A survey of Boston-area residential apartments reveals that many residents of Callahan's properties are dissatisfied with the construction quality of their units. Residents expressed particular concern with noise and the quality of materials in their units, writing comments such as "[c]an clearly hear upstairs neighbor walking. Entire apt. vibrates and rattles. Doors rattle from walking in apt."An organization called Tenant Consumer Protection Services, which has been generating surveys about consumer satisfaction in new residential apartment construction, produced the survey.The survey included responses from Callahan-built residences in Malden, Chelsea, and Chelmsford, and asked residents to rate various topics (such as construction quality, noise level, value for money) on a scale from "very satisfied" to "very dissatisfied." It also allowed space for general comments or concerns.A resident of Chelmsford Woods Residences wrote "paint seems to strip off walls too easily. If there is a spot and it is washed, the paint comes off. Particularly, bathroom paint comes off." Another requested that they "use better quality materials so things last longer & don't break so quickly." Others complained that the windows are extremely drafty and poorly insulated, and one wrote that they had to sleep with ear plugs in every night due to noise.A resident of One North of Boston, in Chelsea, wrote that "building construction is cheap and does not protect from outside excessive noise."At 480 Main in Malden Square, residents complained again of excessive noise, writing "[for] the problem of noise, I can hear my neighbors snore..." and "[t]he walls are so thin and there is no sound-proofing, so I can hear my neighbors talk at 4am! Totally unsatisfied with this situation here." Another respondent wrote "and now they are talking of increasing rent...I am very dissatisfied..."Callahan's business model relies on undercutting legitimate bids by hiring subcontractors who illegally misclassify their workers as independent contractors. Some of Callahan's subcontractors also have a long record of lawsuits and safety violations. The survey results confirm that cutting corners impacts the final product in the case of these residences.via CallahanTruth.com and the New England Carpenters Union
Open Letter to President-elect Donald Trump from Jewish American Organizations
In Our Care: Creating Community Protection in an Era of Uncertainty
First Report on Oral History Project of Domestic Workers and Employers of Domestic Workers
Facebook event here. Please RSVP.
In a post-2016-election environment, domestic workers, many of whom are immigrants, are seeing an increase in anti-immigrant rhetoric, hate crimes, and proposed anti-immigrant policies. The fear and apprehension in our communities are real. On December 4th, in the first of our series on care, we will come together to begin to build relationships across the lines of immigration status to vision together, to resist division, and to create alternative models of safety and protection.

Please RSVP to the Facebook event or to NewEnglandJLC@jewishlabor.org. Email or call with questions: NewEnglandJLC@jewishlabor.org or 617 227-0888.
Action Alert! November 29 Fight for $15 National Day of Action
The Fight for $15 movement began four years ago to uplift low-wage, exploited workers in field predominated by women and people of color. It has already improved the lives of many families. During this post-election season, you can make a significant difference by standing up for a higher minimum wage.On Tuesday, November 29, local fast-food, airport, and other underpaid workers in over 330 cities are taking action in their largest protest yet to demand a $15 an hour minimum wage and the freedom to form a union for 64 million workers making poverty wages.Sign up today to join this historic day of action!
Please join us for any or all of the November 29 actions
- 6 AM Fast Food Strike and Picket
- Location: Central Square McDonald's (463 Mass Ave, Cambridge)
- 11:30 AM Airport Workers Rally
- Location: Memorial Park in East Boston (143 Porter St, Boston)
- 1 PM Jewish Community Meet-Up
- Location: corner of Park St. and Beacon St. in Boston
- Co-sponsored by JALSA, the Boston Workmen's Circle, the Moishe Kavod House, and the Harvard Progressive Jewish Alliance. Please email us if you would also like to co-sponsor this event.
- 1:30 PM Raise Up Massachusetts Announcement
- Location: State House (24 Beacon St, Boston)
Post-Election: T'ruah Statement
About T'ruah: "T'ruah: The Rabbinic Call for Human Rights brings together rabbis and cantors from all streams of Judaism, together with all members of the Jewish community, to act on the Jewish imperative to respect and advance the human rights of all people."Please sign this pledge if you are a rabbi or cantor." קְרָא בְגָרוֹן אַל-תַּחְשֹׂךְ, כַּשּׁוֹפָר הָרֵם קוֹלֶךָCry aloud; do not be silent. Lift up your voice like a shofar.--Isaiah 58:1As rabbis and cantors, we fervently pledge to raise our voices, and those of our communities, to hold the new administration accountable for protecting the human rights and civil liberties of all people as precious creations in the divine image.Jewish history has taught us that fascism arrives slowly, through the steady erosion of liberties. And we have learned that those who attack other minorities will eventually come to attack us. To our great dismay, we learned this truth again when, during this election campaign, anti-Semitism rose to the fore, along with racism, Islamophobia, xenophobia, misogyny, and homophobia.For some Jewish leaders, there will be a temptation to accommodate the new administration in the hopes of protecting our own community’s “interests.” As Joseph learned long ago, and as the Jewish community has learned time and time again, proximity to power does not guarantee protection in the long run. Nor can we ignore the fact that our Jewish community includes people of color, immigrants, women, LGBTQ people, people dependent on the social safety net, and others at risk for reasons beyond Jewish identity. Jews will not be safe until every one of is safe in a just and democratic society.As Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel wrote, “This is no time for neutrality. We Jews cannot remain aloof or indifferent. We, too, are either ministers of the sacred or slaves of evil.”The UN adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948 as the world’s response to the Holocaust. Today, we recommit to fight for these human rights, and our constitutional protections, because we remember that too many of our own family members died when fascism arose in Europe, when the U.S. and other nations refused to accept refugees, and when much of the world looked away.We have inherited a Torah that concerns itself with the fate of humanity, and a sacred tradition that demands building a just society. We pledge to fight for the human rights of all of us. We stand in solidarity with all vulnerable populations, despite and because of fear for our own safety. We call on the entire Jewish community to stand with us in this struggle."
Last Day of SEIU 32BJ Harvard Janitors' Contract
Students and janitors rally on Thursday, November 10. Photo Credit: Grace Z. Li, Harvard Crimson
Today is the last day of the contract that covers approximately 700 janitors at Harvard, who are represented by SEIU 32BJ. Last week, Harvard janitors voted overwhelmingly in favor of a strike if the union and the university are unable to reach an agreement on the contract by the end of today. The janitors' demands include affordable healthcare, raises, and more full-time work.The approximately 300 security guards at Harvard are also represented by SEIU 32BJ and are engaged in contract negotiations. Harvard employs its security guards through the subcontractor Securitas. Security guards and Securitas have agreed to extend the contract until December 1 to allow for more time to bargain.