Tag: metro

  • Union Workers at Los Angeles Metro Have Licenses Revoked – Who’s Next?

    Union Workers at Los Angeles Metro Have Licenses Revoked – Who’s Next?

    “The timing could not have been more devastating; the decision hit just as my family had welcomed a new baby and we were on the verge of buying our first home. Overnight, a qualified, safe, and deeply committed transit operator was sidelined by bureaucracy,” an affected former Metro Train Operator told the Committee.

    Hundreds of union members at the Los Angeles Metro have been stripped of their commercial driver’s licenses. A new rule from the US Department of Transportation no longer permits some immigrant workers who legally work in the US and have passed the Commercial DMV test to receive a CDL. Why are union leaders refusing to fight back? Let’s dig in.

    The threat to workers’ CDLs first emerged last September when US DOT Secretary Sean Duffy issued a new rule excluding DACA recipients, among others, from receiving CDLs. According to the Train Operator the Committee spoke with, their CDL was revoked due to their DACA status.

    The false idea that immigrant drivers are more likely than other drivers to have fatal accidents was first spread by Secretary Sean Duffy. The media repeated this idea, creating a false sense of urgency. The public began to believe that action was needed to ensure road safety.

    It was never true. According to the government’s own data, immigrant drivers are much less likely than their peers to be involved in fatal accidents. Additionally, fatal accidents are at their lowest in years.

    Again, the former Train Operator that the Committee spoke with: “Throughout my career, I have played strictly by the rules—earning two college degrees, maintaining an entirely spotless criminal record, and working hard to build a life here. However, my career was abruptly upended by a sudden federal policy shift.

    California’s DMV has so far complied with the rule, revoking CDLs as they come up for renewal. California is proving to bosses that it will be a reliable partner when it comes time to further cut driving jobs throughout transportation and logistics through technology.

    A former Metro Bus Operator describes the emotional toll: “I lost not only a stable career, but also a sense of purpose, independence, and progress that I had worked hard to build. The job gave me structure, confidence, and the ability to support myself, and losing it forced me to take a significant pay cut and reevaluate my future.”

    Hundreds of unionized operators and mechanics at Metro have lost their licenses. Many were reassigned as Metro Ambassadors. Metro gains the most from this. Workers with years of experience and proven reliability on the job now receive the least pay. Is it any wonder that Metro has not protested the rule change?

    The bigger question is why union leaders aren’t taking action. Workers reassigned as Ambassadors are now in multiple unions, owing monthly dues to each union! While workers feel the pain of reduced pay, reset seniority, and dues doubled, union bank accounts remain safe.

    Union leadership is refusing to see the flashing red light ahead. The same month California DMV stopped renewing workers’ CDLs, it started allowing public employers, like Metro, to begin using autonomous vehicles for passenger service. This shows how workers can be suddenly put out of work by new rules and replaced by technology.

    Rank-and-file workers, both immigrant and native-born, must fight together. The State and Federal Government are paving the way for tech bosses to displace workers. The truth is that replacing workers through technology today only allows bosses to buy our labor cheaply tomorrow. Rank-and-file workers must fight to protect our right to good jobs with living wages. Workers at Metro must stand up for their fellow workers who have been denied a CDL. Failing to do so, they are next.


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  • Elliot for E-Board

    Elliot for E-Board

    ATU 1277 Executive Board Member at Large, Seat 2

    Unions are facing headwinds. While gas and housing costs rise, the government spends more and more on war. No contract can protect us from coming budget cuts. We cannot stick our heads in the sand and assume we will be spared. We must build up our defenses now!

    As a member of the E-Board, I will advocate and vote to:

    • Defend all gains, for every member! No loss in pay from Commerical Drivers License revocation! Fight to reclaim 23-and-out pensions for all! No to outsourcing and automation!
    • Combat divisions to strengthen the union! Down with union probation! End tiers and steps—equal pay for equal work at the highest rate! Fight to end segregation!
    • Rely on union power not the bosses! Democrats and Republicans work for the bosses—no more union money for their parties! Increase the strike fund instead and kill the no-strike clause! Coordinate action among transit unions—united we are stronger!

    Vote for me for E-Board Member at Large, Seat 2! I seek a part-time position where I will continue working on the floor at my current wage. I pledge to earmark the extra earnings that come with the office—non-payment of dues and the extra payments for meeting attendance—for uses beneficial to union members and the union movement. All extra earnings and receipts will be tracked transparently on my website.

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    Endorsed by: Committee for One Fighting Transit Union

  • May  Day March

    May Day March

    MacArthur Park, 5/1, 10 am

    Over 100 operators and a dozen mechanics at LA Metro have been affected by the Trump & Newsom administrations cancellation of commercial drivers licenses (CDLs). Join in solidarity with unionized LA Metro workers standing up to restore CDLs for our operators and mechanics! Stand against ICE! Meet other unionists and workers in LA who share our struggle for labor conditions we all deserve!

    Gather at the southeast corner of 6th and Park View at 9:45 am

  • For Democratic Unions!

    For Democratic Unions!

    Out with the Bureaucracy!

    Unions are organs of workers defense, yet they are led by bureaucrats who care only for their perks and privileges. It’s for this reason the brass seek “friends” among the bosses while silencing the rank and file, avoiding the class battles necessary to defend our interests. To empower the membership, and as part of the fight for a new, class-struggle leadership, COFTU calls for:

    • Average workers’ wages for union officers!
    • Direct elections of the international president and vice presidents, local chairman, stewards and all union positions! 
    • One year terms and direct recall by simple majority!
    • Dues collected directly by the union and paid by all—no perks for stewards!
    • Open negotiations!
    • Full disclosure and open discussion of contract proposals in advance of a vote, taken at mass meetings!

    Click here view to our main demands.

  • Rally of September 25

    Rally of September 25

    Unions: Defend Anti-ICE Bus Drivers

    SMART bus operators Seán Broadbent and Jaime went public in the LA Public Press in July saying that they and around 30 of their coworkers had vowed to not let unidentified, masked and armed ICE agents without a warrant onboard. As a result, they were both fired. After Seán went back to the media saying this was retaliatory, the discipline was reduced to a 60-day suspension. But this remains a threat to the rest of the workforce. So we in the Committee for One Fighting Transit Union (COFTU) joined with other Metro workers and formed the Unionists for Seán and Jaime and held a rally on September 25, fighting for clean reinstatements with full backpay.

    While the rally was small, various Metro and other unionists and left activists joined in. It was a victory, given the blowback we encountered. TCU leadership refused to engage. ATU mostly stonewalled, only sending a letter to the top dog at SMART which they then refused to make public despite a motion the membership passed calling to do so. A SMART local vice chairman wanted to speak at the rally, but upper leadership ordered him to stand down. Meanwhile, rumors circulated that management would discipline anyone who attended.

    All Metro workers must defend these operators! Metro intimidates workers who reach out to the press—including on safety—in order to control the narrative. Many co-workers amplified this, saying “follow the policy” or “it’s not your bus.” But operators are like captains of a ship, they are the stewards of their riders’ safety. What Metro feared most was these drivers’ step toward collective action, taking safety into their own hands, especially in the face of Trump saying that ICE can go anywhere. If the unions can come together now, in the defense of two of their own, it puts us in a good position to defend not just immigrants but the whole Angeleno population.

    While all rally participants agreed on the main demands, there was open debate on how best to achieve them. The Democratic Socialists of America and others, for example, pushed for Metro to adopt a “proactive policy” to protect immigrants and a training program on ICE for drivers. But Metro already has a policy: to punish people like Seán and Jaime who stand up to ICE. Metro’s interest is to keep transit moving so the profits of L.A.’s bosses keep flowing. Metro doesn’t care about its own workforce, let alone immigrant riders.

    The bosses will not bend to moral pressure to do right. The only pressure they will listen to is the one that effects the bottom line. That’s why COFTU demands that the unions exert their power. The bosses need us, we don’t need them—we make the wheels turn! For more on the rally, watch our video at youtube.com/@foroneunion.

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