Crops
Visual: The unemployment metastasisis progression PDF Print E-mail
Written by Stumo   
Monday, 22 February 2010

We hear about the unemployment rate and lack of jobs.  But we hear sporadic statistics which are hard to internalize.  We feel our own employment or unemployment.  But we can't feel the pulse of the trends in numbers.

This link gives you a visual progression on unemployment in the U.S. from 2007 through 2009.   Starting in 2007, there are pockets of higher unemployment, but this video progression takes off in 2008 and 2009.  It feels, when watching, like a disease that has gained the upper hand on the body's immune system and is running rampant.

This is a big job... getting folks back to work.  Three percent growth only stops job losses, according to most.  It does not lower the unemployment rate. 

We need to restructure our economy by eliminating the trade deficit/offshoring drain.  Fixing trade policy, with an integrated economic plan, is the only way to do this.

 
IN-Sen: Rep. Ellsworth (D) to run PDF Print E-mail
Written by Stumo   
Friday, 19 February 2010

IN-Sen:  Democratic Congressman Brad Ellsworth (IN-8) comes from a relatively conservative district in southern Indiana.  He has announced his intention to run to replace Senator Evan Bayh.   

Ellsworth's record on trade is slim, because he has only been in Congress since 2006.  He voted for the Peru FTA (bad) and was a currency manipulation bill co-sponsor in the 109th Congress (good).  He won by 30 points in 2008 (though I don't know that he had a top tier challenger) and McCain won his district by four points in the 2008 presidential election.

Likely the strongest Republican candidate is former Senator Dan Coats.

 
Backers of meat labeling law hail court ruling PDF Print E-mail
Written by Sara Haimowitz   
Friday, 19 February 2010

Peter Harriman
Argus Leader - South Dakota
February 19, 2010

A federal court ruling from eastern Washington earlier this month could shore up the legal foundation under country of origin meat labeling, or COOL, which faces a challenge from Mexico and Canada at the World Trade Organization.
 
That's the opinion of the cattle industry group R-Calf and Sen. Tim Johnson, a longtime COOL proponent.
 
However, a meat industry spokesman insisted the ruling from the Washington Easterday Ranches case has no effect on the WTO complaint against COOL.
 
"It's a completely separate legal process," National Meat Association spokesman Jeremy Russell said.

Read more...
 
Tell Whirlpool: Keep It Made in America and Save Our Jobs PDF Print E-mail
Written by LNC   
Friday, 19 February 2010

The following comes to us from the AFL-CIO Working Families e-Activist Network which can be accessed here.

The Whirlpool Corp. is closing a refrigerator manufacturing plant in Evansville, Ind., putting more than 1,100 people out of work. Even worse, Whirlpool will continue to produce these refrigerators, but not inEvansville and not anywhere else in America. They are planning to manufacture them in Mexico, where weaker labor and environmental laws make them “cheaper” for Whirlpool to produce.

This is outrageous and unacceptable, especially in light of Whirlpool’s profitability and the $19 million dollars in economic recovery money Whirlpool recently received from the federal government as a part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. Those are OUR economic recovery funds, not Mexico’s.

To protest Whirlpool’s decisions and demand good jobs in America, I’m heading to Evansville next Friday to rally and march with local workers and labor leaders—and I’d like you to join me. No, I’m not asking you to join me in person, but I would like you to sign a petition in solidarity with the Evansville workers for me to deliver to Whirlpool’s management.

Click here to sign our petition to Whirlpool: Keep It Made in America: Save Our Jobs.

Too many people have lost their jobs. Too many jobs have been sent overseas. Enough is enough. Whirlpool’s management can’t take our money, shut down our factories and lay off our workers. It’s not acceptable—and together we’re going to deliver a loud and clear message to Whirlpool: Keep It Made in America and Save Our Jobs.

Sign our petition today.

Tell your friends to sign the petition in solidarity.

Together we will fight against corporate greed and for good jobs. Together we will rebuild the American economy, because everyone deserves a good job NOW!

In solidarity,

Richard L. Trumka
AFL-CIO President

P.S. Please sign the petition today. Our power is in our numbers. Together we can make a difference.
 
 
If you received this message from a friend, you can sign up for Working Families e-Activist Network.

 
Buy America Creates Jobs: Transportation Secretary LaHood to Award $63 Million for Arizona Streetcar PDF Print E-mail
Written by LNC   
Friday, 19 February 2010

The following is a press release from the Alliance for American Manufacturing, a unique non-partisan, non-profit partnership forged to strengthen manufacturing in the U.S. AAM brings together a select group of America's leading manufacturers and the United Steelworkers.

Washington, DC, February 18, 2010.  U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood will award the City of Tucson, AZ with $63 million in federal stimulus funds today for the construction of a four-mile, $150 million modern streetcar system that will utilize streetcars manufactured by United Streetcar, LLC in Clackamas, OR.  The streetcars are the first to be manufactured in the United States in 60 years, and thanks to Buy America policies, are spawning a domestic supply chain that is supporting good, middle-income jobs across America.

Read more...
 
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In the news

Brian O'Shaughnessy is CPA's Chief Co-Chair and Manufacturing Co-Chair.  We also have a Labor Co-Chair, Bob Baugh, and Agriculture Co-Chair, Joe Logan.

Brian, Chairman of Revere Copper Products, presented at the R-CALF USA annual convention on Friday, January 22, 2010.  His presentation involved a discussion of how America became strong through making and growing things here, his history in mining and ranching, the strategic importance of continuing that course, and how we all need to work together to fix America's trade and economic problems.

The video presentation is available here.