Celebrating Women’s Right To Vote

Celebrating Women’s Right To Vote

Celebrating 100 Years of Women’s Suffrage

100 Years ago, women first won the right to vote. While we’ve come a long way in our ongoing work to create a more perfect union, our work is far from finished. Good news is, we’re nowhere near finished, either. 

When the Machinists Union was founded in 1888 and for years after, there were no women in that Atlanta railroad pit, brainstorming about how to get better wages and working conditions. but that doesn’t mean they didn’t want­­ those things. “They wanted the freedom to decide how to live their lives, whether that was homemakers or workers or advocates or all three,” said Carla Siegel, IAM Deputy General Counsel. “They wanted the freedom to be able to have a voice in the policies that affected their families, that affected their schools, that affected their communities and their coworkers.”

In the 19th and 20th centuries, women were often treated as second class citizens, regardless of their skills. yet, they fought for the right to vote, just like men did in local, state and national elections. “They engaged in nonviolent protest, which was nonetheless illegal and they paid the price for that,” said Mary McHugh of the William W. Winpisinger Education and Technology Center. “They went to jail, they faced physical dangers, in order to put public pressure on elected officials to move women’s suffrage forward as a constitutional issue.”

Deputy General Counsel Carla Siegel says technically, the constitution didn’t actually prohibit women from voting. “It doesn’t refer to gender at all and some states allowed it, but because there were strong forces that were prohibiting women to vote in certain states, there was the push for the 19thAmendment to make it clear that of course, women had the right to vote.”

One hundred years later, women of all races, ethnicities and identities are exercising the rights to vote, despite the fact that many were initially excluded from white women’s suffrage efforts in the early 1900s. “African American women, Native American women had to continue to fight to really be able to realize a right to vote what the constitution said and what the reality was, were not the same things,” McHugh said.

In 2020, women of color are finally getting the recognition they deserve… women like Mabel Ping-Hua Lee, 16, who led ten thousand people in the New York suffrage parade in 1912, or Ida B. Wells, who created the Alpha suffrage club in 1913. “It’s a huge accomplishment,” said Vivianne Simon of IAM Local 1295 in Toronto, Canada. “We need to get more people involved just to show the solidarity for women and to be there for those who basically died for us, to acknowledge them and to show them respect by all coming together to bring it higher. Raise the bar.”

Although Simon lives in Canada, which gave women the right to vote two years before the United States, she and other IAM members understand the significance of the anniversary and the parallel it has to voting in union elections. “Well, I love that we’re celebrating a hundred years and I’ll say a hundred years of success because that’s what women’s suffrage was all about, gaining these types of rights,” said Kimberly Fedd of IAM Local 774 in Wichita, Kan. “This year in particular is a big year for our local and our district. Elections are coming up… that right was fought for and it’s a big deal.”

Women have made great strides in the workforce, even though all of us still don’t have equal pay for equal work in the United States and Canada. But, we have a better chance if we’re in a union like the IAM. Nevertheless, having a right and using it are two different things. “If you’re visible, if you’re active, if you’re vocal through your vote, through attending meetings, through getting involved in the subcommittees that may exist in your local or in your district, that’s how we move forward our agenda as women and as women inside the labor movement,­” said Ines Garcia-Keim, President of the New Jersey State Council of Machinists.

It’s a movement that still needs to be held accountable when it comes to equal rights, gender equity and inclusion, on the shop floor and in the union hall. “Unions aren’t perfect. We have still have a lot of work to do,” said Dora Cervantes, IAM General Secretary-Treasurer. “But, the wage gap is smaller and almost non-existent in union shops. Having women move up the ranks ensures that equity remains a priority.”

 

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Video Report: Will Riley, Adoph Stutz Memorial Scholarship Winner

Video Report: Will Riley, Adoph Stutz Memorial Scholarship Winner

A Conversation With Will Riley, Scholarship Winner

A student at the University of Houston, he is the winner of $2,000 from the Adolph Stutz Memorial Scholarship

Hello Machinists & Aerospace Union Members!

I’m 22 years old and from Houston, Texas. I’ve lived in Texas all my life. I graduated from Kingwood High School in 2016. I graduated from UT Austin with my Bachelor’s degree in biomedical engineering this past May. Right now I’m attending the University of Houston for my Master’s degree in biomedical engineering. Though I did research for a year in undergrad, I start working in my professor’s lab for research later this month.

My mom’s name is Kim. She’s also from Houston and is a professional photographer like her dad. She originally got a job as a Reservations Agent at Continental Airlines in 2006 and started working for United Airlines after the merger in 2012. 

– Will Riley
Biomedical Engineering Masters Student

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District 141 Video Report With PHX Local President, Donald Carbonneau

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A Conversation With New President of Phoenix’s Local 2559, Don Carbonneau.

Brother Don Carbonneau talks about Sky Harbor Lodge and the job of being  a Local President during the pandemic.

Brother Don Started his airline career in 1996 at America West Airlines, where he accumulated 24 years of experience. He is now with American Airlines as a Fleet Service Employee.

When the workers at American West unionized with TWU in 2000, Don Volunteered as a Shop Steward in Phoenix to help serve the membership. From 2001-03, Don Served as TWU Grievance Chairperson in Phoenix.

In 2006, Don transferred with the recently merged US Airways to Boston where he served again as a Shop Steward. In 2011, he worked on the IAM Grievance Committee in Boston under Committee chair Steve Miller. Miller currently serves as Assistant General Chair for District 141. In 2015 Brother Don transferred with American Airlines to Charlotte, North Carolina, and then in 2016 transferred yet again, this time returning to Phoenix. Once back in his home city, Don served as IAM Shop Steward and a term on the Grievance Committee.

Brother Don then was elected just this year as President of his local in Phoenix, for a 3-year term which began January 1, 2020.

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Video Report: Machinists & Aerospace Union Legislative Action

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IAMAW District 141 Video Report: Legislative Action to Prevent Airline Furloughs

IAMAW District 141 Legislative Director David Roderick Discusses Legislative Efforts to Extend the CARES Act Furlough Protections

This week’s 141 report is about Legislative action and what members should do to protect transportation Jobs. IAM 141 Director of Legislation Dave Roderick joins the conversation with host Dave Lehive.

Airlines such as American and United have promised to furlough more than 60,000 airline jobs within hours of the expiration of the CARES Act on October 1. However, Congress can extend the provision of the CARES Act that prevents furloughs.

How You Can Help Save Hundreds of Thousands of Airline Jobs

In March, as U.S. COVID-19 cases began rising exponentially, Congress rose to the occasion by enacting the CARES Act to provide assistance to tens of millions of Americans who found their financial security, if not their health, directly imperiled by the pandemic.

Among other things, the CARES Act created the Payroll Support Program (PSP), under which the Treasury Secretary issued $32 billion in grants to airlines and their contractors exclusively to keep their workers on the payroll through September 30, 2020.

But while time marches on, so does the pandemic, Airline workers are facing the worst crisis by far in the industry’s history. Last Wednesday, a major airline put 36,000 workers across the country on notice that they could be furloughed on or after October 1. Other carriers have issued and will issue similar notices.

Please ask your member of Congress to join House Transportation and Infrastructure Chairman Peter DeFazio (D-OR) on a bipartisan letter to House and Senate Leadership, urging them to extend the PSP authorities in the CARES Act through March 31, 2021, and save hundreds of thousands of frontline airline workers’ jobs.

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Local Lodge 1759 Holding Town Halls on Furloughs

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Local Lodge 1759 (DC Area) Holds Town Halls to Discuss Furloughs

Capitol Air Lodge 1759 in Herndon, Virginia calls daily membership Q&A Sessions, 8-hours a day, for the next two weeks.

IAMAW Local 1759 President, Bill Huston discusses the extraordinary efforts that members are taking in the DC Area to prepare for the impact of furloughs, which are expected to hit about 36,000 United Airlines workers as soon as October 1. 

MNPL ALERT:
Congressional allies are working to build support for an effort to extend the Payroll Support Program. If successful, such an extension could prevent furloughs until March 2021. They are winning bipartisan support, but they need your help. Please contact your member of Congress and Senate and ask that they join the effort to save hundreds of thousands of airline jobs this fall.

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Video Report: A Conversation With Workers’ Compensation Attorney, Kathleen Grace Walsh

Video Report: A Conversation With Workers’ Compensation Attorney, Kathleen Grace Walsh

Attorney and Workers’ Rights Expert, Kathleen Grace Walsh

An Important Conversation about Workers’ Compensation 

Kathleen Grace Walsh is a Virginia attorney whose practice specialties encompass Virginia Workers’ Compensation and Social Security Disability. She is known and respected throughout the state’s legal community, and was recognized by her peers in 2019 and 2020 with a Super Lawyer designation and was selected a Leader in the Law for 2019. In addition, she is beloved by her clients for her empathy, her determination to help them, and her kindness. 

She attended The George Washington University in Washington, DC, (B.A. 1980), where courses in Political Science first sparked her interest in the law. Following graduation, Kathleen worked as a reporter from 1980 – 1983 for Commerce Clearing House, focusing on Consumer Product Protections and Food & Drug regulation. It was here that Kathleen honed her interest in protecting society’s workers, and those in need. 

In 1983, Kathleen entered The Columbia School of Law at Catholic University in Washington, DC (JD, 1986). Ms. Walsh opened her solo practice in 2000 in Occoquan, VA.  Her firm specializes in Workers’ Compensation. 

In 2015, Kathleen was accepted as a Fellow in the College of Workers’ Compensation Lawyers.  Her professional positions include the Virginia Workers’ Compensation Inn of Court, where she is Past President and continues to serve on the Executive Committee and the Virginia Workers’ Compensation Inn of Court Advisory Conference, where she is Chairperson (2019 – 2021).  

As an attorney who represents unionized workers, Kathleen annually trains the International Association of Machinists on Workers’ Compensation Law.

Virginia IAMAW Members may contact Kathleen and learn more about Workers’ Compensation at The Law Offices of Kathleen Grace Walsh. 

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