General Cable Lauds Employees, Then Cuts Benefits


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Greed, pure and simple. How else can one describe what’s taking place at General Cable in Lincoln, RI right now? A company that is making money hand-over-fist for its investors, because of the hard work of its employees; decides those employees are owed nothing in return when it comes to raises, and even feels they should pay more for their health care.

In its annual report, General Cable touts how operating income grew by 12 percent to $248 million last year, on the strength of almost $6 billion in sales; with all of this taking place during a down economy.  Also in that report, the company boasts how the plant in Lincoln received a “Best Plant Award” from Industry Week magazine.

When it’s convenient for them to do so, like in the Industry Week article, management at the plant lauds the employees and all they’ve done to make the Lincoln plant a stand out.

Manufacturing manager John Tremblay emphasizes that the buy-in of the workers and the local United Steelworkers union has been key to the success of the switch to cellularization.

“You can make the physical moves with the equipment, but the real benefits come when you get the associates engaged,” Tremblay says.

However, now that the contract for the members of USW Local 4543 is up for renegotiation, plant management conveniently forgets everything the employees and union have done to make the plant successful. Instead, they offer minimal wage increases, which barely keep up with the cost of living, while at the same time insist on employees paying more for health and dental coverage that in effect wipe out any wage increase and actually lead to a decrease in take-home pay.

Is this the way a responsible company, which says it values its employees, shows its gratitude?  With a little digging though, finding that what management at the Lincoln plant says publicly isn’t anything like how they actually treat their employees on site.

From what was said at a recent (May 19) solidarity rally outside the plant, attended by most of the members of Local 4543 as well as other local community and labor activists; conditions at the plant are nothing like the picture painted in the annual report and the Industry Week article.

The Industry Week article detailed human resources manager, Mary Igoe, bemoaning the fact that under the old system of doing things there was no camaraderie among the workers.

“They didn’t even talk to each other,” Igoe says. “They were just making wire and pushing it along to the next operation.”

At the recent rally however, it was clear that protecting the company’s human capital always takes a back seat to protecting the company’s bottom line. Along with the HR manager, the maintenance manager, process engineer and other managers all have charges pending for continued harassment of employees. The employees they all claim to revere.

An investigation conducted at the beginning of April looking into some of these charges can hardly be viewed as impartial, as Ms. Igoe brought in a human resources manager from a neighboring plant in Willimantic, Conn.; one of five facilities also under the direction of vice president and team leader, Mike Monti.

It seems that for a global company like General Cable, to avoid the appearance of impropriety, it might have been better to go outside the immediate sphere of local management to get an objective opinion. However, Ms. Igoe decided to forgo the appearance of any conflict of interest and brought in the HR manager from a neighboring facility. It just so happens one of the principals under investigation used to work at that neighboring facility.

Mr. Steele has also been less than diligent in his investigations, interviewing fewer than half the witnesses to a particular incident involving Local President, Ed Matias. From their point of view, the members of Local 4543 feel that no one less than Stephen Roush, General Cable’s Vice President, North American Human Resources should be the one to investigate recent developments at the Lincoln plant.

However, when reached, Mr. Roush offered the quote, “We appreciate your inquiry, but the Lincoln plant is currently engaged in labor negotiations and we have no comment at this time.” Again demonstrating that the corporate policy is to use the employees as a showcase when they can; but take advantage of them at the bargaining table and retaliate against them for demanding their fair share of the profits they help the company derive.

People are powerful drivers of General Cable performance. Our organizational strategy is built on the belief that people are the differentiating element in gaining a competitive advantage. We recruit and develop talented people who bring special knowledge in such areas as manufacturing excellence, technology, quality, safety, management, purchasing, sales and accounting.

Across the global enterprise ― on the job and on the team, on task and on time ― we would not be in our current position of strength without the individual and collective efforts of the more than 11,000 General Cable associates who come to work every day to make a difference.

