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ABOUT US

Across New York State and the country a growing movement is bringing workers and their supporters in unions, religious institutions and youth groups together in efforts to challenge corporate control and to move toward greater economic justice. Specifically, workers, trade unionists, people of faith and young people are uniting to fight sweatshop conditions at home and abroad and to end child labor. They also are actively leading campaigns that call upon municipalities to require that those doing business with government pay living wages.

Our Mission

Our Structure

Our Model and Work

Staff Directory

 

Our Mission
Founded as a volunteer organization more than 20 years ago--and incorporated in 1997--the New York State Labor-Religion Coalition is a growing alliance of unions, religious institutions, youth groups and individuals who share a commitment to challenging economic injustice. Through education, support for organizing, and advocacy the Coalition works to help low-wage workers both in New York and in developing countries to challenge corporate control. Both the labor movement and religious institutions share a long history of activism for social justice and both root this work in a fundamental respect for the dignity of each worker. We believe-and have demonstrated-that together unions and religious institutions can advance workers' rights. That said, the Coalition is both nonpartisan and nonsectarian. While we believe that all workers have the right to union representation if they so choose, we do not represent or speak for any union. Similarly, we do not adhere to or promote the religious beliefs of any faith.

Our Structure
The New York Labor-Religion Coalition is a statewide organization with twelve local affiliates. Seven of the local chapters have at least part-time paid staff. The statewide office which coordinates much of the Coalition's work, is located in Albany. The local chapters are spread across the state in Buffalo, Alleghany/ Olean, the Capital District (Albany and surrounding communities), Utica, Central New York (Syracuse and surrounding communities), Ithaca, Long Island, New York City, Rochester, the State's Southern Tier (Elmira and surrounding communities) and the Hudson Valley.

Active coalition members include unions such as the New York State United Teachers, the National Health and Human Service Employees Union, Local 1199/SEIU , UNITE , the New York State Nurses Association, District Council 1707 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), United University Professions, the Professional Staff Congress, the Public Employees Federation, and others.

Churches, synagogues and mosques that are active in the coalition include seven of the eight Catholic Diocese in New York State, the Albany United Methodist Society, the New York Board of Rabbis, several Unitarian-Universalist churches across the state, the Episcopal Diocese of New York, the Islamic Da'wah Educational Alliance, the Evangelical Lutheran Church, and others.

Youth organizations in our alliance include all of the Free the Children chapters in the state. Also, we are active with United Students Against Sweatshops in Albany, Buffalo, Long Island, Rochester and Syracuse.


Our Model and Work

Under the leadership of the National Interfaith Committee for Worker Justice, religion-labor alliances are increasing across the country. Nationwide, the New York State Labor-Religion Coalition is the oldest such coalition.

Combining Local Initiatives with a Shared Statewide Program

We function constitutionally and interactively at both the state and local level. Our approach is to blend locally based work-such as leading a community's living wage campaign, building support for a local organizing effort such as the cafeteria workers at New York City's Metropolitan Opera, or generating attention about egregious health and safety violations in a Syracuse plastics plant-with statewide programming and initiatives.

Each local chapter participates in a shared set of activities such as our annual 40-Hour Fast and our Sweatfree Schools campaign. Each March, for the last five years, we have led a statewide 40-hour fast intended to highlight the plight of New York's invisible, low-wage workforce. In 2001, the fast focused on home care workers who are organizing to join a union, farm workers who are advocating to be included under the state's labor laws, and immigrant day laborers who are struggling to win better pay, safer working conditions, and an end to abusive treatment from employers. Coalition members organized numerous events across the state to publicize the conditions that these workers face.

Similarly, as a part of the statewide campaign we call Sweatfree Schools, Coalition chapters are leading efforts to get their local parochial and public school districts to adopt anti-sweatshop procurement policies for apparel (primarily for their school and sports uniforms). In Suffolk County on Long Island, the local Coalition chapter expanded the campaign into the larger community and led a successful effort to pass the first countywide Sweatfree Resolution in the country.

Blending a statewide organization with local chapters enables Coalition affiliates to learn from one another and to build on each other's victories. For instance, our Rochester chapter recently led that city's successful living wage campaign. The Long Island chapter is now actively working toward a countywide living wage bill. And the chapter in New York City is part of the leadership team in the City's new living wage initiative. Meanwhile at the state level, we will be working with the Fiscal Policy Institute to apply the Self-Sufficiency Standard, which is a more sophisticated way of calculating the wages and benefits that constitute a real, community-specific living wage.

Linking Local and International Labor Struggles

Since 1997, the Coalition has led eight delegations of rank-and-file union members, community leaders, teachers, young people, clergy, and union leaders to the maquiladoras and colonias (workers' neighborhoods) in Mexico along the Texas border. These delegations have met with workers, organizers, and health and environmental experts to learn both about the conditions that maquiladora workers endure and about their organizing efforts to improve those conditions.

For many delegation members, first-hand knowledge about workers' struggles in the maquiladoras often makes real what had been an abstract understanding of the global consequences of corporate control. Thus, once home, many delegation members move into leadership roles in their local Coalition chapter. For example, one delegate persuaded his union, the United Auto Workers (UAW), to produce 1,500 copies of his video documenting maquiladora workers' living conditions and to distribute the video to every UAW local in the United States and Canada. Another delegate from Syracuse has developed a presentation that he has given to twenty-one local union, community, and religious groups. And as a result of their participation in the February 2001 delegation, at least two young people have decided to pursue social justice-oriented careers.


Bringing Youth Organizations into the NYS Labor-Religion Coalition

Anti-sweatshop youth organizations and activists are choosing to join with us because our collaborative relationship provides them with both mentoring and a means to participate in local workers' rights campaigns. Participation in the Coalition enables young people to translate the spirit of the protests against corporate control-as manifest in the anti-IMF and anti-WTO protests in Seattle, Washington, D.C., and Prague-into concrete action.

The Coalition serves as the umbrella organization, providing mentoring and administrative support, to the incipient Free the Children chapters that young people are founding across the state. (Free the Children is a youth-led organization dedicated both to empowering young people and to eradicating child labor.) In October 2000, the Coalition was a key organizer in convening the first-ever-statewide meeting of New York's Free the Children chapters. Over 140 anti-child labor youth activists met for 1½ days to learn more about the issues that concern them, to enhance their leadership skills, and to build connections with one another across the state.

In response to their interest, the New York State Labor-Religion Coalition led youth-oriented delegations to the maquiladoras in Mexico. Trips to Mexico help youth activists understand the connections between the conditions of the maquiladora workers and anti-sweatshop activism in their own communities. Members of many of the delegations, for instance, have organized efforts in their school districts to pass Sweatfree Schools policies.

 

Last Updated:12/02/2005
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