Monday, August 24, 2020

ROTTING FOOD, DEAD ANIMALS AND CHAOS AT POSTAL FACILITIES



By Laura J. Nelson and Maya Lau, LA Times.
August 22, 2020

https://popularresistance.org/rotting-food-dead-animals-and-chaos-at-postal-facilities/


NOTE: Tuesday, August 25 is a national day of action to save the US Postal Service. Find an action near you or plan one at APWU.org.

Six weeks ago, U.S. Postal Service workers in the high desert town of Tehachapi, Calif., began to notice crates of mail sitting in the post office in the early morning that should have been shipped out for delivery the night before.

At a mail processing facility in Santa Clarita in July, workers discovered that their automated sorting machines had been disabled and padlocked.

And inside a massive mail-sorting facility in South Los Angeles, workers fell so far behind processing packages that by early August, gnats and rodents were swarming around containers of rotted fruit and meat, and baby chicks were dead inside their boxes.

Accounts of conditions from employees at California mail facilities provide a glimpse of what some say are the consequences of widespread cutbacks in staffing and equipment recently imposed by the postal service.

Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, responding to a national outcry over service disruptions and fears of voter disenfranchisement, said this week he would suspend many planned changes until after the election. But postal workers say significant damage has already been done, including the removal of mail-sorting machines, which may not be replaced.

While the long-term effect of the cuts on U.S. mail service is unclear, the evidence of serious disruptions appears to be mounting, according to postal employees interviewed by The Times as well as customers, lawmakers and union leaders.

Until this week, the postal service was implementing a sweeping plan to remove 671 mail-sorting machines, or about 10% of its total, from facilities across the U.S. — including 76 in California. Officials also slashed overtime pay and imposed a new policy that could delay outgoing mail.

The cuts have had a ripple effect in California, snarling the operation of one of the biggest mail-processing facilities in the country and delaying the delivery of prescriptions, rent payments and unemployment checks. Some people have complained of going days without receiving any mail at all.

At least five high-speed mail-sorting machines have been removed from a processing plant in Sacramento, said Omar Gonzalez, the Western regional coordinator for the American Postal Workers Union. Additionally, two of the machines have been removed in Santa Ana and six in San Diego, Gonzalez said.

Processing plants serve more than 1,000 California post offices, some of which deliver to far-flung, rural addresses that could be faced with high delivery costs if serviced by private mail carriers.

Inside one sprawling facility at Florence and Central avenues in Los Angeles, which serves 92 L.A.-area post offices, seven delivery bar code sorters were removed in June, leaving three, Gonzalez said.

Each of those machines, which would handle mail-in ballots, can process up to 35,000 pieces of mail per hour.

“A lot of the machinery has already been gutted. Some of it has been dismantled and relocated or trashed,” Gonzalez said. “Although we welcome the news of the suspension of these changes, it’s just that — a suspension. The attacks and undermining of our operations will resume, maybe at the worst possible time, in December, our peak season.”

Before the recent cuts, workers at the facility were working six days per week, and were still struggling to keep up with the volume of packages driven by an influx of online shopping during the COVID-19 pandemic, said mail handler Aukushan Scantlebury, 47.

When DeJoy restricted overtime two months ago, Scantlebury and other workers saw their schedules cut back to five days per week. Within days, he said, the facility was in chaos.

Packages piled up, blocking the aisles and the heavy sorting machinery. Boxes of steaks, fruit and other perishables rotted. Rats dashed across the floor. At one point, Scantlebury said, the “whole building was filled with gnats.”

The delays were particularly tragic for live animals, including baby chickens and crickets, that are transported through the U.S. Postal Service. Usually, mail handlers say, they can hear the birds peeping and rustling around in their boxes.

This month, one worker said, she found a box with air holes in a pile of packages. Instead of hearing the gentle sounds of baby chicks, she heard nothing.
Workers sometimes see shipments of crickets jumping around inside their packaging, said Eddie Cowan, a mail handler and the president of a local chapter of the National Postal Mail Handlers Union. Now, he said, “you can see in the packages those crickets are dead.”

Sumi Ali, the co-owner of the Yes Plz coffee subscription company, arrived July 25 to mail a batch of freshly roasted beans to customers. A frequent visitor to the complex, he was shocked at what he saw.

The parking lot was crammed with semi trailers piled high with unsorted mail; the warehouse-like facility was packed “wall to wall” with mail; and there were very few employees in sight.

“It was like Armageddon,” Ali said. “It was a total maze. You could not walk through the facility without having to move things out of your way. I don’t know how they got forklifts through there. There were only inches of space between containers.”

Since then, Ali said, the backlog of packages seems to have improved a little. But, he said, the chaos continues to be as bad, if not worse, than the usual holiday season.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) said Wednesday that DeJoy informed her he did not intend to restore the sorting machines or blue mailboxes that have been removed in several cities, nor did he have plans to allow for adequate overtime for workers.

As for the November election — the spark that ignited a national firestorm over USPS cutbacks — postal service and California elections officials say there’s less concern here than in other states.

USPS spokesman David Partenheimer did not comment on the reductions, but referred to a statement from DeJoy that said the postal service is equipped to fully handle election mail this fall.

The postal service also said DeJoy was expanding a task force to strengthen coordination with election officials to handle mail-in ballots. The postal service had earlier warned 46 states, including California, that some ballots might not be delivered in time to be counted.

In June, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a law requiring that all ballots postmarked by election day and delivered by Nov. 20 be counted — five times longer than California’s normal grace period. Still, Secretary of State Alex Padilla said the concerns raised in other states merit close scrutiny.

“Given this administration’s track record with the truth, seeing is believing,” Padilla said in a written statement. “My office will continue constant communication with the U.S. Postal Service, and will continue to monitor for any signs of disruption to service.”

At the Santa Clarita processing and distribution center, two delivery bar code sorters were padlocked and gutted of their cameras and computers in July so that workers couldn’t plug them in and start using them again.

For an unknown reason, the devices came back online Wednesday, but a third delivery bar code sorter was missing from the facility, according to a worker who did not want to be named because they were not authorized to speak on behalf of the agency.

Merchant Stephen Tu of Pasadena said in the past two months he has noticed his first-class packages have been getting stuck for as many as 10 days in the Santa Clarita facility, whereas normally they would pass through in one day. Tu, who tracks shipments of baby clothing and accessories he sells on EBay and Facebook Marketplace, said he’s never endured delays this long — up to 20 days for packages sent outside Southern California — in the 15 years he has been selling items online.

Tu said his customers sometimes ask him whether he has even shipped their goods at all. In order to guarantee on-time deliveries, he said, he’s considering switching to private services like FedEx and UPS.

About six weeks ago on a Wednesday morning, postal clerk Kenny Diaz, 35, showed up to work at the Tehachapi post office and saw something new in his nine years on the job: a plastic tub full of mail that should have gone out for delivery the night before.

Every afternoon, Diaz said, a truck driver picked up the post office’s outgoing mail and took it to a processing facility in Bakersfield. If the post office was running behind, the last driver of the day would wait to pick up every bill, package and letter, he said.

“They always waited — they always waited,” Diaz said. “Our No. 1 priority is getting the mail where it has to go. We’d rather delay the truck by two hours than delay the mail by a whole day.”

Now, Diaz said, the truck drivers have been instructed to leave on time, regardless of whether all the outgoing mail is on the truck. That means some mail is arriving a day later at the processing facility, where it could be delayed again, he said.

“Just think of our little town, times a million across the nation,” Diaz said. “You can see the domino effect that it’s going to have.”

BANKS HAVE MADE $18 BILLION FROM ‘PAYCHECK PROTECTION PROGRAM’ PROCESSING FEES




By Colleen Boyle, In These Times.

August 22, 2020

https://popularresistance.org/banks-have-made-18-billion-from-paycheck-protection-program/

Fees Paid To Banks Eclipse Funding Allocated To Develop Vaccines, Provide Medical Supplies And Feed Children.

Whether or not a sin­gle job or com­pa­ny is saved through the CARES Act’s Pay­check Pro­tec­tion Pro­gram (PPP), lenders will be paid hun­dreds of mil­lions of dol­lars in tax­pay­er mon­ey. As of mid-July, PPP lenders, includ­ing JPMor­gan Chase Bank, Bank of Amer­i­ca and Wells Far­go, had racked up $18 bil­lion in fees—more than was allo­cat­ed to oth­er pro­grams to devel­op vac­cines, pro­vide med­ical sup­plies and health ser­vices, and feed chil­dren. Near­ly $130 bil­lion in PPP funds have gone untapped, yet both the HEROES Act passed by the House of Rep­re­sen­ta­tives in May and the HEALS Act intro­duced by the Sen­ate in late July call for the program’s exten­sion while remov­ing require­ments that most of its fund­ing be spent on payroll.

The Pay­check Pro­tec­tion Pro­gram was designed to ​“pro­vide a direct incen­tive for small busi­ness­es to keep their work­ers on the pay­roll,” accord­ing to the Small Busi­ness Admin­is­tra­tion (SBA). Issued by lend­ing insti­tu­tions and guar­an­teed by the SBA, PPP loans cov­er up to eight weeks of aver­age month­ly pay­roll costs between $1,000 and $10 mil­lion, and may be used for pay­roll, mort­gage, rent and util­i­ty pay­ments, along with own­er com­pen­sa­tion. The pro­gram calls for the SBA to for­give a loan if all employ­ee reten­tion cri­te­ria are met and at least 60% of the funds are used for pay­roll costs. Should the bor­row­er default, the admin­is­tra­tion will refund the lender.

Nor­mal­ly, bor­row­ers pay a guar­an­tee fee to the SBA and any required pro­cess­ing fees to the lender that pro­vid­ed the loan. Under the Pay­check Pro­tec­tion Pro­gram, how­ev­er, all fees for bor­row­ers have been waived, and the SBA is pay­ing lenders a pro­cess­ing fee of between 1 and 5% when each loan is ful­ly dis­bursed. The SBA does not pay lenders under any oth­er program.

This com­po­nent of the Pay­check Pro­tec­tion Pro­gram has result­ed in major finan­cial insti­tu­tions pock­et­ing hun­dreds of mil­lions sim­ply for act­ing as a con­duit for tax­pay­er dol­lars. Below are the 10 finan­cial insti­tu­tions that had prof­it­ed the most from PPP pro­cess­ing fees as of July 7, 2020, accord­ing to data released by the SBA. These 10 firms will earn more than $3.6 bil­lion com­bined; JPMor­gan Chase and Bank of Amer­i­ca togeth­er account­ed for near­ly $1.6 bil­lion.
Lender Total Fees Earned
JPMor­gan Chase Bank, Nation­al Association $823,297,941
Bank of Amer­i­ca, Nation­al Association $770,493,577
Wells Far­go Bank, Nation­al Association $362,959,963
Tru­ist Bank d/​b/​a Branch Bank­ing & Trust Co $317,538,597
PNC Bank, Nation­al Association $303,210,598
TD Bank, Nation­al Association $238,436,086
U.S. Bank, Nation­al Association $236,130,803
Cross Riv­er Bank $215,875,654
Key­Bank Nation­al Association $182,159,042
Zions Bank, a Divi­sion of Zions Ban­cor­po­ra­tion, N.A. $168,530,745


While $18 bil­lion in fees may seem triv­ial com­pared to the $2 tril­lion in total spend­ing autho­rized by the CARES Act, it is more than the $1.3 bil­lion in fund­ing allo­cat­ed for com­mu­ni­ty health cen­ters cur­rent­ly ser­vic­ing 28 mil­lion peo­ple; the $3 and $4 bil­lion ear­marked for air­line con­trac­tors and car­go air car­ri­ers respec­tive­ly; the $4.3 bil­lion allot­ted to the Cen­ters for Dis­ease Con­trol and Pre­ven­tion; the $8.8 bil­lion for schools to pro­vide meals to stu­dents; the $450 mil­lion for food banks and com­mu­ni­ty food dis­tri­b­u­tion pro­grams; the $10 bil­lion in Eco­nom­ic Injury Dis­as­ter loans for small busi­ness­es to cov­er imme­di­ate oper­at­ing costs; the $11 bil­lion for Covid-19 drug diag­nos­tics, treat­ments and vac­cines; the $15.3 bil­lion that the state of Cal­i­for­nia received under the Coro­n­avirus Relief Fund; the more than $15.5 bil­lion to cov­er expect­ed increas­es in Sup­ple­men­tal Nutri­tion Assis­tance Pro­gram (SNAP) appli­cants; and the $16 bil­lion for the Strate­gic Nation­al Stock­pile to increase the avail­abil­i­ty of essen­tial sup­plies like masks and ventilators.

What’s more, we may nev­er know how many jobs the pro­gram has actu­al­ly saved. The SBA announced that it will only auto­mat­i­cal­ly review loans larg­er than $2 mil­lion and only after the bor­row­er sub­mits the loan for­give­ness appli­ca­tion. Less than one per­cent of PPP loans meet that qual­i­fi­ca­tion.

On July 17, Trea­sury Sec­re­tary Steven Mnuchin tes­ti­fied to the House Com­mit­tee on Small Busi­ness that the five mil­lion PPP loans that have been issued will keep over 50 mil­lion peo­ple employed. But an ini­tial analy­sis of the program’s impact on the U.S. jobs mar­ket led by the MIT Depart­ment of Eco­nom­ics puts that num­ber between 1.4 mil­lion to 3.2 mil­lion. Dur­ing the week of July 13, more than 31 mil­lion peo­ple
received some form of unem­ploy­ment benefits.

The PPP may have kept some busi­ness­es afloat in April and May, but as the pan­dem­ic enters its sixth month with no clear end in sight, it’s fair to ques­tion whether the pro­gram has out­lived its use­ful­ness. What Amer­i­cans need now more than any­thing is a direct infu­sion of cash — to pre­serve their pay­rolls, yes, but also to pay rent and mort­gages, buy food and toi­let paper, and keep their fam­i­lies safe from Covid-19. Dur­ing the Great Reces­sion of 2008, the banks used gov­ern­ment bailouts to enrich them­selves to the tune of bil­lions. Trag­i­cal­ly, his­to­ry appears to be repeat­ing itself.

THE ONGOING US DOMINANCE OF THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC



By Narciso Isa Conde, Noticias sin.

The Adventures Of Pompeo In The Transfer Of Leadership In The Dominican Republic.

The U.S. gave particular importance to the inauguration of the new president of the Dominican Republic, Luís Abindar by sending Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, accompanied by the Assistant Secretary for Hemispheric Affairs Michael Kosak.

That’s enough to show the geopolitical importance that the super-power has given to this country and to this island that it shares with Haiti, after the liberation of Cuba – a historic feat in our Caribbean region, – defined as the border of the empire and the hinge between the Pacific and Atlantic. Also because of its closeness with two other countries emancipated from U.S. colonialism, Venezuela and Nicaragua.

This is an island with two nations that have suffered from foreign intervention and repeated imperialist invasions, and, in our case, a country that has been absolutley captured by the Pentagon after our most recent attempt to change ourselves into a sovereign nation in 1965 (following Cuba’s path in our own manner) precisely due to the popular-democratic revolution of 1965 which was blocked by the landing of 42,000 invading US Marines.

Since then we’ve been unable to break these powerful chains. Every time there are attempts in our country at changes out of the control of the US, the shackles are tightened.

The empire doesn’t hesitate to impose its orders, often gift-wrapped and adorned with pretty phrases. When they wear out one formula, they construct the replacement and fix it in place. This has occurred and it is occurring now. To give continuity to this imperial task, the Super-CIA arrived, sometimes also in the role of US Ambassador.

The next shift of caretakers are fresh and well oxygenated as they rise on the wave of anti-corruption and anti-impunity that damaged the rule of the Partido de la Liberación Dominicana-PLD and their forced efforts at continuity, after having exercised governmental and state control for 16 straight years, with the support of the brutal neighbor of the North.

It was no longer possible to maintain this however without great risks for the stability of the system of domination, and so months ago Washington and the opposition forces under their control prepared a replacement. Pompeo’s role was to direct the orchestra with some supporting cast, among these the unspeakable Organization of American States – OAS.

Pompeo came to the culmination of this first phase of the re-adaptation and smooth continuity of our colonial status and did so especially to secure some fundamental aspects of his stated policy on U.S. hemispheric affairs. Two interviews and two invitations symbolize the progress of the re-colonization work, duly renewed.

First, his farewell encounter with defeated ex-president Danilo Medina, entirely disgraced to the point of being subject to legal charges, together with his main collaborators. This was a meeting full of hypocrisy and pretense, in which Pompeo finished up by praising him as an ally in the fight for democracy.