It actually seems a little strange he didn’t reference the company’s corporate citizenship policy towards its people, stated in the above text box and at: http://www.generalcablecsr.com/citizenship/people/

In another troubling example of how the company says one thing publicly but acts completely differently in its management policies, the company leads off its summary of financial and operating highlights in the annual report by pointing out how they, “Further improved one of the best safety records in the industry.” However, that statistic may be misleading, especially at the Lincoln plant when health and safety manager, Rick Flaxington, routinely encourages employees not report injuries, or directs them to the company doctor rather than have them seek treatment from their own physicians or at an emergency room. In certain instances, employees were threatened if they sought medical treatment and one was even fired for getting hurt on the job. After an 18-month battle he was reinstated.  The company doctor, Dr. Steven G. McCloy, received poor ratings on vitals.com, a clearinghouse for doctor reviews: http://www.vitals.com/doctors/Dr_Steven_Mccloy#reviews . The doctor also has no website and no one answered the phone at his office.

So, now that the members of Local 4543 are standing up for their rights and voting down a regressive contract proposal by a margin of 115-8, Ms. Igoe isn’t exactly looking for members to be so comradely. All along the company has been trying to divide and conquer; pitting older versus younger employees by trying to change contract language regarding seniority.

The membership stands firm though; showing that a group of workers from disparate backgrounds, from the old French Canadian and polish populations to longtime transplants from Portugal and the Azores and newer immigrants from Latin America, the Caribbean and Africa all have the same thing in mind – being rewarded for the hard work that helped the company they work for become one of the best in its industry.

For more info on working conditions at the plant, watch this YouTube video:

Occupy Prov Plans Sidewalk Protest During Netroots


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Occupy-Providence

Occupy-ProvidenceNetroots Nation won’t be the only progressive group taking Providence by storm this weekend. Occupy Providence, the activists that protested economic inequality by turning Burnside Park into a tent city in 2011, plans to re-occupy the city in honor of Netroots.

Local poet and activist Jared Paul, one of the original organizers of Occupy Providence, said the group plans a four-day, three night occupation of the sidewalks near the Convention Center during Netroots starting Thursday and lasting through Sunday.

“We believe our occupation will show that the voice of the 99 percent is present and active at this political convention,” he said. Besides, he added, the action will make a good alternative to those “who don’t have the money for the registration fee.”

Paul stressed that Occupy isn’t protesting Netroots Nation – while he said some of the high-level political operatives and beltway Democrats involved with Netroots don’t always have the best interest of the 99 percent in mind, he added, “many of the people there are our allies, and we look forward to making more of them our allies.”

Mary Rickles, a spokeswoman for Netroots, said the annual conference is on the side of the Occupy movement in general and Occupy Providence in particular.

“We stand with the 99 percent too and welcome the conversation they want to have,” she said. “We’ve been supportive of the Occupy movement from the get-go. Last fall, we publicly petitioned Mayor Taveras to not evict the protestors from Burnside Park. And, we’ve got a number of Occupy folks on panels during the conference. We look forward to working with them on pushing out the message that our leaders must stand for the 99 percent.”

Netroots has planned several panel discussions on the Occupy movement, such as: Beyond Occupy: What Does a New Economic System Look Like? on Thursday at 10:30 and That Will Never Work: What Progressives Can Learn from OWS, on Friday at 4:30. Here’s a full list of the OWS-related panel discussions at Netroots.

Outside of the convention, Occupy Providence’s Facebook page says there will be, “Rallies, marches, sign and banner making, workshops, teach-ins, poetry, music, general assembly, working groups, chanting, dancing, art-o-lution, radical games, and more!”

Here’s a link to the full schedule of events for Occupy Providence’s sidewalk protest this week.

In a press release sent out today, Occupy Providence detailed its demands for the sidewalk occupation:

  1. No 38 Studios bailout: The 38 Studios debacle illustrates how our local government recklessly gambled on the notion that the “job creators” are the 1% rather than investing in small business development, micro loans, or the expansion of public works projects that helped pull us out of the last Great Depression. Now, to add insult to injury, Rhode Island taxpayers are being asked to bail out this insider deal or face financial blackmail from Wall Street rating companies that were co-conspirators to begin with.
  2. Tax the 1%:  We need proven solutions not gambles. The top marginal tax rate was increased to 63% during the Great Depression and steadily increased, reaching 94% (on all income over $200,000) in the following decades.  OPVD believes tax rate increase for the wealthiest Americans during the Great Depression set a precedent, and that similar measures are now needed to pull us out of the current crisis that is again the product of Wall Street greed.
  3. Solidarity not austerity, locally, nationally and internationally: The third anti-austerity demand reflects the desire of working people around the world that our governments stop punishing the victims of this Grand Theft by Wall Street and instead hold the perpetrators accountable.

