Kilmartin asks 10 retail chain stores if they use on-call scheduling


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american eagle outfittersAttorney General Peter Kilmartin sent letters to 10 retail chain companies that do business in Rhode Island to warn them against and request information about what is known as on call scheduling.

On-call scheduling, or on-call shifts, is the employer practice of informing employees the day of a work shift if they are needed or not. Kilmartin sent letters to: Justice Just for Girls, American Eagle Outfitters, Carters, Inc., Coach, Inc., Forever 21, Aeropostale, Inc., Pacific Sunwear of California, Inc., Payless ShoeSource, Inc., Vans VF Corp., and Zumiez, Inc.

“Such unpredictable work schedules take a toll on employees,” said each letter [Click here to read a letter]. “Our letter today is prompted by the concerns outlined above and by our shared interest in the well being of workers nationwide. Because we have reason to believe [enter name of business] maybe using this methodology for scheduling, we would like to know about your use of ‘on call shifts.'”

The letters request scheduling information from the 10 companies, as well as if the businesses have analyzed the “actual affect of ‘on call shifts’ on the productivity or well-being of its employees.”

The Rhode Island Fair Workweek Coalition applauded Kilmartin’s action.

“For too long, scheduling practices like on-call shifts have given employees virtually no warning that their shift is about to start, forcing them to make impossible choices between keeping their job and being able to schedule childcare, look after an aging parent, or keep a doctor’s appointment,” the group said in a statement. “It is simply unfair to give workers so little control over their own lives. We applaud Attorney General Kilmartin and other states for taking a strong stand against policies that should have no place in today’s economy.”

Kilmartin took the action in conjunction with attorneys general from seven other states and the District of Columbia, who also sent out similar letters.

“A majority of retailers no longer use on-call shifts, as they recognize the practice in unfair to employees who must keep their day free, arrange for child care needs, and give up the chance to get another job or attend a class – often all for nothing,” said Kilmartin in a news release.  “It is our hope that these remaining retailers will follow suit and end this unjust method of scheduling work hours.”

According to an article in today’s Wall Street Journal, the movement against on-call scheduling took root last year when the New York attorney general sent a similar letter to 14 retail chains. “Last year, New York’s attorney general, Eric Schneiderman, sent similar requests to 14 retail chains, including Target Corp. and Gap Inc.,” according to the WSJ article. “Not long after, Gap, Abercrombie & Fitch Co., and L Brands Inc.’s Bath & Body Works announced that they would discontinue the practice. The letters sent Tuesday state that on-call scheduling doesn’t appear to be a business necessity, given that a number of retailers don’t use the method.”

Nursing home workers Fight for $15


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2016-04-13 SEIU 001Following a wave of successful efforts to raise the minimum wage in California and New York, and with news that nursing home workers in Pennsylvania won a $15 starting wage, SEIU 1199 held a “Fight for $15” rally at the State House Wednesday afternoon.

“I shouldn’t have to rely on food stamps if I’m working 40 hours a week taking care of people. But I do! Honestly, I could be making more at Dunkin’ Donts and that’s ridiculous,” said Nichole Ward, a CNA at Greenville Skilled Nursing and Rehab in a statement.

Of special interest was legislation submitted by Rep Scott Slater (H7547) and Senator Gayle Goldin (S2521) that directs funds in the nursing home budget to raise wages for nursing home workers. Similar legislation was passed in Massachusetts last year. Both Goldin and Slater promised to fight for this legislation, with Slater calling it his top priority.

Shirley Lomba, a CNA/CMT for 14 years warned that talented nurses will soon be leaving our state for the better paying jobs in Massachusetts, saying, “many of us will drive 15-20 minutes… where we can earn more money.”

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Video: Verizon employees in NK explain the strike


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verizon strikeAlmost 40,000 Verizon workers went on strike today, more than 1,000 of them work in Rhode Island. Four of them set up a picket line outside of the Verizon store on Ten Rod Road in North Kingstown.

These Verizon employees told me one of their demands is for more high-speed FIOS to be installed in Rhode Island. This would increase work for employees and service for customers. Verizon reported more than $5 billion in profits last year.

Trump can’t deal with Rhode Island


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It seems that Donald Trump won’t be visiting Rhode Island out of a fear of “disruptive protesters.” Steve Klamkin of WPRO asked Governor Gina Raimondo about this at an unrelated event this morning.

Trump LogoThe Providence Journal picked up the story, quoting Rep Joe Trillo, RI Chair of Trump’s campaign as saying, “local college students were planning to protest if Trump came to Rhode Island.” Trillo said the cost of added security for the event “may not be worth it.”

Rhode Island has a solid history of chasing loud mouthed racists out of our state. In 2013 our state made national headlines when former New York City police commissioner Ray Kelly, famous for his racist “stop-and-frisk” methods of policing was prevented from speaking at a Brown University event by students.

More recently former US Representative Pete Hoekstra found his anti-refugee message particularly unwelcome in our state when students, clergy and community members countered his message of fear with one of hope and acceptance.

Both events brought commentariat responses similar to Governor Raimondo’s above: Activists should show restraint and civility; shouting down those with opinions you disagree with is counter-productive.

But Trump’s magnificent cowardice shows that this is simply not the case. Calls for civility from those in power are really calls for silence and acquiescence. When a speaker full of money, privilege and power comes to our state to tell us that immigrants are evil, women are second class citizens, or that people of color deserve the brutality police heap upon them, our response cannot polite.

These are not simple political opinions, these are fundamental attacks on our state’s character and values. To politely accept these attacks is cowardice and weakness, and Rhode Islanders are neither.

Here we have a proud tradition of standing up to such attacks.

Trump could never handle Rhode Island. That’s why he ran away.

Photos from the Verizon strike in Providence


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As reported earlier today by Andrew Stewart, Verizon went on strike this morning, and picketers were out in front of the downtown Providence offices starting at 6am. Here are some pictures.

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Sheldon Whitehouse won’t take a position on Burrillville power plant proposal


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whitehouse rappSenator Sheldon Whitehouse is one of Congress’ sharpest critics of the fossil fuel industry when he’s in Washington D.C. When the fossil fuel industry comes to Rhode Island, on the other hand, Rhode Island’s junior senator is less sanctimonious on the subject. He’s not taking a position on a methane power plant proposal for Burrillville currently being considered by the state Energy Facility Siting Board.

“The Senator believes this is an issue that should be left for the state siting board and DEM to decide,” said Whitehouse spokesman Richard Davidson in an email to RI Future on Tuesday. “He feels his time is best spent fighting for national efforts to limit greenhouse gas emissions.”

Davidson was reiterating remarks the senator said during a recent appearance on NBC10 News Conference that seemed to contradict an earlier WPRI report that Whitehouse “supports” the project. “I did not take a position, and I do not intend to take a position,” Whitehouse told NBC10’s Bill Rappleye.

“As a general proposition I’m opposed to fossil fuels,” Whitehouse said. “Nobody fights harder than I do in the Senate to try to knock down the fossil fuel industry, break it’s grip on the Senate and let us solve the problem of climate change.”

But he clearly doesn’t oppose the methane-fueled power plant proposal in his home state.

“To the extent all we are doing is taking out choke points that create artificially high prices for Rhode Islanders or creating potential spikes in electricity when there is very high demand that goes beyond way above regular prices, I’m not going to object to those things,” he told Rappleye. “I object more generally and categorically to having our dependence on fossil fuels.”

The proposal for a new fossil fuel power plant in Burrillville has pitted environmental activists, Burrillville residents and, more recently, local legislators against Governor Gina Raimondo and Invenergy, the company that wants to build and manage the facility. Raimondo and Invenergy promise lower energy prices while activists and locals say the project guarantees fossil fuel production for another three decades while diminishing the quality of life in bucolic Burrillville, a small rural town in northwestern Rhode Island.

Whitehouse was seen as an important bellwether on the proposal because of his ongoing efforts in Congress to call attention to the physical and economic dangers of climate change and continued reliance on fossil fuels. For more than two years, Whitehouse has delivered “Time To Wake Up” speeches on the senate floor that detail the dangers of climate change and dishonesty of the fossil fuel industry.

Local environmentalists were disappointed Whitehouse didn’t oppose the project. They were more disappointed that he told WPRI there was no push back from environmentalists. “From the larger environmental movement – the Save the Bays and the League of Conservation Voters and the Nature Conservancies and all that – there’s no blowback whatsoever. They understand the difference between the national and the local concern,” Whitehouse said, according to the WPRI report.

But a subsequent RI Future report showed Save The Bay and the League of Conservation have not taken positions on the proposed power plant. And the Environment Council of RI, of which the Nature Conservancy is a member, took issue with Whitehouse’s characterization of the political ramifications. “To be clear,” said the group in a news release. “ECRI strongly opposes the proposal to build a new, long-lived fossil-fuel plant in Rhode Island, because building this plant would make it impossible for the state to meet its short-, medium-, and long-term goals for carbon-emission reductions.

Below is a transcript of Whitehouse’s remarks to Bill Rappleye and the full episode of NBC10 News Conference:

As a general proposition I’m opposed to fossil fuels. Nobody fights harder than I do in the Senate to try to knock down the fossil fuel industry, break it’s grip on the Senate and let us solve the problem of climate change.

What happened in this case is that there are two, I think, facilities and one of them bid into the auction and was selected so that’s going to be part of the process going forward. there’s another one that did not bid into the auction but may bid into later auctions or they may try to sell power somehow on the side and that goes into our grid and is part of the process…

I did not take a position, and i do not intend to take a position, in the siting decision that is made or in the auction. there really isn’t a role for a member of congress either in a siting decision which is a contested administrative matter where we really aren’t supposed to try to interfere or in the  capacity auction. so I’ve stayed out of that. I understand the point that we have these terrific spikes in energy prices and we have variances in energy prices particularly natural gas prices in the northeast versus other places where they pay way lower prices because of choke points in the system.

And to the extent all we are doing is taking out choke points that create artificially high prices for Rhode Islanders  or creating potential spikes in electricity when there is very high demand that goes beyond way above regular prices I’m not going to object to those things. I object more generally and categorically to having our dependence on fossil fuel and the way I’m best positioned to fight that is to fight every week every day in the senate to getting something done and I would say we are actually closer than we have ever been to making sure president’s clean power plant stays or getting a carbon fee that adjusts the whole market so the subsidies for fossil fuels are levelized and are no longer given that advantage.

You have to allow administrative procedures to take their course everybody has a chance to say their peace but for a senator or a congressman to try to but into a ongoing administrative proceeding is something that can create an ethics problem and is usually seen as an improper interference. people in that process are entitled to have that be a fair process that comes to its own decision without a senator leaning on it.”

Verizon goes on strike


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VZW SolidarityAfter several months of fruitless negotiations, unionized workers at Verizon have decided to go on strike. Sources indicate that, due to the training of non-union labor over the period of negotiations, this could be a long strike.

IBEW Local 2323 said the following via FaceBook:

After waiting all day for Verizon reach out to the Union in an effort to avoid a work stoppage, they have responded they have nothing for us. Verizon has nothing for your hard work, sacrifice, and dedication to this corporation that off the fruits of your labor have been able to make profits of $1.5 billion dollars over the last 18 months.

Our Unity is our Strength!

Our picket lines will be set up tomorrow morning at 6:00 a.m.

We will continue to cover this story as it develops.

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