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New York transit workers set up picket lines: Todays
strike is for all working people
By a WSWS reporting team
21 December 2005
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Tens of thousands of New York City transit workers walked off
the job Tuesday morning and set up picket lines at bus barns and
train yards scattered throughout the city, shutting down operations
that move some seven million passengers daily, the largest mass
transit system in the US.
The strike, the first on the citys
subways and buses in 25 years, drew strong support not only from
transit workers, but from working people throughout the city.
The widespread backing for the strikers was in the teeth of a
media barrage blaming the strikers, rather than the Metropolitan
Transportation Authority (MTA) and Mayor Michael Bloomberg, for
the massive disruption to the citys economic life. The city
administration has estimated that losses from the walkout will
total as much as $400 million a day.
Both the administration of Bloomberg, a billionaire Republican,
and the mass media have sought to portray the strikers as greedy,
contrasting their salaries to those of the many impoverished New
Yorkers who earn little more than the minimum wage. But many of
these low-paid workers welcome the transit strike as a blow against
the wealthy elite who dominate the city.
At sites in Brooklyn, Manhattan, the Bronx and Queens picketers
chanted, What do you want?... Respect! and No
Contract... No work! Among the strikers were immigrant workers
drawn from virtually every part of the globe, including South
Asia, East Asia, Latin America and the former Soviet Union. Workers
marched in circles in the bitterly cold weather, with only the
fires in oil barrels to warm them.
Massive traffic jams developed on every major artery leading
into the city, demonstrating the indispensability of the transit
workers. At many picket lines, passing motorists trying to find
a way into the city honked their horns in support, drawing cheers
from the strikers.
Reporters from the World Socialist Web Site spoke to
workers on picket lines in Brooklyn, Manhattan and Queens.
The offer that they made
was unacceptable, said Karl Boyer, a Queens bus driver with
17 years on the job. You cant even survive on what
they are paying us now.
Like many of the workers on the picket line outside the Corona,
Queens bus barn, opposite Shea Stadium, he complained bitterly
of managements disciplinary abuse of employees and the continuous
drive to boost productivity.
A lot of the time, there are no bathrooms for bus drivers,
and when there are, they dont give you any time to use them,
he said. Youve got a lot of people walking around
with prostate and kidney problems because of this job. They treat
us like were machines.
Were professionals, and we deserve respect. We
are responsible for the people we carry and we get to work on
time and get them to work on time. If were one minute late
they send us home. The schedules, particularly for the younger
workers, dont even let you see your family. Half the guys
out here have been married two or three times because of the stress
this job places on marriages.
They say that were holding the city hostage, but
were the ones who are the hostages under the Taylor Law.
They sent three letters to my home threatening that if I struck
I would be fined $25,000 and two days pay for every day
on the picket line.
We are just working people out here. We have families,
and the economy has been going up like crazy, while they keep
our salaries the same. They have given us no choice but to strike.
Every agency, it seems, is out to destroy this union. Were
going to have to hold out as long as it takes.
Arthur Somersall, also a Queens bus driver, was hired by the
MTA in 1981, just after the last strike 25 years ago. In
the 24 years that I have been here, things have gotten a lot worse,
he said. They are always trying to squeeze more work out
of you. Now they have loop runs instead of one point to another,
so you cant get off the bus even to go to the bathroom.
They are also constantly looking to discipline people.
If you write up three buses in a month for mechanical problems,
they call you in to be questioned.
When I started on the job, the guys who had struck were
hurting because of the fines. Now they want to fine us two days
pay for every day out. But we cant live with what they are
giving us. The cost of living is rising and now they want to make
us do co-pays for health care on top of everything else.
Paul Moreau, who has 17 years driving a bus in Queens, told
the WSWS, We have bit the bullet too many times. We have
had the Taylor Law hanging over our heads for so long, but this
time they forced it on us.
The thing that none of us could accept is the change
in pension to make you work until youre 62. As hard as this
job is, youre lucky to make it to 62. Five years after they
retire, half the people have passed away. A lot of them are dying
on the job. I have been to so many funerals for my co-workers
that I have gotten tired of going.
They are always asking and asking us for things, but
when it comes to the 62 years pensionoh, no. We have got
to take a stand and fight for what we need.
When I hear Bloomberg and Kalikow talking about how we
are selfish, it makes me so angry. Were just asking for
a salary that we can live on, something that neither of them could
understand. Theyre billionaires, but what is it they get
paid for? They just take in the revenues, while were the
ones doing the work.
You hear the media talking about the $63,000 bus driver,
but I never see that money. By the time they take out taxes, Medicare,
pension and everything else, you end up with about $10 an hour.
They call us militants, but as far as I can see theyre
the militant ones. They want to be dictators, and when you dictate
to people, this is what happens.
Its like they spit
in our face, said Joe Townsend, a train operator on the
East Side of Manhattan with four years at the MTA. They
say, Look, weve got a billion dollar surplus, but
screw you, youre not getting any of it.
Usually, they wait until after theyve negotiated
the contract and pled poverty to reveal that they have found
a few extra hundred million, and its barely reported by
the media. This time, they got caught because the government has
been investigating the use of the money.
Weve been pushed into this, but we had to fight.
Every other worker in the city is going to face the same thing
if we go down. Theyll screw everybody.
They talk about us making so much money, but the real
poverty line in New York for a family of four is about $57,000.
If youre the only one working, like in my family, its
not easy. This strike, coming in the middle of the holidays, is
stressful. Then on top of that to be threatening fines and penalties.
Where is the money going to come from?
At the Coney Island Yard in Brooklyn, Jasper, a conductor with
23 years on the job, said, I think this strike is for the
entire working class against the attacks against us. They are
trying to destroy all the good paying jobs. We need dignity, benefits
and all the things that we have accomplished through decades of
struggle by our parents and grandparents.
Todays strike is for all working people who are
overlooked and treated with disrespect. We have to stop them from
turning the clock back against us. This is not just a struggle
for transit workers, but for all workers. Before I came here,
I was in trucking and involved in a number of other strikes. The
work we do makes this economy and makes it possible for the wealthy
to obtain the riches they possess. So of course, the corporations
that make such big profits use the media against us by trying
to divide us and weaken us. They want to rob us, and stop us from
having a decent income.
Vincent Masci, a structure maintainer for the past 17 years,
said, I am against what I call the neo-Nazi neocons who
are running this government. We are in this predicament because
they are trying to keep workers down. They are attempting to increase
the size of their wallets by reducing ours.
They are making money and we are not. The people who
are condemning us are the people who are making billions like
Bloomberg. They make their wealth by keeping working people down.
I am a structure maintainer and we mostly are concerned with keeping
the transit system safe. We want to make sure people dont
fall and break their necks on the infrastructure.
I am strongly against the Iraqi war. I wrote a letter
to Hillary Clinton and she wrote back to tell me why she supports
the war. We should never have been there. Its a waste of
human life for both the Iraqis and our troops. It is genocide.
The Democratic Party is not with us anymore. They have
become more conservative, more representative of the wealthy against
the working man.
See Also:
New York City transit workers defy threats
and strike
[20 December 2005]
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