Big week for working families!

159215306_10160915378199778_4021865164552875334_n.jpg

That's two wins in 24 hours, Steelworkers! Earlier today, the U.S. House approved the Senate’s amendments and passed the next Covid Relief package. The next step is the President’s signature, which is expected to come ahead of the expiration of jobless benefits this weekend.

This measure includes passage of the Butch Lewis bill as well as so many other provisions that will help move the economy into recovery. Find out more from our Feedback Report at http://usw.to/3pz and thank you for your work on this! #uswrr

The Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act passed!

159630620_10160913248834778_633859611144670447_o.jpg

The Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act (H.R. 842) passed tonight with bipartisan support! 225- 206 (1 representative did not vote). Look for our Feedback Report in your inboxes!

Thank you. It’s your voices that move our priorities forward. It’s the calls you make, the conversations you have with your coworkers, the emails you send, and the personal experiences you share with your lawmakers that make days like today so critical to putting bills like the PRO Act forward to protect our members and communities.

On to the Senate! #uswrr #PROActNow

Union activists convene online to share Women of Steel origin stories

Our USW Women of Steel (WOS) program hosted a panel discussion on International Women’s Day focusing on the origins of the union’s activist-arm built around leadership and empowerment.

The virtual conversation, moderated by WOS Director Ann Flener, highlighted historic events including the union’s first Women of Steel resolution, introduced at the union’s 1992 Constitutional Convention. Activists and union members also shared intimate, personal experiences they’ve endured and challenges they’ve overcome while navigating their workplaces and the labor movement as women.  

Roberta Wood, one of thousands of women who went to work in the steel industry in the 1970s, spoke on her entrance into the male-dominated mill in the union’s former District 31 in Gary, Ind. 

“My thinking at the time was this was a real job, a job with real pay I could use to support myself,” reflected Wood.

Of course, there were still challenges she and the other women faced every day. “Sometimes you had to walk a mile just to use the restroom,” said Wood. “And we had to use hotels for our women’s caucus to meet because we didn’t have access to the union halls.”

Wood and her co-workers eventually organized and ran for local election—and won.

The panel also featured labor leaders including former USW Vice President at Large Carol Landry, USW Vice President Leeann Foster, and Coalition of Labor Union Women (CLUW) President Elise Bryant.

Foster, who oversees the union’s paper sector, closed the evening conversation and gave a shout-out to fellow International Executive Board member Roxanne Brown, who serves as Vice President at Large.

“Roxy and I truly stand on the shoulders of the women who came before us,” said Foster.

Click here to watch the panel.

USW @ Work Winter 2021 Issue

USW@Work: Volume 16, Issue 1

USW@Work: Volume 16, Issue 1

FEATURES

Page 4: Serving & Protecting

Niagara County is home to about 105 members of Local 4-2001 who serve as deputies, investigators and other law enforcement agents for the county sheriff’s office. They are part of a larger group of more than 600 USW members who serve in a similar capacity across the United States, and more than 25,000 public workers in the USW overall.

Page 14: USW Members Hopeful on Infrastructure

As President Joe Biden begins his administration, members in the USW’s manufacturing sector are optimistic that the new chief executive’s ambitious “Build Back Better” proposals will finally deliver a long-awaited comprehensive plan to overhaul the nation’s crumbling infrastructure.

Page 22: USW Members Play Crucial Roles in COVID-19 Vaccine Distribution

As COVID-19 infection rates soared to ever-higher levels early this year, hundreds of Steelworkers put their lives on the line, and in some cases logged exhausting amounts of overtime, to distribute the vaccines essential to ending the pandemic.

Click here to read this issue as a downloadable and printable PDF.