 
 Veolia/Transdev attempts to divide the union. In March 2015, Stevan 
 successfully defeated Veolia’s anti-union felony frame-up charges against 
 him.\n\nClaude J St Germain, “Tou Tou”: Under the leadership of this 
 Team Solidarity leader, local recording secretary and Boston Fanmi Lavalas 
 leader, the leadership has initiated an extremely popular and exciting 
 “stewards school” held in the bus yards, with the stated purpose of 
 training an army of new Team Solidarity leaders and sharpening the skills 
 of the veteran leaders. The sessions also raise political campaigns, 
 concrete solidarity with the Verizon Strike and present lessons from Local 
 8751’s 40+ year history.\n\nHannah Kirschbaum has been a member of Team 
 Solidarity since its inception and has been an active supporter of the 
 Boston School Bus Union for many years. She assists in organizing, and 
 participates in, rallies, picket lines, and “pack the court” actions. 
 She helps to chronicle USW Local 8751’s struggles by contributing 
 articles and photos to Workers World newspaper, http://www.workers.org/ . 
 She is currently in her final year of study at Suffolk University Law 
 School, concentrating in Labor Law.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2016/07/13/18789088.php
SUMMARY:How Solidarity Can Win
LOCATION:ATU Local 1555, 132 9th Street, Oakland - across from Lake Merritt BART
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2016/07/13/18789088.php
DTSTART:20160723T010000Z
DTEND:20160723T030000Z
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