Union Librarians Community

Unions contribute to a stable, productive workforce—where workers have a say in improving their jobs. Library workers in public, academic and school libraries have organized in unions for better wages, working conditions and benefits.
Unionization as a human right was included in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights as Article 23 when the UDHR was issued in 1948.
Article 23.
(1) Everyone has the right to work, to free choice of employment, to just and favourable conditions of work and to protection against unemployment.
(2) Everyone, without any discrimination, has the right to equal pay for equal work.
(3) Everyone who works has the right to just and favourable remuneration ensuring for himself and his family an existence worthy of human dignity, and supplemented, if necessary, by other means of social protection.
(4) Everyone has the right to form and to join trade unions for the protection of his interests.
Sixty years later, unions continue to be viewed as fundamental to democracy. Elaine Bernard wrote in 2008: “Unions are the premier institution of a free, democratic society, promoting democracy in the workplace, as well as economic and social justice, and equality. They have this role because they are instruments of transformation of members and of society at large. In this wonderful transformation rests the real power of unions.”[ Bernard, E. State of US Labor & Building Union Power. Democratic Left 2008, 36: 6].
PostRockford Public Library Cuts to be Analyzed by Union, AFSCME 3350
by Kathleen McCook on Thu, 08/20/2009 - 5:44amThe Rockford Public Library would close the Lewis Lemon Branch, lay off two dozen staffers and six management-level employees, and reduce hours at all libraries, under a reorganization proposal unanimously approved Monday....AFSCME 3350 the union representing 86 librarians, librarian assistants, librarian interns, clerks and maintenance workers has 10 days to review the proposal and offer alternative solutions.
PostStrength in unity as New York Library Association and NYSUT agree to affiliate
by Kathleen McCook on Wed, 08/12/2009 - 7:45pmALBANY, N.Y. July 24, 2009 - New York State United Teachers and the New York Library Association have agreed to a formal affiliation between the 600,000-member union and the professional organization representing librarians and libraries.
NYSUT's Board of Directors voted Thursday to approve an affiliation agreement in which NYSUT will lobby state government on NYLA's behalf.
Post"Equivalent to taking a meat cleaver and amputating an arm or a leg of the library’s workforce"-Lincoln Library, Springfield,IL
by Kathleen McCook on Sun, 08/02/2009 - 7:19am“Metaphorically, the 10 layoffs are equivalent to taking a meat cleaver and amputating an arm or a leg of the library’s workforce, crippling our ability to provide basic service to the public,” said Bob Moore, an employee at Lincoln Library for 22 years. “Services will definitely suffer dramatically,” said Moore, who is not one of the 10 employees facing layoff.
PostUniversity of Minnesota Technical Assistants- AFSCME Local 3937 and Local 3801 -Vote to Ratify TA for 2009-2011.
by Kathleen McCook on Mon, 07/27/2009 - 8:32am
The members of AFSCME Local 3937 and Local 3801 (Technical, UMD) voted by majority to ratify the Tentative Agreement for 2009-2011.
The contract will be presented to the Regents for a vote. As there is no August Regents meeting, it is probable that this presentation will occur at the September meeting. That is the last step in the process.
PostSave the UCLA and Berkeley Labor Centers and the Miguel Contreras Labor Program !
by Kathleen McCook on Tue, 07/21/2009 - 10:55amPost"There Is Power in a Union - 2008-2009"
by Kathleen McCook on Thu, 07/16/2009 - 5:35am"There Is Power in a Union - 2008-2009" is a chronology of articles and events about librarians and unions Progressive Librarian no. 32 (Winter/Spring 2009) p. 55-67.
In 2008 the only reporting and analysis of librarians and unions indexed in Library Literature & Information Science Full Text was published in the journal, Progressive Librarian.
PostJust another cog in the machine
by Kathleen McCook on Mon, 07/13/2009 - 3:38pmPostLabor's Last Stand. The Employee Free Choice Act.
by Kathleen McCook on Sun, 07/05/2009 - 7:16amPostPay Equity Bibliography
by Kathleen McCook on Thu, 07/02/2009 - 11:24amPay Equity Bibliography
Partially annotated
Updated May 2009
PostLudlow Massacre site designated a National Historic Landmark.
by Kathleen McCook on Sun, 06/28/2009 - 8:38pmLudlow becomes a National Historic Landmark.
Ludlow was the site of 14 months of strikes in 1913-14 by some 1,200 coal miners who were fed up with low wages, unsafe conditions and company towns that kept the miners deeply in debt. More than 100 people died in the strikes.




