At the risk of diving in here when I haven’t been posting much to self-promote, my first story is up at the Nation’s site. It’s about the Philadelphia Museum of Art security guards and their struggles to unionize, and how they’re a great example of the need for the Employee Free Choice Act.
There’s kind of a dearth of interest in labor issues among the “netroots,” as I noticed when Arlen Specter had to bring up EFCA himself while being questioned at Netroots Nation. While I’m nowhere near as knowledgeable as some when it comes to union history and organizing, I try to do my part. Anyway, here’s the beginning and please read the whole piece over there.
The Philadelphia Museum of Art is a recognizable icon even to those who have never set foot in the city. Immortalized in the movie Rocky, when a sweatsuit-clad Sylvester Stallone bounded up the stairs while training for his big fight, the museum became a symbol of the working-class tenacity that Philadelphians are known for.
On September 6, those steps will host a different kind of blue-collar battle: the museum security guards will be holding a rally in support of the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA) and their right to form a union.
Thanks for writing about the security guards fight to establish a union. With health care taking all the air in the political room right now, it’s understandable that other issues are getting little attention. This battle is coming though. It’s important to keep talking about it.