Local Progressives Toast Netroots Wednesday Night


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What would Netroots Nation in Providence be without a toast from the local progressive community?

The annual conference of lefty journalists and activists kicks off here Thursday morning, but the party starts the night before. RI Future and Working RI, a coalition of local labor unions and community activists, is hosting a happy hour from 6 to 8 p.m. on Wednesday in the Convention Center Rotunda.

The Netroots staff will be putting the finishing touches on the big three-day event of progressive speakers and panels and networking opportunities, and it’ll be a great opportunity to welcome them to the Ocean State.

Called “one of America’s fastest rising progressive voices in radio, “Jeff Santos, of Revolution Radio in Boston, will be opening his Real Romney Tour then too. Come see the first night of his eight city tour exposing the hypocrisy of Mitt Romney. His live broadcast, featuring live music and comedy, starts at 5 pm and it would be great to have a crowd for that.

Plus, you can have a drink with me, labor leader George Nee, organizer and former congressional candidate David Segal, progressive legislators Art Handy and Teresa Tanzi, Pat Crowley, who has done a fantastic job putting the party together, and many many more.

Here’s the Facebook invitation (in case we forgot to send it to you personally). Please let us know you’re coming.

We’ll be posting a lot more on Netroots this week so stay tuned … for an overview, check out their site here, and for a list of speakers check out the preview the Netroots staff recently posted to RI Future.

Here’s a compilation of some of the panels that will speak to local concerns we posted way back in April. And here’s the complete list.

We also set up a page with a Netroots-centric Twitter widget so you can keep abreast of all the action live.

Hope to see you all Wednesday night for a toast … and then at the conference the next day through the weekend!

RI Progress Report: Netroots Preview, Myth of Union Power, Abortion Politics, 38 Studios and Scott Walker


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Netroots Nation comes to Providence this week … you can expect a ton of coverage from us, both previewing the big progressive networking event and covering all the action on the panels, the keynote speakers, the parties and the protests. The Phoenix put together a great Netroots preview story last week (still on news stands now) and the Projo has a nice piece this morning … this time, though, the august daily does not put scare quotes around the word progressive.

Scott MacKay dispels the myth that organized labor holds outsized sway at the State House writing, “There was a time when labor had outsize clout at the State House. That would have been 1972, not 2012.” MacKay, who knows the State House as well as anyone, rattles off the litany of losses labor has sustained over the past 30 plus years … It’s sad but true: one can literally chart Rhode Island falling further into economic decline as unions grew less influential during that period. As we’ve written before, anyone telling you organized labor runs Rhode Island is either trying to sell you a right-wing point of view, or has already been sold one.

It’s not just labor that doesn’t have juice at the State House … neither does the women’s rights movement. The Projo has a telling tale in Political Scene that suggests Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed may have sent Gov. Chafee’s EDC nominees, which include Pablo Rodriguez, a pro-choice doctor,  to a committee controlled by conservative Senator Michael McCaffrey rather than the Corporations Committee, chaired by progressive Senator Josh Miller.

Seems the new Miss USA, Olivia Culpo of Cranston, has a bit of a progressive (or libertarian_ streak in her … when asked if she thought a transgender woman could be Miss USA, she said, “This is a free country and to each their own.”

Not only is it Netroots week, it’s also Scott Walker recall week … and it’s looking like he might survive. Either way, Netroots will have a post-mortem on it in Providence on Friday.

Ted Nesi links to a piece by The Hill suggesting that progressive Democrat Sheldon Whitehouse might be a contender to run the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee.

A primer on Florida’s Stand Your Ground Law.

Jared Paul and Randall Rose, of Occupy Providence, weigh in on the 38 Studios debacle.

Here’s a lot ripe for redevelopment between the State House and North Main Street: