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WATCH THIS: Lai Yee Chan’s 24 Hour Shift

Do you think it’s right to force workers into arbitration? What about forcing workers to do overtime? Do you have ideas on how to promote the campaign or want to get involved?

You can:

  • Sign a petition to 1199SEIU here
  • Tweet the Ain’t I A Woman?! position paper on why we need to #Fightfor40 and #StopMandatoryOT to President Obama and any presidential candidate.
  • Get your organization to endorse the Ain’t I A Woman?! Campaign.
  • Contact the Ain’t I A Woman?! Campaign about how you are organizing in your community and/or invite Ain’t I A Woman?! to speak at your next event.

CPC forces home attendants to work 24 hours! Workers call on 1199 SEIU to stand with them, clean up their act!

Lai Yee Chan, a home attendant for Chinese-American Planning Council (CPC), helped her patients day and night for over 15 years. During the day, she bathed and fed her patients. At night, she helped them get out of bed and go to the bathroom or get a drink of water. She could not leave her patient for even a second of her 24-hour shift. One day her daughter was locked out of her house, but Lai Yee was not allowed to go downstairs to give her daughter the key. Adding insult to injury, Lai Yee has not seen a pay increase in 8 years, is not paid for the 12 hours of work at night, except for a small fee, and is never paid overtime. Ultimately, workers like Lai Yee are paid about $5/hour, way less than the minimum wage.

1Bwqt0JTnGY3GXzR7X9bsmi_eb7d1-d6YoS9zGMwIn November, 2014, Lai Yee received a check from NYS Department Labor of about $200 for the 6,000 hours of overtime she worked from 2007 to 2013. Lai Yee went to her union, 1199 SEIU, for help. Union reps refused to file a grievance, and lied, telling her CPC was not required to pay overtime because CPC is a non-profit. Lai Yee and a few other workers were frustrated and decided that they wanted to speak out against the wage theft and mandatory overtime. With the support of Chinese Staff & Workers’ Association, in March 2015 they filed a class action against CPC and organized over a hundred co-workers to join them. CPC argued that the case should be arbitrated, according to their contract with the Union, and asked the court to dismiss the case. But in September 2015, New York State Supreme Court Judge Carol Edmead rejected the employer’s argument, stating that the contract’s arbitration clause was not specific enough to prevent workers from proceeding in court. She also affirmed their right to pursue pay for all hours worked.

Immediately after, the union shamelessly entered into an agreement with the employer to amend the contract making arbitration mandatory for any wage claims and prohibiting workers from representing other workers or the class. The amendment deprived workers of their right to a fair day in court. The new contract also cut the wages for all 24-hour-shift workers, instead of giving them their wage increase that was long overdue.

The union’s legal staff claimed the new contract was not being used to stop workers from pursuing the lawsuit, yet other union reps pushed hard for ratification of the new contract. Lai Yee and her coworkers felt compelled to speak out against this corrupt deal. When they complained about the amended contract at the ratification meeting, union reps called them “troublemakers” and attacked the workers who filed the lawsuit.

We demand the union stand by the workers instead of standing with CPC! We urge 1199 SEIU President George Gresham to clean house and remove the mandatory arbitration requirement from the union contract!

Do you want to support the home attendants to get justice and fight against mandatory overtime? Here’s what you can do:

  1. Get your organization to join the Ain’t I a Woman Campaign by visiting https://aintiawoman.org/endorse/
  2. Send a letter urging 1199 SEIU President George Gresham to clean house: 1199 Healthcare Workers East, 310 W 43rd St, New York, NY 10036
  3. Sign the petition online
  4. Speak out against Mandatory Overtime and for the Right to a 40-Hour Week
  5. Get involved and plan your own activities! Contact the campaign with any ideas at aiwcampaign@gmail.com!