And to follow-up, he had a meeting with the incoming president, Luís Abinader, meant to seal the new alliance “to promote democracy, transparency, and security’ on the continent, according to of course to the limits and conditions set down by The Pentagon, the CIA, the State Department, and its OAS.

Above all: “hemispheric security” against any twitch of independence and any plans for or exercise of sovereignty and anti-neoliberalism. This included orders to limit relations with China and to distance ourselves still further from Cuba.

But it would not be complete without the key point being made that the new government, the ambassador and the president came out from this meeting held in the National Palace ( built in the style of the U.S. Capitol Building) tied down and formally committed to applying to the agreement drawn up between the Lima Group, the International Liaison Committee, the European Union and the U.S.

This agreement formalizes the decision to fight together for a “transition to democracy in Venezuela” along with siding with the colonialist gangster faction headed by the self-proclaimed president Juan Guaidó and with an appeal to the Rio Pact (The Inter-American Treaty of Reciprocal Assistance – TIAR) as a useful instrument to revitalize the efforts to reverse the main achievement of the Bolivarian process – the self-determination of the Venezuelan people.

All this, in the context of a national ceremony at which there were very few invitees but which did include two versions of the lowest scum of Latin-Caribbean politics: President Juvenal Moises of Haiti and the representative of President Juan Orlando Hernández of Honduras.

At the end of Pompeo’s visit, which ironically occurred on the 157th anniversary of the Dominican Restoration War, which freed the Republic from Spanish annexation, the so-called new Government of Change added to our condition of a country that has suffered U.S. intervention, the adding itself to the practice of intervening in the affairs of other countries, on the tail of decadent western imperialism. Shame! An unpardonable decision.

ISRAEL CUTS FUEL, GAZA GOES DARK



By Tamara Nassar, Electronic Intifada.
August 22, 2020

https://popularresistance.org/israel-cuts-fuel-gaza-goes-dark/

The Gaza Strip’s only power plant shut down on Tuesday after Israel stopped the transfer of fuel to the territory.

The halting of fuel transfers is among a series of collective punishment measures Israel has imposed on Gaza.

Israel has claimed the measures are a response to incendiary balloons released from Gaza. The launching of such balloons by some Palestinians is, in reality, a symbolic effort to draw attention to the deteriorating situation in Gaza, long subject to an Israeli siege.

Although incendiary balloons caused several fires in Israel, “no injuries or damage have been reported,” according to The Jerusalem Post.

Israel has also bombed Gaza on an almost daily basis over the past week.

Two million Palestinians in Gaza have been under a lethal Israeli siege for the past 13 years. Israel subjects the territory to bombing whenever its people resist or protest collective punishment measures.

It is a vicious cycle that only Israel can stop.

The availability of electricity in Gaza stood at about 10 to 11 hours before further restrictions. It is expected to drop over the next several days to four consecutive hours per day, followed by 14 to 16-hour cuts.
Hospitals And Factories

The Israeli human rights group Gisha warned that hospitals, schools, workshops, and quarantine facilities will all be impacted by fuel cuts.

While most hospitals in the Strip are supplied with 24-hour electricity through the main power plant, Gisha says it is unclear if that will be sustained.

Gaza’s health ministry warned that power outages at hospitals would “have serious repercussions on the lives of premature babies in nurseries and intensive care and kidney failure patients.”

Israel’s fuel ban will also affect factories in Gaza, where the economy has already been all but destroyed by 13 years of blockade and repeated military assaults.

The head of the Palestinian General Federation of Trade Unions said that factories and workshops are expected to operate at less than 20 percent capacity by relying on generators.

Quarantine facilities in Gaza, which are currently housing some 2,000 people, will also have no more than four hours a day of electricity.

Israel announced on Sunday that it would entirely prohibit fishers from sailing off Gaza’s coast, having already imposed tightened restrictions last week.

Gaza’s fishing industry is crucial to its economy, with tens of thousands of Palestinians dependent on it.

Last week, Israel closed the Kerem Shalom checkpoint, the sole point of transfer for commercial goods in and out of Gaza, for all but the transfer of “vital humanitarian aid.”
Bombing School

Since the beginning of August, Israeli warplanes have bombarded the Gaza Strip with air strikes on agricultural land and what Israel claims are Hamas posts.

Fawzi Barhoum, a spokesperson for Hamas, which runs Gaza’s internal affairs, assigned Israeli occupation forces “the full responsibility” for the “results and repercussions” of the tightening of the siege and cutting of the fuel.

Last week, Israeli warplanes struck a school in Gaza City run by UNRWA, the United Nations agency for Palestine refugees, causing damage and disrupting school activities.







“How can a school surrounded by three UN schools and a UN health center and considerable distance to known military sites be hit by accident?” Matthias Schmale, who heads the agency in Gaza, asked on Twitter.

Students were evacuated from the school, and police teams are working to remove remnants of the missile from campus, according to Al Mezan, a human rights group based in the territory.

Israel’s constant restrictions and bombardment constitutes collective punishment, Gisha said on Tuesday. Collective punishment is a violation of article 33 of the Fourth Geneva Convention and therefore a war crime.

“Israel must immediately reverse these illegal measures of collective punishment and stop deliberately violating the fundamental human rights of Gaza’s residents,” Gisha stated.

Israel’s blockade of Gaza has turned it into a sealed ghetto.

While insisting that it “disengaged” from Gaza in 2005, Israel still controls the maritime, aerospace and land borders of the coastal enclave.

While always cruel, the effects of Israel’s actions are even worse during a pandemic.




Working In These Times: Links to articles


Hello my friends,

One political convention is over. Another is soon to begin. I encourage you all to watch them, because it’s good to remember that there are things more interminable than union meetings. Heyo! And hey, it’s time to sign up for the big In These Times (online) annual gala. We’re celebrating 44 years—almost as long as it feels like a political convention lasts. Whoa!

Folks—let’s talk labor.

This Week in Working


A Pricey Private School Says “Quaker Values” Justify Aggressive Campaign to Destroy Its Union
By Hamilton Nolan

Brooklyn Friends School takes advantage of a Trump labor board ruling.

In The Gap

If you have not already, please check out In The Gap, a brand new 12-episode podcast series by Chandra Whitfield about the gender pay gap that Black women in America face.

The Working People Podcast

The People's Movement, the People's Media (w/ Mel Buer, Gabby, & Garrison Davis): Working People talks to Mel Buer (Protean Magazine), Gabby (DefendPDX), and Garrison Davis, three independent journalists who have been on the front lines this summer covering the anti-police protests in Minneapolis, Portland, and Omaha. We talk about how events have unfolded from their vantage point, the hazards of doing this vital work, and about the importance of anticapitalist media. Listen here.

The Big Issue: Reopening, Unions, and Strike Threats

There is a 100% chance that college kids, if they return to campus, will get drunk, have parties, and generally act in ways that will facilitate outbreaks of coronavirus. This is guaranteed to happen. To pretend that it will not happen is to exhibit a plainly idiotic refusal to recognize reality. Nevertheless, many major universities have forged ahead with the fantasy of reopening for in person classes. Some took less than a week to be forced to shut down again.

Universities are a good demonstration of the fact that, absent any serious countervailing pressure, businesses will reopen whether it is safe or not, because they fear the devastating economic consequences if they remain closed. Some businesses, like meatpacking plants, have been very up front about their willingness to sacrifice workers for profits since the beginning of the pandemic; others, like universities, have searched painstaking for fig leaves to cover this reality. But reality it is. All of these enterprises do different things, but none of them are in the worker protection business. Nor is the U.S. government very interested in worker protection, these days. That means unions are the last line of defense.

In industries that are dense with unions who are willing and able to make credible strike threats—public schools, entertainment—employers have been forced to put together believable safety plans for returning to work, or else their people are not going to return to work. In industries that are not unionized much at all, or have only unions that are unwilling or unable to make credible strike threats, businesses are mostly doing whatever they think they can get away with. Funny how that works.

So, unionize your industry. But don’t just unionize your industry. Make your unions organize to be able to strike. The threat needs to be real, so the strike isn’t necessary. If it is necessary, though, you want to be able to do it. It’s better than death.

Labor News This Week


The business model of Uber and Lyft—to attempt to destroy all competitors in the transportation market by subsidizing the cost of rides through a combination of investor capital and brash avoidance of labor costs by misclassifying workers as independent contractors—is, perhaps, collapsing, as courts slowly begin to enforce the law. Good.


This week in “America is a hell society”: California is having trouble fighting their deadly wildfires because so many of the prison inmates that make up a large portion of their firefighting teams are on lockdown due to prison Covid outbreaks. PRISON LABOR IS LABOR. Get these people in the firefighters union.


Here is a very long piece by an anonymous “research collective” detailing the history of the UFCW’s multimillion-dollar payments to a consultant in return for services of dubious value. If you are a UFCW insider who would like to share your thoughts on this, you can email me.


More public defenders are unionizing. So are Greenpeace workers.


ProPublica details how meatpacking companies spent years ignoring warnings about the very things that have happened to their workers in this pandemic.


And unions want slower line speeds in chicken plants.


An interesting look at how police unions have bullied public officials in various cities.


Employees at the Tate galleries in England are on strike.


More than 100 workers have tested positive for Covid at a Christmas tree farm in North Carolina. Send angry letters to Santa.

Final Thought

“I feel sure that the police are helping us more than I could do in ten years. They are making more anarchists than the most prominent people connected with the anarchist cause could make in ten years. If they will only continue I shall be very grateful; they will save me lots of work.” —Emma Goldman

In solidarity,

Hamilton Nolan



Tapping the Enormous Electoral Potential of Low Income Voters



What impact could 34 million poor nonvoters make if they started participating in elections? According to a new report commissioned by the Poor People’s Campaign, it could be massive and warrants the deployment of significant 2020 campaign resources.

August 22, 2020 Frances Madeson CAPITAL & MAIN

https://portside.org/2020-08-22/tapping-enormous-electoral-potential-low-income-voters

It seems a little risky in retrospect, but since launching three years ago, the Poor People’s Campaign has been executing its political strategy on a dearly held hunch: namely, that increasing the volume of poor and low income voters will make for more democratic elections and more equitable social policy. Putting their intuition to the test, the national advocacy group, which garnered 3 million attendees at its virtual Moral March on Washington in June, commissioned a study to learn if their best guess, which Poor People’s Campaign policy director Shailly Gupta Barnes calls more of “a motivating belief,” was even in the ballpark.

What they learned made them glad they’d followed their political instincts. According to Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis, a co-director of the Poor People’s Campaign, the data empirically prove what the organizers themselves have long understood—“poor and low income people can become a transformative new electorate.” Especially in the South, where they’ve already made a difference in competitive gubernatorial races in Kentucky and North Carolina, unseating incumbents even in the face of extreme voter suppression.

As the national conventions of the two major U.S. political parties approach, the Democrats on August 17-20, followed by the Republicans on August 24-27, the Poor People’s Campaign has released a white paper written by Robert Paul Hartley, an economist with the Center on Poverty and Social Policy at Columbia University. Entitled Unleashing the Power of Poor and Low-Income Americans: Changing the Political Landscape, the 22-page analysis crunches numbers from the MIT Election Data and Science Lab’s 2017 reports on presidential and U.S. Senate elections and the Current Population Survey from the U.S. Census Bureau and the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. About 20 percent of the total electorate in Arkansas, Kentucky, Mississippi, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Tennessee and West Virginia are low income nonvoters.

Hartley has quantified the number of eligible low income nonvoters in each state in relation to the state’s total electorate – about one out of five in Arkansas, Kentucky, Mississippi, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Tennessee and West Virginia – and has related those percentages to margins of victory to show the potential impacts on elections. He then calculated what percentage of new low income voters would have to vote the same way in order to flip the party affiliations in the 15 states where the victory margins are small enough to be affected. Poor People’s Campaign leaders say the newly revealed possibilities warrant a fresh look from party apparatchiks strategizing where best to deploy campaign resources.

“In the South, if you just take the 13 former Confederate states, that’s over 168 electoral votes,” said Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II, president of Repairers of the Breach, the second Poor People’s Campaign co-chair at Tuesday’s press conference announcing the report. “And if you change just three or four states in the South, then you fundamentally shift the political calculus.”

Some of the findings are based on speculative questions, e.g., if low income voters participated at the same rate as higher income voters, then what effects can be expected? One likely answer is that rebalancing representation between higher and lower income voters may take more than one election cycle. But other findings mark what could be the beginnings of a shift away from the widely accepted notion that poor people don’t vote. The increase in responsiveness among poor and low income voters measured in Figure One below, which correlates to the worsening of their economic circumstances, shows a renewed engagement with the electoral process.

