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We are the 99 percent

OWS Co‐ops Support New Era Factory Workers

Posted 11 years ago on July 15, 2012, 1:28 p.m. EST by OccupyWallSt

a crowd of union workers march toward their factory carrying signs
Republic Windows and Doors workers occupy their factory for the first time in Dec. 2008, chanting "Bank of America got bailed out, we got sold out," eventually inspiring OWS and many others to do the same

via OWS Coops

Our Best Chance for a Better Future: Let the People Rule

The Republic Windows and Doors workers in Chicago are trying to take the first step into that future and are attempting to buy the factory they used to be employees in. But the company would rather scrap the factory and avoid the workers. We will all lose if they lose.

Chicago Workers Fight Back

The cost of living keeps rising as wages fall. We can sit back and whine, or we can stand up and fight. The factory workers of New Era have chosen to fight. Rather than watch their jobs sunken into the abyss by the rich, they’ve decided to buy their factory. It’s a good faith effort to build a better world where they will both earn their keep and experiment with self-management. Now, their company, Serious Energy, is trying to deny them the right to bid for the machinery they’ve been working on for years. As they march the 99% into exciting new efforts toward economic justice, we, members of the cooperative working group of New York City, call everyone who has supported our movement to stand with them.

The Full Story

For far too long, the United States manufacturing sector has been hemorrhaging good union jobs, particularly across what is now known as the Rust Belt. Chicago, the city of broad shoulders, is a city that has struggled with skyrocketing poverty and the departure of hundreds of thousands of blue collar families who just couldn’t make ends meet.

When Bank of America and the Republic Windows and Doors company decided to illegally cut the jobs at a tax subsidized factory on Goose Island, the workers and their union, Electrical Workers Union Local 1, took the immediate steps to demand their just rights to compensation and/or their jobs. They didn’t whine and complain that the economy wasn’t working for them, right in 2008 as the banks were being bailed out and the people were being sold out. They took direct action to make sure they could continue to feed their families.

It was the first factory occupation this country had seen in 71 years, and it represented a break with the fear and complacency with which working people had been taking the hit for the inept management of their bosses and the banks. They thought a new company, Serious Energy, had come along to build sustainable products and keep the United States working.

Nearly three years later, working people across many classes came together in an effort to reverse the growing brutality of economic inequality in the United States, and build a new world based on the principles of direct democracy and dignity for all. We gave rise to a whole series of occupations of parks and plazas across the country and the world.

The workers, as many of us have, came to find that there’s no way to place all of their faith in big businesses and the same system that keeps grinding us back down. Serious Materials, for one reason or another, has been unable to turn the factory around. And that’s fine, because these workers have a sense of imagination. They’re ready to run their factory themselves. Just as cooperatives like ours have found fertile soil in Occupy Wall Street within which to grow, These workers are seeking a new way forward based in a rich history of economic democracy the world over.

The idea is simple. If owners and bosses can’t keep us working, then let’s try to do it ourselves. The workers at this window and door factory have appropriately titled themselves New Era, seeking a solution for working people out of a system that has cast us aside out of blinded greed.

Unfortunately, Serious Energy and its financial backers have not stuck to their side of the bargain much better than Republic did. Where Republic and Bank of America attempted to sell off the parts of the factory to a non-union plant in Iowa, violate Illinois law that the workers get 90 days compensation or notice, and continued to receive tax subsidies for maintaining jobs that they had in fact cut, Serious sounds ready and willing to sell off the factory, and refuse the workers their fair opportunity to buy the very parts they’ve been working on for many years to protect their jobs and attempt a cooperative model.

As workers in current or developing cooperatives, and people tired of bankers willing to gamble away any sense of human progress and their bought out politicians, we stand in solidarity with the workers of the proposed New Era cooperative in both their willingness to create what they were told was impossible, and their fight to get a fair shake in the bidding process from Serious Energy, and its financier Mesirow Financial. If corporations can’t solve our economic crisis, then we’d like to see them get out of the way and let us build democratic solutions. Even funnier, Mesirow Financial claims that 91.5% of its company is owned by a quarter of its employees, and we want to know why they’re willing to deny that style of management to the UE workers at New Era.

It is the duty of everyone who has believed in our movement, as well as those who told protesters to stop whining and just work, to come out in support all of these people who are ready to labor and willing to experiment with direct democracy.

If you can get involved, please share and sign on to this statement, head over to interoccupy.net/newera, and help us keep the pressure on. Negotiations are scheduled to begin again on Friday so it’s very urgent. Join the conversations on the forum or start one to figure out a strategy to support these workers, and consider donating to the workers’ fund to purchase the factory.

And when everything’s said and done, we know where we’re buying our windows.

-The NYC Occupy Wall Street worker cooperative working group & OccuCopy

34 Comments

34 Comments


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[-] 4 points by 99nproud (2697) 9 years ago
[-] 3 points by 99nproud (2697) 9 years ago

OWS & worker co ops. Perfect together

http://jacksonrising.wordpress.com/

Strugglin for freedom from oligarch bankster bastards

[-] 2 points by 99nproud (2697) 9 years ago

worker Co ops in Cincinnati

http://www.soapboxmedia.com/features/091614-growing-a-new-type-of-food-business.aspx

Growing Always, All ways.

[-] 2 points by turbocharger (1756) 9 years ago

Excellent link

[-] 2 points by turbocharger (1756) 9 years ago

It will change for the individual who wants to take action quickly. For those that don't, probably never.

[-] 4 points by 99nproud (2697) 9 years ago

It will change for all because the arc of history bends towards justice.

Taking action quickly benefits more than the individual because those taking action know that "we are in this together"

We will create change for ALL, even those slow to action. We are certainly not going to penalize the slower to action. We will only urge them on to action.

We need the slow as well.

[-] 1 points by turbocharger (1756) 9 years ago

Everything is relative. We tend to look at our working class as struggling here, while others in other places would look at them as having everything a person could want.

Its all relative. Especially if the world goes into coopt mode, the ones that grind will make it, the ones who dont will fall behind. I'm a grinder. I have friends who simply can't even get out of bed in the morning, and when they do, first thing they do is cook their brain.

There is no solution to bring those types up to the levels we are talking about. If they dont want to take action, the action takers will slowly move away.

[-] 1 points by 99nproud (2697) 9 years ago

We will in fact bring as many as possible along. Focusing on the vast majority of decent hard working families is understandable, but even drug addicts (to which you allude to) will be embraced and encouraged to improve their lot & contribute to the revolutionary change we require.

"We need everyone to change everything"

"no solution to bring those types"? I Disagree, solutions exist for all. And if our "action takers" embrace the obviously best philosophy of "we're in this together" moving away is not an option.

Even lazy burnouts are welcomed.

Solidarity

[-] 1 points by turbocharger (1756) 9 years ago

Where are you bringing them?

[-] 1 points by 99nproud (2697) 9 years ago

WE are bringing ALL to a new system that values labor over capital.

Where the peoples government represent the people and not corporations.

Where people (as well as our environment) are put ahead of profits.

Does this sound familiar? Are you unaware of the goals we are fighting for?

I think not.

You wanna come?

[-] 1 points by MattHolck0 (3867) 9 years ago

I have known many groups of friends

[-] 1 points by MattHolck0 (3867) 9 years ago

some of us just stay busy

[-] 1 points by 99nproud (2697) 9 years ago

This matters

http://www.wagescooperatives.org/tools

Struggle on

[-] 1 points by 99nproud (2697) 9 years ago

"Farther, Faster, Together"

http://www.usworker.coop/

Join the fight to change everything

[-] 4 points by VQkag2 (16478) 11 years ago

Signed and passed on. More worker owned manufacturing is the solution.

Solidarnosc.

[-] 2 points by m4trix87 (71) 11 years ago

"Solidarnosc."

Not the best name to use (was corrupted by the Vatican and so became responsible for bringing capitalism to USSR instead of a more democratic socialism as it originally intended) but agree.

[-] 3 points by 99nproud (2697) 9 years ago

Poll : Which is more important Worker co ops, or Karma points?

[-] 3 points by VQkag2 (16478) 11 years ago

oops. sorry my bad. was thinkin of Lech Walesa and the workers striking in Poland.

Solidarity

[-] 2 points by Bighead1883 (285) 11 years ago

Good luck with this.The cycle of greed has had the parasite entirely consume it`s host.Meanwhile MSM peddles corporate dogma denying the truth behind the political/financial swindle which is the GFC.But slowly the truth is being understood as the world wakes from the nightmare and just who is responsible.Obama is right about one thing,Romney is the problem.Make your rage heard.Solidarity.

[-] 1 points by MattLHolck (16833) from San Diego, CA 11 years ago

why is this so long ?

[-] 3 points by 99nproud (2697) 9 years ago

Got anything else?

[-] 1 points by DKAtoday (33802) from Coon Rapids, MN 11 years ago

Signed and shared out on twitter.

[-] 4 points by 99nproud (2697) 9 years ago

Worker co op alternatives abound

http://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/2014/08/24/business-model-with-altitude-for-market-basket/W3zaaaNJvY5oSPimORpchN/story.html

Can always find a good current example of this important business model that favors labor.

[-] 3 points by 99nproud (2697) 9 years ago

Worker co ops in France.

http://www.thenews.coop/87811/news/business/crisis-led-to-an-increase-in-the-number-of-worker-co-operatives-in-france/

Some positive news. Like minded people growing an economic moel that serves labor 1st, corporation/capital 2nd.

[-] 1 points by spermcoffinACAB (5) 11 years ago

thanks. signed it.