Workers Call on Albany Legislators to Make the Minimum Wage Increase Real for All Workers

“With Minimum Wage Passed, Advocates Look to Wage Theft Issue” – Albany Times Union

“Workers Press for Bill to Assist Wage Theft Victims” – Public News Service

“Renewed Push to Prevent Wage Theft” – Capitol Tonight interview with Sarah Ahn and Susan Zimet of the SWEAT Coalition

IMG_2305

MEDIA RELEASE

Workers Call on Albany Legislators:

Make the Minimum Wage Increase Real for All Workers

On the heels of New York State’s minimum wage increase, workers and supporters are convening in Albany to say, a wage increase is critical, but will never be seen by many workers unless the Legislature also provides the tools needed to enforce the wage laws. Workers, advocates, and supporters from throughout NYS joined Assemblymember Linda Rosenthal, Senator Jose Peralta and co-sponsors to call for passage of A5501/S2232, the Securing Wages Earned Against Theft (SWEAT) bill.

According to a study by the US Department of Labor released last year, workers in NY and California lose 1.6-2.5 billion dollars a year to wage theft. This means, workers are not being paid for the work they have already performed. Even with recent measures to combat wage theft in NYS, many millions of workers are routinely cheated out of their pay. This is because employers are able to shut down their shops, transfer and hide their assets and never pay even when workers win court judgments. Many workers who turn to government agencies meet the same fate. A report published last year by the SWEAT Coalition found that $125 million went uncollected on wage theft judgments and orders, of which $101 million were from orders by the State Department of Labor.

The proposed bill offers a simple solution to workers and enforcing government agencies by introducing new tools to combat wage theft. The bill will expand and improve existing mechanisms so unscrupulous employers cannot fraudulently dissipate their assets to evade court judgments and orders to pay owed wages.

Assemblymember Linda Rosenthal, the bill’s lead sponsor, shared the experiences of her constituents and workers in her district who faced this uphill battle. “Without the ability to collect on a wage theft judgments, winning in court is not worth the

piece of paper it’s written on,” said Assemblymember Linda B. Rosenthal (D/WF-Manhattan). “Some employers will go to any length to avoid paying workers their hard earned wages, including filing for bankruptcy, leaving hundreds of hard working New Yorkers owed hundreds of millions of dollars in earned wages. My bill, A.5501-C, the SWEAT bill, will arm aggrieved employees with a powerful tool to collect wages they earned, allowing them to file a wage lien against the assets of their employer.”

State Senator Jose Peralta (D-Queens), sponsor of the bill, noted, “Countless hardworking New Yorkers are abused on the job when it comes to straight out wage theft, the theft of tips, and payments below the minimum wage. Unfortunately, predatory and unscrupulous employers are stealing money from men and women who earn it to support their families. This is intolerable. If an employer steals from a worker, we should have every possible recourse available to remedy the situation. Period.”

Jei Fong, a representative of the SWEAT Coalition stated, “If our elected officials in Albany don’t pass the SWEAT bill this year, many workers will be left behind when wages are increased next year. It’s impossible to lift workers out of poverty when unscrupulous employers continue to underpay workers and can still avoid ever being held responsible. Our bill allows workers and the government to go after only the employers who break the law. This is good for workers, law-abiding employers, and the state.”

The Coalition behind this bill is a statewide coalition, representing workers, community, advocacy and faith-based groups from all over New York State.

Susan Zimet, executive director of Hunger Action Network of New York State stated, “It is criminal that workers, after putting in hours and hours of work, can then have their wages stolen from them! How is the worker supposed to put food on the table or pay their bills? What good is a law if the loopholes are so big it is ineffectual? It is imperative that the SWEAT bill is passed this legislative session and signed into law. Workers deserve the protection under the law, and SWEAT will do just that.”

“The wage theft epidemic in New York is not isolated to the NYC and downstate area—it’s a state-wide crisis that impacts workers and communities throughout the state, including areas of Upstate, Central and Western New York,” said Elizabeth Koo from Empire Justice Center’s Workers’ Rights Project in Rochester, NY.  “When wages are stolen from workers and they’re left unable to recover the money owed to them, it’s not only the workers who suffer—our government gets cheated of payroll taxes, it creates unfair competition to law-abiding businesses, and it hurts working families and our state’s economy.  The SWEAT bill is badly needed to address the far-reaching impacts of the wage theft crisis in New York.”

Celebrate the Lunar New Year With Us!