“Over time, the data shows that eligible voters living below twice the poverty line do respond to changes in the economy and the candidates and issues,” Barber says.

“For the 2018 mid-term, the four year increase in voting percentage, around 10 percent, was about the same for higher and lower income voters,” he explained. Interpreting the data, he says, “There’s an opportunity for mobilization. They are responsive and they do move in tandem with one another.”

Candidates are taking note and are stepping up to center poor people’s issues in their electioneering. Theoharis says the Poor People’s Campaign will be sponsoring upcoming town halls tied to eight U.S. Senate races, details soon to be announced.

“The Senate is in play,” confirms Rev. Barber. “And poor folk have the power to make the play.”

He’s referring to the 34 million poor and low income people in the U.S. who, though eligible, did not vote in the 2016 election but who, if galvanized, could turn many tides in November. Hartley shows that in some states even if only a fraction of this untapped voting pool is activated, the victory margins in prior elections are easily surpassed. “In Michigan,” Hartley explains, “if only one percent of low income nonvoters moved to the polls and voted, they would in total equal the most recent margin of victory.”“In Michigan, if only one percent of low income nonvoters moved to the polls and voted, they would in total equal the most recent margin of victory.”
Robert Paul Hartley, economist, Columbia University

In the seven states that the United States of Inequality has identified as 2020 battleground states, the percentages of low income eligible nonvoters relative to the total electorate in 2016 are considerable: 17 percent in Arizona, 11 percent in Florida, 13 percent in Michigan and North Carolina, 14 percent in Ohio, 12 percent in Pennsylvania, and 11 percent in Wisconsin. When compared to the victory margins for the races in the 2018 midterms, real political transformation starts looking achievable in a dynamic political environment.

For the 2016 presidential race, not all but some margins of victory were less than the percentage of representation in the total electorate – 13 percent in Arizona, 7 percent in Florida, 1 percent in Michigan, 19 percent in North Carolina, 35 percent in Ohio, 4 percent in Pennsylvania, and 5 percent in Wisconsin. For those who support the Poor People’s Campaign emphasis on building political power by “registering people for a movement that votes,” these findings are invigorating, notwithstanding the safety challenges for voter registration drives and ultimately get-out-the-vote efforts posed by the pandemic.

“Poverty and racism are the fissures, the wounds, through which this pandemic has power,” Barber said at the event on Tuesday.

The way Barber sees it, the fight to the ballot box is also a fight for self-survival.

“There’s an economic annihilation going on. Seven hundred people die from poverty every day in this country,” he says. “But poverty is not inevitable, it’s created by public policy. We’re tired of being ignored and so we’re going to show our power at the ballot box in November. That’s what our campaign is committed to from here until we no longer exist on this Earth.”

Barber’s pleased to have Unleashing the Power in his back pocket. He says:

“It’s amazing when people see this data and see how much power poor and low income voters have. They are not going to just wait for the politicians to acknowledge them; they are going to change the narrative, they are going to be a power, they are going to vote in a way that expresses that power.”

Team Biden attacks TMI — help us keep up the pressure


Biden's campaign hates that our accountability journalism forced them to stop echoing GOP talking points.


David Sirota
Aug 22




Friends:

Joe Biden’s campaign is attacking us because we reported something that made them retreat — and so we need you to click here and help us right now.

To review: this week, we published a huge story that forced Biden’s campaign to frantically backpedal away from echoing Republican talking points. It was proof that our accountability journalism is working. Now, Biden’s campaign is attacking us — it deployed its paid campaign consultant to publish an angry diatribe calling TMI “irrelevant,” even as our reporting forced Biden’s campaign to walk back its comments about budget austerity.

Clearly, our accountability journalism about both parties is having a major impact — and we are right now trying to expand that journalism. So here’s my ask:

We need everyone who can to go to sirota.substack.com/subscribe to pitch in and become a supporting subscriber.

Let me be clear: in the same week we published our impactful story about Biden, we also broke some big news about Donald Trump administration rewarding GOP donors. The point here is: we are a grassroots-funded news outlet that scrutinizes BOTH political parties, whether they like it or not.

If you want journalism that isn’t afraid to hold politicians accountable, please click here and become a supporting subscriber — and please pass on this request to anyone else you may know who wants to support this kind of work.

Thanks for considering this request. Onward.

Rock the boat,

Sirota