That’s the subject line of the email I just opened that links to this new video with the voices of American working people and AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka.
Senator Ben Nelson of Nebraska is the lone Senate Democrat who has voted with Republicans to block unemployment benefit extensions. You can reach Sen. Nelson’s Omaha office at 402-391-3411. And for a list of Republican Senators to contact, see our post from yesterday: Who You Gonna Call?
If ever there was a time for a fierce urgency to confront the massive jobs crisis in America, that time is certainly now.
Today the AFL-CIO, NAACP, Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, National Council of La Raza and the Center for Community Change announced they will urge the White House and Congress to move forward on a new comprehensive plan for job-creation and real economic recovery.
This is big news — and a major step forward for labor, economic and civil rights groups and the progressive community to build a movement for jobs and recovery.
AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka announced the key aspects of the new jobs plan at the Economic Policy Institute’s Spotlight on Jobs forum in Washington, D.C. earlier today.
Promoting this urgent policy initiative on a new webpage America Needs Jobs Now the AFL-CIO summarizes the core components of the plan:
No one needs to tell America’s families that unemployment and underemployment are at crisis levels. We need jobs—and we need them now.
Wall Street has gotten its bailouts. Now it’s time for Main Street to get some immediate help.
The AFL-CIO is calling on Congress and the Obama administration to take five steps now to care for the jobless and put America back to work.
1. Extend the lifeline for jobless workers. Unless Congress acts now, supplemental unemployment benefits, additional food assistance and expansion of COBRA health care benefits will expire at the end of the year. They must be extended for another 12 months to prevent working families from bankruptcy, home foreclosure and loss of health care. Extending benefits also will boost personal spending and create jobs throughout the economy.
2. Rebuild America’s schools, roads and energy systems. America still has at least $3 trillion in unmet infrastructure needs. We should put people to work to fix our nation’s broken-down school buildings and invest in transportation, green technology, energy efficiency and more.
3. Increase aid to state and local governments to maintain vital services. State and local governments and school districts have a $178 billion budget shortfall this year alone—while the recession creates greater need for their services. States and communities must get help to maintain critical frontline services, prevent massive job cuts and avoid deep damage to education just when our children need it most.
4. Fund jobs in our communities. While workers go without jobs, important work is left undone in our communities. We should put people to work restoring our environment, providing child care and tutoring, cleaning up abandoned houses and more. These are not replacements for existing public jobs. They must pay competitive wages and should target distressed communities.
5. Put TARP funds to work for Main Street.The bank bailout helped Wall Street, not Main Street. We should put some of the billions of dollars in leftover Troubled Asset Relief Program funds to work creating jobs by enabling community banks to lend money to small- and medium-size businesses. If small businesses can get credit, they will create jobs.
America’s jobs situation would be even more dire without the economic stimulus program President Obama and Congress enacted, which has saved or created 1 million jobs. But the depth of this crisis demands that we do more—and that we do it now, before more people lose their jobs, their homes, their health care and their hope.
This is a bold first step. Much needs to be done to build the coalition to generate political support for a comprehensive jobs and recovery policy. Right now, I am fired up — having written months ago about The Coming Battle for Jobs and Recovery.
Over a period of just seven weeks, from Jan. 14 to March 3, a total of 26,419 people took the online 2008 Health Care for America Survey sponsored by the AFL-CIO and Working America. Most are insured and employed. Most are college graduates. More than half are union members.
These are the people, it would seem, most likely to have positive experiences with America’s health care system. Instead, their responses tell a sobering story about the breadth of the problems with health care in America. They say our system has fundamental problems that must be fixed.
The people who took the survey also submitted 7,489 heart-wrenching stories about the effects of this broken health care system on them and their families. You’ll see some of their stories throughout the report.
Richard Freeman, Harvard University professor and Herbert Ascherman Chair in Economics goes in-depth about our history and success at the AFL-CIO website’s Point of View.
The story of Working America is the one of the greatest success in reaching workers outside of collective bargaining since the Knights of Labor in the 1880s. Its primary mode of enlisting members is through community canvassing, where bright young activists go door to door in potentially union-friendly neighborhoods. At the same time, Working America’s strong online program has resulted in 60,000 new members signing up through its website….