CSWA’s Lunar New Year Celebration

Sunday, March 6, 2016
2:30pm-5pm
P.S.124 – Yung Wing School
(40 Division St in Chinatown, Manhattan)
CSWA New Year Party Photo

Lion Dance Performers at CSWA’s 2015 Lunar New Year Celebration

As Fearlessly as the Monkey King Defeating All Demons
Chinese Workers Gain Justice Through Struggle

Join us for a day of festivities with family and friends as we bring in the Year of the Monkey  with performances, a lion dance, lunch buffet, and raffle prizes.

Celebrate the victories and achievements of 2015 and look forward with us to uniting our community against racism and exploitation.

RSVP to cswa@cswa.org or call 212-334-2333

反歧视 反逼迁 反贵租 社区大会! 邀请白思豪市长到场表示立场!

Sorry, this entry is only available in 中文. For the sake of viewer convenience, the content is shown below in the alternative language. You may click the link to switch the active language.

NMASS Town Hall Poster v3

萧华被判有罪,振奋人心!华埠和下东城有转机了。萧华成为议长后称霸我们社区二十多年,对我们社区建树很少,而且最近的七、八年,他和地产商以及某些民选官员勾结,破坏唐人街下东城。在他管辖的地段上和发号施令下,以致第三社区委员会和市议会通过了彭博的歧视性的东村土改计划,令唐人街和下东城得不到同等的保护,讓地产商大量地侵占华埠,起豪华高楼和酒店。他还将苏域柏的政府公用地拱手相送给地产商,应付式地建很少低收入家庭可负担的房屋。这个民选官员贪得无厌,帮Extell 在Pathmark的旧址建80层豪华高楼和设立“穷人门”,并得到政府津贴。由此令地税和租金飙升,小生意不能负担昂贵的租金,工人减少工作机会,居民无以为继,人人在贵租的压力下怨声载道。很多民众都把愤怒指向与萧华关系密切的陈倩雯,以致人人都骂陈倩雯。
现在,萧华被判有罪,给我们华人和少数族裔大好的翻身机会。俗语讲“树倒猢狲散”,和他要好的政客,怕被调查,人人自危的时候,我们应该出来,反对这些破坏我们家园的豪华建筑和带歧视性的土改计划。
我们要将愤怒化为力量,呼吁大家踊跃参加12月5日的社区大会,要求市长出席大会,通过华埠工作小组的土改计划,停止Extell 种族歧视的大楼;终止421 A 地税优惠给地产商。

社区大会时间:2015年12月5日 (星期六) 下午4時正
社区大会地址:华埠 格兰街350号 苏域柏高中的大礼堂
联络电话: 212-334-2333

Community Marches Against Racism and Displacement

Community Demands de Blasio Adopt LES/Chinatown Rezoning Plan

On Oct. 28, hundreds of residents, workers, students, small business owners, and others — including children and elderly — from the Lower East Side, Chinatown and across the city marched to City Hall. The marchers slogged through Hurricane Patricia’s driving rain from Cherry Street in the Lower East Side, past the Department of City Planning. Arriving at City Hall, marchers called on Mayor de Blasio to adopt the Chinatown Working Group (CWG) Rezoning Plan that will protect the entire community, which has become vulnerable to rampant luxury development.

Since the East Village Rezoning Plan was passed in 2008 — protecting majority white and wealthier neighborhoods while excluding majority Latino, African-American and Chinese neighborhoods in Community District 3 — new luxury development has accelerated gentrification and led to massive evictions. One stark example is the 80-story Extell tower with poor door that has applied for the 421-a tax break. The Lower East Side/Chinatown is now ground zero for the displacement of low-income people of color.

For the past seven years, nearly 60 organizations from the Lower East Side and Chinatown joined CWG to create a community-led rezoning plan that would protect the entire community using similar protections afforded to the East Village. Earlier this year the City’s Department of City Planning (DCP) rejected the community rezoning plan adopted by Chinatown Working Group, calling it too “far-fetched.”

On September 25th, close to 1,000 concerned individuals marched to City Hall to demand Mayor de Blasio take a stand against the displacement and adopt the CWG Rezoning Plan. The outpouring of community concern has encouraged other sectors of the community–including churches, students and small business owners–to join the call to pass the CWG Rezoning Plan. Some businesses even closed their doors for a few hours in a show of support for the march.

Coalition members invited Mayor de Blasio to attend the rally and put out his position on the marchers’ demands to:

  • End the 421-a tax abatement (a tax subsidy for luxury developments)
  • Immediately halt the Extell luxury tower at 227 Cherry Street
  • Adopt the CWG rezoning plan

# # #

Chinatown and the Lower East Side are Not For Sale!

MARCH AGAINST DISPLACEMENT
Wednesday, October 28 at 3:30PM
Start at Cherry Street and Pike Slip | End at City Hallmarch-down-east-broadway

When New York City adopted the major East Village Rezoning in 2008, Chinatown and the Lower East Side were intentionally excluded. The wealthier white residents of the East Village got height restrictions and zoning protections for their neighborhood, while high-rise, luxury development was pushed into our community. Now the NYC Department of City Planning refuses to pass the Chinatown Working Group rezoning plan, saying it’s too “far-fetched” to give Chinatown and Lower East Side equal protection to the East Village. Will Mayor de Blasio follow Bloomberg’s racist legacy by selling out our community to luxury developers?

If the Chinatown Working Group rezoning were adopted, luxury developers like Extell would not be able to build their 80 story high-rise tower with a separate “poor door” for low-income tenants. The rezoning plan will limit the height and size of buildings, require low-income housing in every new development, and block the sale of public housing and land to developers. These measures are needed to stop skyrocketing rents and the displacement of residents and small businesses.

On Sept. 25, close to a thousand residents, workers, small businesses, students, and others from Chinatown, the LES, and across the city marched to City Hall to demand that Mayor de Blasio protect our community from displacement.

Our community has been set in motion, but we must show Mayor de Blasio that we will not stop until our community gets the equal protection we deserve. We call on everyone to join our march on Wednesday, Oct. 28!

Demand that Mayor de Blasio Protect the Lower East Side and Chinatown:

  • Stop the racist Extell luxury development
  • End the 421a tax giveaway
  • Pass the Chinatown Working Group Community Rezoning Plan
Coalition to Protect Chinatown & the Lower East Side

List in formation: 318 Restaurant Workers’Union, Action by the Lower East Side, Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund, Cabalito Restaurant, Chinese Staff &Workers Association, District Leader Jenifer Rajkumar, District Leader Pedro Cardi, Harlem Consumer Education Council, LaGuardia Houses Tenant Patrol, Lands End 2 Resident Association, LES Dwellers, Lower East Side Anti-Displacement Project, Mujeres y Hombres Luchadoras, National Mobilization Against Sweatshops, Orchard Street Block Association, Professor Peter Kwong from CUNY-Hunter, Project Reach, Sixth Street Community Center, Professor Juanita Díaz-Cotto from SUNY-Binghamton

转载世界新闻网

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转载世界新闻网
「路標」貴族化 華埠平民抗議
September 26, 2015, 6:04 am 2576
近千名示威者在華埠和市議會門前呼籲遏制華埠貴族化。(記者尹英姿/攝影)
近千名示威者在華埠和市議會門前呼籲遏制華埠貴族化。(記者尹英姿/攝影)
近千名示威者在華埠和市議會門前呼籲遏制華埠貴族化。(記者尹英姿/攝影)
近千名示威者在華埠和市議會門前呼籲遏制華埠貴族化。(記者尹英姿/攝影)
宋美榕高舉標語,強烈反對華埠貴族化。(記者尹英姿/攝影)
宋美榕高舉標語,強烈反對華埠貴族化。(記者尹英姿/攝影)
近千名示威者在華埠和市議會門前呼籲遏制華埠貴族化。(記者尹英姿/攝影)
近千名示威者在華埠和市議會門前呼籲遏制華埠貴族化。(記者尹英姿/攝影)

「反對貴族化,華埠不能賣!」318工會、華人職工會、下東城行動聯盟等17個組織的近千名會員代表,25日在曼哈坦華埠舉行遊行示威,抗議開發商 Extell Development公司將曼哈坦下東城櫻桃街(Cherry St.)227號的「路標」(Pathmark)超市拆除,興建高級豪華公寓。遊行隊伍經過華埠,在市議會門前高舉標語,呼籲市長白思豪提高對下東城土地 改革的重視。

遊行隊伍從櫻桃街227號出發,經過東百老匯和林則徐廣場,抵達市議會門前舉行集會,呼籲市長白思豪遏制包括華埠在內的下東城地區的逼遷房客的行 為。上千名示威者沿途高喊口號,呼籲遏制下東城貴族化的趨勢,保護居民和小商家的正當權益。在下個月10月28日下午4時,還將在櫻桃街227號再次舉行 示威遊行,抗議下東城興建高級建築。

華人職工會幹事李華表示,華埠工作小組(CWG)在七年前就已經提出遏制下東城貴族化的土地重畫提案,但卻沒有得到白思豪和市議會通過,令華埠小商家和居 民感到不解。她認為,以東村為例,豪斯頓街(Houston St.)到14街的社區都獲得土地規畫的保護,明確規定不允許修建超過六層至八層樓的高層建築,防止租金上漲。但針對華埠在內的下東城的土地重畫提案卻被 市府束之高閣。長此以往,華埠雖然將新建不少高級建築,但本地居民卻因為難以承擔高額的房租,被迫搬離家園。

「租金上漲,不但小商家負擔重,居民流失更令生意難做!」在華埠東百老匯家開店20多年的華裔老闆娘宋美榕表示,她做過餐館生意,也開過花舖,但隨 著華埠貴族化加劇,小商家和居民都苦不堪言。宋美榕說,做生意多年來,租金從最早先的3000多元一個月飆升至1萬2000元,普通的花舖業者根本就無力 承擔。貴族化不只影響小商家的生存,房租上漲也會進一步加劇居民的流失,生意更沒有辦法做下去。

It’s Time for the CSWA Picnic!

Join us for a day of fun with family and friends

BBQ * Swimming * Hiking * Games

Date: Sunday, August 23, 2015

Time: 8:30am-5pm

Location: Lake Welch, Harriman State Park

SEATING IS LIMITED! RSVP / pick up bus tickets from CSWA’s Chinatown Center or call (212) 334-2333

Bus Tickets:
$15  Members *  $20 Non-members  * $10 for children under age 12
(Buses leave from Chinatown and Sunset Park, Brooklyn)
 Highlights of the trip include:
  • Beach – Enjoy swimming, sunbathing and sand on a half-mile long beach
  • Hiking – Take a stroll on one of the many trails in Harriman State Park
  • Games – Kid and family friendly fun
  • Community – Come learn about recent developments in our work!
*Please note there is a $8/vehicle entrance fee if you plan to drive. 

** Press Advisory **

Communities Protest DCP’s Refusal to Protect Communities of Color,

     Call for March to City Hall- Call on Mayor to

Protect Chinatown and Lower East Side and Stop Extell

Date: Thursday, August 20, 2015
Time: 11AM
Location: Across from 227 Cherry St (corner of Pike St)
    Since the passing of the 2008 rezoning plan that only protected the East Village while excluding Chinatown and Lower East Side, many residents and small businesses have been displaced from our communities. The Coalition to Protect Chinatown and the Lower East Side met with the Department of City Planning (DCP) on August 5th and asked the DCP to give the same protections to Chinatown and the Lower East Side, which are mixed communities of color, as given to the East Village, a majority white community. The Coalition was told that we were too ambitious and our rezoning plan could not be implemented.
On August 20, 2015, 11am, the Coalition to Protect Chinatown and the Lower East Side will hold a press conference at 227 Cherry Street where Extell is building a racist tower that will include a “poor door”. We will tell Mayor de Blasio that communities of color have had enough with the city’s racism and efforts to push us out! We will also call for a march to City Hall on September 25, 2015, from the former Pathmark site.
#
Coalition to Protect Chinatown & the Lower East Side
318 Restaurant Workers’ Union, Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund, Chinese Staff & Workers Association, District Leader Jenifer Rajkumar, District Leader Pedro Cardi, LaGuardia Houses Tenant Patrol, Lands End 2 Resident Association, Lower East Side Anti-Displacement Project, La Mujeres y Hombres Luchadoras, National Mobilization Against Sweatshops, Orchard Street Block Association,
Professor Peter Kwong from CUNY-Hunter, Project Reach, Sixth Street Community Center, Professor Juanita Díaz-Cotto from SUNY-Binghamton