Monthly Archives: April 2017

Public Bank Event: Friday, May 5

As the gross inequality between the top 1/10th of 1% and ordinary working people worsens, our state and municipal governments often turn to privatization to combat budget shortfalls due to shrinking tax bases. These efforts often put control of public services in disadvantaged neighborhoods into the hands of corporations, and only offer a short-term fix for municipal and state budgets. These issues are exacerbated as Wall Street banks extract large fees from our state government, little of which is reinvested back into the state of New Jersey. Join LEARN, in partnership with the Work Environment Council and the Public Need over Corporate Greed campaign, to learn about a potential solution to this economic spiral: public banking. In this workshop, Walt McRee, chair of the Public Banking Institute, and Joan Bartl, state coordinator, two nationally-recognized experts and advocates of public banking, will review the history and theory of state banking, and detail the benefits and risks of establishing a public bank in New Jersey. If you want to understand what money is, how banks work, and how a state bank might improve the lives of all New Jerseyans, this workshop is for you. The event will be held Friday, May 5th from [...]

By |2017-04-26T16:19:34-04:00April 26th, 2017|Highlights|Comments Off on Public Bank Event: Friday, May 5

Peoples Climate March: Saturday, April 29

In 100 hours the Peoples Climate March will thunder through the streets of Washington, DC to demand action for jobs, justice and the climate. Do not miss this moment. There are multiple buses from NJ; click through this page to purchase tickets from several of our Jersey Renews partners. If you need a ride from another location, click here. To find out where to go once you arrive in DC, and the route, click here. Please consider joining us at the Labor Rally, beginning at 11am, at the Department of Labor. These maps (PDF) provide instructions for travel from the bus parking lots to the Labor Rally, illustrate the route for the march, and also have instructions on getting back to buses. In 100 days Donald Trump has done a lot of damage -- and our resistance stopped him from doing a lot more. But if we don't begin to reverse his attacks on the climate, all of that may be for naught. In the last few weeks, WEC helped coordinate Jersey Renews kick-off events in Montclair, Camden and New Brunswick. More than a dozen organizations spoke at the events, each declaring support for making NJ a climate leader [...]

By |2017-04-27T00:13:14-04:00April 26th, 2017|Highlights|Comments Off on Peoples Climate March: Saturday, April 29

NOT ONE MORE DEATH

On April 23, at a Workers’ Memorial Day Rally and March organized by New Labor and WEC in New Brunswick, NJ, workers stood together to remember those who have died on the job or suffered workplace injuries at work. Daniel Templeton Comerie was one of the 45 New Jersey workers who died at work in 2016.  Daniel, a maintenance mechanic employed by Joint Meeting of Essex and Union Counties, went to work on the morning of March 11, 2016 and never returned home to his family.  Nat Bender, Communications Director at American Federation of Teachers New Jersey, and friend of Daniel and his wife Cherrie, read this beautiful testimony from Cherrie. My husband Daniel Templeton Comerie died on March 11, 2016.  The man I married is the love of my life.  We were together for 25 years, and married for 21 years. If you asked me how I feel. I feel dysfunctional, devastated and stricken with overwhelming shock.  I spoke to my husband at 9:30 a.m. in the morning, in his office, and at 2:00 p.m. I was told that he was gone. He was killed on the job when a large concrete slab landed on his chest.  [...]

By |2017-04-25T16:52:43-04:00April 25th, 2017|Highlights|Comments Off on NOT ONE MORE DEATH

Hundreds honor Workers’ Memorial Day in New Brunswick

"Hundreds of workers from community organizations, unions and faith-based groups rallied Sunday to observe Workers’ Memorial Day. Despite the Occupational Safety and Health Act, workers continue to find themselves at great risk of exposure to dangerous workplace conditions. In December 2016, Alvaro Esteban of Freehold died on the job at the Edgeboro Landfill in East Brunswick after being crushed by a trash compactor. He was 22. Though progress has been made in reducing the number of incidents, workers continue to be injured on the job. Those at the rally added that even today, not all injuries are reported. 'Seeing the names and photos of the fallen workers memorialized at this event lined up across a large hall is a somber experience. We were glad to see so many allies in attendance expressing support for families dealing with the most tragic of circumstances, while also demanding protections to prevent more tragedies from occurring,' said Dan Fatton, executive director of the NJ Work Environment Council (WEC), an alliance of 70 labor, community and environmental organizations advocating for safe, secure jobs and a healthy, sustainable environment."   Read the entire piece by Cheryl Makin on MyCentralJersey.com  

By |2017-04-25T16:07:40-04:00April 24th, 2017|Highlights, WEC in the News|Comments Off on Hundreds honor Workers’ Memorial Day in New Brunswick

WEC Welcomes Two New Board Members

WEC is pleased to announce the addition of two new members to our Board of Directors.   "As health professionals, we are creating standards in the workplace to protect the health and safety of our patients and workers in our union contracts and lawmakers in Trenton.  Joining the board of WEC provides an opportunity to work with others taking on challenges in their own communities and workplaces and I'm looking forward to collaborating to demand improvements for all workers in New Jersey," Alexis Rean Walker, Co-President Central-South Jersey Region, HPAE "As an advocate for income equality and labor standards that benefit working New Jerseyans, I'm thrilled to join the board of WEC to help this amazing organization achieve safe, secure jobs for all," Brandon McKoy, Policy Analyst for New Jersey Policy Perspective

By |2017-04-14T13:28:06-04:00April 14th, 2017|Highlights|Comments Off on WEC Welcomes Two New Board Members

Immediate Action Needed: Stand Up for Worker Safety and the Environment

Call Your Congressional Representative and Congressman Frelinghuysen With Congressional Representatives heading back to their Districts, now is the time to urge your Representative to stand up for worker safety and the environment. Please ask that they oppose any budget cuts that would hinder federal and state agencies from protecting us. When Congress returns to DC on April 25, they only have three days to pass a continuing resolution so the government doesn’t shut down. We already know that the President’s administration is eyeing draconian budget cuts in fiscal year 2018; gouging the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and Department of Labor (DOL) budgets by 21% and 33% respectively, and entirely eliminating the US Chemical Safety Board (CSB) among other vital programs. These cuts have real consequences in New Jersey, which has more than 5,000 facilities that each use more than 10,000 pounds of hazardous chemicals, and has the highest population density of any state. New Jersey also has more contaminated sites in the federal superfund program than any other state. Take Action: 1)      Urge your Representative to oppose any draconian budget cuts to DOL, EPA and CSB that would put workers lives and the environment at risk. 2)      Urge NJ Congressman [...]

By |2017-04-07T12:02:01-04:00April 7th, 2017|Act Now, Highlights|Comments Off on Immediate Action Needed: Stand Up for Worker Safety and the Environment

Building A Prosperous, Clean Energy Future in New Jersey

New Jersey faces major threats from climate change. The state has already seen the impacts of heat waves and increased flooding from sea level rise. We cannot afford to be unprepared in the face of the next Superstorm Sandy caused by climate change. Likewise, there are major social and economic impacts of climate change if our state does not act quickly to reduce emissions. New Jersey’s electricity grid is vulnerable to power outages from extreme weather, like Superstorm Sandy and the storm that hit South Jersey in 2015 when nearly 300,000 people lost power. New Jersey must build a better energy future. It is well within our reach to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and secure prosperity and health for all New Jerseyans, in a cheaper manner than our current fossil-fuel economy. In fact, a 2015 report by Stanford and UC Berkeley showed that by achieving 100 percent wind, water, and solar energy by 2050, New Jersey would save $57 per person in annual energy costs. New Jersey can return to being a clean energy leader, learn from other states that are leading the way on climate change and save ratepayers money as well. In November 2016, the Institute for Energy [...]

By |2017-04-04T19:57:27-04:00April 4th, 2017|Highlights|Comments Off on Building A Prosperous, Clean Energy Future in New Jersey
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