Standing Against Sexual Harassment of Airport Workers

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Earlier this week Rosa, an airport worker at Ready Jet, filed a sexual harassment and retaliation complaint with the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination at 1 Ashburton Place. JetBlue contracts Ready Jet to cleans its airplanes. U.S. Representative Katherine Clark spoke at a press conference about sexual harassment and workers' rights as Rosa filed her complaint.
The New England Jewish Labor Committee stands with Rosa and all workers who have experienced sexual harassment. On Thursday, May 17th at 9:00 a.m. we participated in a community delegation led by Dalida Rocha of SEIU 32BJ to visit JetBlue management, asking them to require better working conditions at Ready Jet. Rabbi Mike Rothbaum was there representing the New England Jewish Labor Committee. 

Tufts Dining Workers Vote YES To Form a Union!

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About 150 dining hall workers have joined UNITE HERE Local 26 after an overwhelming vote in favor of unionization: 127 to 19.

Following the NLRB vote, Tufts University dining hall workers are members of UNITE HERE Local 26 and can begin negotiating their first contract with Tufts.

"My time at Tufts has been filled with job insecurity," said dining hall worker, Tsering Ngodup who has been classified as a temp for over five years. "But this journey to a union has shown me that the Tufts community is behind us."
Earlier this April, 500 students joined workers as they formally announced their union, demanding recognition from Tufts University. Since then, 77 student groups have joined a coalition backing the food service worker's union.
To read more from UNITE HERE's statement, click HERE!

Harvard University Graduate Students Form a Union!

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We are so excited that after months of hard work, Harvard Graduate students have voted to join a union.
The Boston Globe says "Harvard University graduate students have voted to join the United Auto Workers, part of a wave of teaching and research assistants on private college campuses embracing the labor movement." To read more about this victory, click HERE!
We are particularly happy to share in this victory with UAW organizer Jenna Grady, a former New England Jewish Labor Committee Program Associate.  We look forward to seeing the union grow and thrive!

JLC LABOR SEDER IN MEMPHIS FOR 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF SANITATION WORKERS STRIKE AND ASSASSINATION OF DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING JR.

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In celebration of Dr. King Jr.'s Work and his commitment to bringing Civil Rights and Labor activists together,
the JLC, AFSCME and the I AM 2018 Coalition hosted a National Faith-Labor Leadership Passover Seder on Wednesday April 4th.
This year, the Jewish holiday of Passover falls at the same time as the anniversary of Dr. King, Jr.'s death. The Passover imagery and themes of the Exodus often imbued Dr. King, Jr.'s words. The National Faith-Labor Leadership Seder combined the traditional celebration of Passover with a rededication to the work, the words, and the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Fifty years agoDr. King, Jr. traveled to Memphis to lend his voice to the city sanitation workers' growing "I AM A MAN" strike, which began after two workers were crushed to death by faulty equipment. Dr. King, Jr. went to meet with strikers for a march on April 8, 1968 at the, Clayborn Temple at Hernando Street in Memphis, where the JLC Seder will be held.
The night before Dr. King, Jr.'s death, he told an overflow crowd at nearby Mason Temple that if he could travel through history, "I would watch God's children in their magnificent trek from the dark dungeons of Egypt...across the Red Sea, through the wilderness, on toward the Promised Land." Dr. King, Jr. also noted, that, like Moses, "I may not get there with you." Dr. King, Jr. had already accepted an invitation for less than two weeks later to celebrate that Passover with the renowned rabbi and civil rights advocate Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel.
The seder was timed to be an hour after what is known as the "6:01" ceremony at the Lorraine Motel, denoting the felling of Dr. King, Jr. by an assassin's bullet, and was held at the very meeting place where Dr. King and the Memphis sanitation workers gathered to secure the right to organize and bargain collectively.

Thank You for Coming to the 18th Annual Labor Seder

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Thank you to everyone who participated in our 18th Annual Labor Seder!It was a great evening of celebration, new connection, and honoring the hard work of many in our communities this year. We heard from our special honorees, Frank Callahan of the Mass Building Trades Council, and Rabbi Toba Spitzer of Congregation Dorshei Tzedek, both of whom are incredible longtime defenders of workers rights.We took time to recognize the Nurses at Tufts Medical Center, who undertook a historic strike to fight for a fair contract, the first group of nurses to strike in Boston in over 30 years. Together, we also recognized the Massachusetts Coalition for Domestic Workers, who have been fighting tirelessly for law and action ensuring safe and fair working conditions for domestic workers through the D0mestic Workers' Bill of Right. The Coalition has supported the JLC to conduct employer education in synagogues to help implement these legal protections.A big thank you from the New England JLC to all who came and supported -- see you next year!

Rabbis Arrested in a Rally for Dreamers at U.S. Capitol

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JLC Executive Director Jonathan D. Rosenblum and JLC New England Co-Chair Rabbi Barbara Penzner were arrested on January 17, 2018 in a rally for Dreamers at the U.S. Capitol. Rosenblum and Rabbi Penzner’s arrests—which occurred while they and more than 80 rabbis and other Jewish community activists sang “We Shall Not Be Moved”— were broadcast live by MSNBC, with commentary from reporter Andrew Rafferty. The noontime Capitol report has some half million daily viewers. http://www.msnbc.com/…/protesters-take-to-capitol-hill-to-f…

These and other rallies for Dreamers led to a three-day government shutdown, a short-term extension to February 8, and another likely showdown in Congress for a “clean” vote on Dreamers legislation.

Photo courtesy of Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism.