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-Short Attention Span Theater-
Four ex-labor organizers sue union over pay
2005-07-26
from the Schadenfreude files
Labor organizers who fought to improve working conditions for the nation's hotel and textile workers have mounted another campaign, this time against their former employer.

In a lawsuit filed in federal court in Seattle, four former organizers for Unite Here, one of the largest labor unions in the country, say they and hundreds of others were expected to work more than 40 hours a week without overtime pay.

They're suing for back wages and seeking class-action status to include an estimated 500 current and former employees who worked for the New York-based labor union after 2002.

Andrew Gibert, who lives near Bellingham but worked all over the United States and Canada, is one of the plaintiffs. He said he worked up to 16 hours a day, seven days a week, traveling, passing out leaflets at factories and knocking on doors in neighborhoods.

When he complained about the hours, he said, his supervisor gave him a verbal warning for a bad attitude. He said the stressful workload put him on disability for a year before he quit in April.

Unite Here spokeswoman Amanda Cooper said the union was unaware of the lawsuit, which was filed in May and amended yesterday. But she said the nature of organizing requires unusual work schedules.

"We're confident that the suit is baseless," she said, "and we're going to fight it. We are an organization that is committed to the rights of workers."

Federal law requires employers to pay employees time-and-a-half after 40 hours a week unless their job falls into one of several white-collar exemptions, including salaried executives and professionals.

"I don't think there's any legitimate argument that these people were professional," said Ed Budge, a Seattle attorney representing the union workers. "These were the ground troops."

Gibert's partner and fellow organizer, 26-year-old Jennifer Jason, said she worked more hours at the union than she did starting her own company in 2000, the now-shuttered virtualintern.com.

"If I didn't get the work done, I'd get written up," she said.

Jennifer Jason and Andrew Gibert organized under the names Jason N. Kuder and Anne Clare Gibert. Both changed their names after beginning gender reassignment.

A similar class-action suit was filed in April against United Food and Commercial Workers, Local 7, in Colorado. Organizers said they weren't paid overtime for work weeks that stretched to 70 hours.

Longtime organizer Cindy Richardson, who works 50-hour weeks for Unite Here's Seattle affiliate, called the suit "ridiculous."

"When you come into organizing, you know what you're walking into," she said. "This is not a job, it's my passion. It's not like I'm making sacrifices that I'm not willing to make."

Gibert, 46, said the union exploits this dedication, particularly among its younger employees, many of whom are fresh out of college with few family commitments.

"They create this atmosphere that's extremely intense, getting people to buy into the notion that we're part of this movement so you're supposed to sacrifice your home life, your pocketbook, your health, your body. And it works."

Unite Here represents more than 440,000 employees working in apparel, laundry, food service and other service and textile industries. It is one of six unions threatening to form a rival organization to the AFL-CIO, claiming, in part, that the labor federation is spending too much on political donations and not enough on organizing
Posted by:too true

#7  I'm pretty sure I heard about it on Larry Elder when I was living there. That would have meant May '99 at the latest.

Then again, memory is the second thing to go.
Posted by: Jackal   2005-07-26 17:36  

#6  He who's becoming a she meets he that's becoming a she. The sparks fly, they fall in love, they sue the corrupt union...
Is John Waters still alive, because this would be like the easiest money he ever made...
Posted by: tu3031   2005-07-26 15:47  

#5  Was it that long ago Jackal? It rings a recent bell.
Posted by: Shipman   2005-07-26 15:36  

#4  This is like the time in the late 90s when ACORN was trying to get a proposition to raise the minimum wage in LA to something $9/hour. It turns out they weren't even paying the existing minimum wage to their employees. They argued (with a straight face) that if they paid that much, they couldn't afford to hire enough people to get the job done.
Posted by: Jackal   2005-07-26 15:09  

#3  Both changed their names after beginning gender reassignment.

Jennifer (formerly known as Jason) and Andrew (formerly known as Anne) obviously have issues of their own. Guess they took the name "Unite Here" a little too seriously.
Posted by: Steve   2005-07-26 14:39  

#2  Both changed their names after beginning gender reassignment.

WTF?
Posted by: Ebbavith Ebbereting9742   2005-07-26 13:02  

#1  More irony than you can tote in a SpembleBarrow
Posted by: Shipman   2005-07-26 12:37  

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