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SEIU Annual Report

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Workers<br />

United<br />

In March, more than 100,000 workers voted to form Workers<br />

United to conduct strong and aggressive organizing<br />

campaigns for new workers. At the founding convention, the<br />

general executive board unanimously voted to affiliate with<br />

<strong>SEIU</strong> to bring added strength to Workers United to negotiate<br />

better contracts, protect members on the job and promote<br />

workers’ rights.<br />

In just eight months, Workers United:<br />

• Helped 29,000 Disney World employees in Orlando, Fla.,<br />

win much-needed raises—pouring between $15 million<br />

and $20 million into the local economy—and helped<br />

laundry worker members win a record-breaking class<br />

action suit against Cintas, an industrial launderer, for<br />

violations of a living wage ordinance in Los Angeles.<br />

• Ratified a new contract, following a 40-day strike at Bemis<br />

Manufacturing in Terre Haute, Ind., that both stopped the<br />

company’s attempt to form a pool of temporary workers<br />

and resolved workers’ privacy concerns about the<br />

proposed controversial Health Risk Assessment Testing.<br />

• Kept 1,000 good union jobs in the United States by<br />

successfully beating back an attempt by Wells Fargo—a<br />

recipient of $25 million in federal TARP funding—to<br />

liquidate U.S.-based clothing manufacturer Hartmarx.<br />

• Collaborated with private investors and government<br />

officials to bring a new manufacturer to New Bedford,<br />

Mass., and put laid-off workers back to work after the<br />

Eagle Manufacturing plant closed.<br />

nationwide formed a new alliance, the Alliance for Quality<br />

Child Care, to help unite child care workers into <strong>SEIU</strong> to<br />

make similar improvements.<br />

Leading on innovations in Public Services<br />

Public services members worked together to come up with<br />

new and creative ways to improve public services. Local<br />

unions engaging in innovation projects included <strong>SEIU</strong> locals<br />

5AZ, 73, 99, 500, 503, 721, 925, 1000, 1021, 1948 and 4053.<br />

In Oregon, where understaffing was threatening the quality<br />

of child welfare services, Local 503 members, leaders and<br />

staff worked on a team to transform the work process of the<br />

Oregon Department of Human Services. Their work is helping<br />

to fix staffing levels and create new work efficiencies. In New<br />

York, Local 4053/PEF (Public Employees Federation) members<br />

launched a “Go Public!” project to save the state millions of<br />

dollars by using state employees instead of consultants.<br />

Marysville, Wash., saving $5,000 on its 2009 utility bill and<br />

keeping the equivalent of six school buses of trash out of<br />

landfills. Styrofoam trays used in the school cafeteria were<br />

replaced with a recycling/composting program. The program<br />

will be expanded and is a model of President Obama’s call for<br />

“making government cool again.”<br />

Fighting for an economy that works in Puerto Rico<br />

Local 1996 SPT-<strong>SEIU</strong> members in Puerto Rico helped lead an<br />

islandwide movement to prevent Governor Fortuno’s plan to<br />

lay off more than 10 percent of Puerto Rico’s public workforce.<br />

We won a crucial victory late in the year when a court granted<br />

a petition to stop the termination of 6,000 <strong>SEIU</strong> members who<br />

provide vital education and healthcare services. But the battle<br />

was not over and our members in Puerto Rico continued to<br />

work against these devastating layoffs.<br />

Greening the schools<br />

12<br />

An idea growing out of an <strong>SEIU</strong>-sponsored contest for<br />

improving public services resulted in the school district in<br />

9

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