Lady in fur holding a sign standing in a parking lot. Group of people standing front of a building.

The members of Circle City Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) of Kokomo, Indiana, voted 100% to join the UAW Region 2B, Local 685. Success like this is only possible when workers unite and demand that their voice is heard. Welcome to the union family.

Toledo Public Schools are facing serious budget shortfalls due to federal reductions to the U.S. Department of Education and subsequent state-level funding changes under the Fair School Act. In response, the district cabinet has proposed layoffs impacting Toledo Federation of Teachers (TFT) employees in an effort to address a growing budget deficit.
Notably, the leadership of UAW Local 5242 was not informed of the existence or severity of this deficit until only weeks ago, raising serious concerns about transparency, communication, and fiscal planning.
This evening, more than 270 members of Local 5242 gathered to receive an update on the latest proposal presented by the district cabinet and to stand united in defense of their jobs and public education.

Members in meeting inside local union hall standing at mic, sitting in chairs and writing at table. wearing winter coats, UAW t-shirts and winter hats.

UAW Region 2B, Local 2192 Public Sector Workers at Lorain County Jobs & Family Services in Ohio authorized a strike vote with 86% YES!

 

members stand inside office building for photo

UAW Region 4, Local 2320 Immigrant Justice Workers United Unit gathered in office to deliver a letter in solidarity to the Executive Director, requesting that our Coordinators, Legal Fellows, and additional staff be recognized as members of UAW National Organization of Legal Services Workers (NOLSW).

A supermajority of the workers has signed Union cards and want to fight for better wages and working conditions, standing in solidarity with their Union siblings.

Give your solidarity and support to our newest members seeking voluntary recognition to be included in the existing Immigrant Justice Workers United bargaining unit.

Justice for those who seek justice for others! 

Lorain County Public Workers are ready to STAND UP!

Workers standing in front of the Kalamazoo Dispatch Authority background

Congratulations to UAW Region 1D, Local 2290 Kalamazoo County Dispatch Authority, ratifying their contract at 100%. The showing of solidarity that proves when our essential public sector workers stand together, they can secure a contact with the respect and recognition they deserve.

UAW Region 2B, Local 2320 National Organization of Legal Services Workers (NOLSW) newly organized unit Advocates for Basic Legal Equality (ABLE), a nonprofit law firm supporting low-income people.

UAW Region 4 Local 95 Unit 12 Mercy Clinic East Members thanks the community for their support and solidarity during their strike.

New York, NY— This morning, Local 2110 of the UAW petitioned the National Labor Relations Board for a union election for nearly a thousand full-time and part-time professional and non-professional staff of The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Workers cite long term pay inequities, lack of job protection and ever-increasing workloads as reasons for the unionization efforts.

Initial conversations about unionizing started in 2020, with staff sharing concerns generated by the pandemic. In 2022, the group reached out to UAW Local 2110, known nationally for organizing staff at major cultural institutions, including the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MoMA, New Museum of Contemporary Art, Guggenheim Museum, MASS MoCA, the Whitney Museum of American Art and others.

“The union effort was started during the pandemic by a group of long-time staff who know the Met extremely well and have been through multiple crises where we have lost staff and benefits.,” says Rebecca Capua, a Conservator who has been employed at the Met for 16 years. “We want our jobs at the Met to be viable long term careers — for ourselves and for those who come after us.”

“The Met is an amazing place. I’ve worked here almost 20 years, and love it,” says Alison Clark, Collections Manager. “However, the Museum often makes decisions without considering or consulting staff, such as changes to our Work from Home policy and erosion of our health and other benefits. Right now, we’re contending with several large scale capital projects that displace people and create a lot of additional work for the staff. Unionizing is the only way for us to have a strong collective voice to address concerns with the Museum.”

“Being involved in the organizing for our union has really broken down barriers between us as coworkers who work in many different departments at The Met,” says Tiffany Camusci, a Data Analyst who has worked at the Met since 2023. “As a newer employee, I got involved because a union will empower us to address our pay and our opportunities for career advancement at the Met. It’s rewarding to know that so many of my colleagues share similar concerns and want to address our workplace needs collectively. ”

The last few years have seen thousands of museum workers unionize. Employees at the MFA, Boston, the Guggenheim, the Whitney, the New Museum, the Brooklyn Museum, MASS MoCA, the Jewish Museum, The Dia Foundation, the Hispanic Society Museum and Library, the Portland Museum of Art are just some of the institutions where workers have organized with UAW Local 2110 . Many have echoed similar issues of low pay, lack of job security, and little or no transparency about institutional plans. The economic fallout caused by the global Covid-19 pandemic, which further exposed the insecurities of non-unionized workplaces, further galvanized workers to organize.

UAW Region 1, Local 1781, Blue Cross & Blue Shield MI/Blue Care Network reminds us why union members wear Red on Wednesday.