All
eyes are on essential workers during the coronavirus pandemic, as individuals,
companies and even the federal government make a point to thank them for their
heroic action: working. Frontline workers have received plenty of symbolic
accolades, but many are working without proper personal protective equipment
(PPE) and hazard pay, and are scared for their health and safety. Public
transit workers, who shuttle other essential workers to and from work, have
been sounding the alarm about poor safety standards at their jobs since the
beginning of the coronavirus pandemic. The Amalgamated Transit Union (ATU),
which represents 200,000 workers in the United States and Canada, told In These Times that
nearly 1,000 of its members have been infected with coronavirus, and almost 40 have
died. In response, the union has taken action by setting up coronavirus test sites,
sharing information about safety gear, and lobbying both the federal and state
governments to do more to protect transit workers. It has also partnered with
the Transport Workers Union of America (TWU) to increase its strength.
But
the best way for workers to show their strength is to withhold their labor, and
ATU locals across the country are engaging in work stoppages to make sure
transit agencies understand what’s at stake if they don’t take immediate action
to protect workers and riders. Bus drivers in Detroit kicked off the wave of
workplace actions on March 17, relatively early in the pandemic, by shutting
down bus service throughout the city, leaving only 10% of buses running. They won all
of their demands around health and safety, including suspension
of fares, rear door entrance, and PPE for drivers—but unfortunately, at least
one bus driver has died from coronavirus. (ATU International President John
Costa says that transport workers “have been the biggest casualty from this
pandemic.”)
Several
Birmingham drivers took action next and refused to work on March 23, in order
to make the transit authority increase safety. They went back to work the
following day after having won multiple safety measures, including a mandate
that passengers only use the rear door when boarding and exiting buses,
physical barriers around the operator seating area to give drivers social
distance from riders, and only allowing 15 to19 passengers on each bus,
depending on size of the bus. Gregory Roddy, President of ATU Local 725 in
Birmingham, told In These
Times that bus drivers “are here ready to work. But we will not
work in an unsafe environment.”
Drivers
in Richmond, Virginia and Greensboro, North Carolina also took action for
safety on the job the following month. On April 27, about 50 drivers in Richmond caused
massive service delays by calling out of work to demand hazard pay, in addition
to other safety precautions, like PPE,
on-site testing, and furlough protections. Two days later, bus service was stopped
in Greensboro as some drivers refused to show up at work after a fellow driver
tested positive for Covid-19. The transit authority sanitized buses and workspaces, and
drivers returned to work the following day. Roddy shared that the coronavirus
pandemic has inspired Alabama bus drivers to take action, and that their next
fight is for hazard pay.
Roddy said that “one person can be broken, but all of
us together, we can be strong.”
Layoffs
have swept the nation and transit workers are not immune: They have
also been laid off and furloughed. President Costa said that without federal
intervention, layoffs and cuts to mass transit could continue, long after the
pandemic. But he also said his members are ready to fight back: “If we can
build ships and bombs, we can transfer money back into the public transit
system to keep the cities alive."
The
coronavirus pandemic has opened up new conversations about the future of public
transit—in mostly scary ways, unless workers organize to take more control.
Because so many people are now either laid off or working from home, ridership is down by 75% nationwide,
according to statistics from the Transit App company, so bus lines have been
cut, and trains come less frequently. And because numerous cities like New York and Philadelphia are pushing austerity
budgets in response to deficits caused by the pandemic, many workers, riders
and transit and environmental advocates are concerned that public
transportation won’t be restored to its previous level of service. This could
leave thousands of union members out of work, and countless others struggling
to get to work, school and appointments on time.
But
there are also openings to create a better, healthier future, as the pandemic
has forced many of us to reckon with the past and imagine a new world. And as
the coronavirus crisis has rocked our society, carbon dioxide emissions are
projected to drop by about 8% this year. Businesses are closed, air travel has
decreased, and millions of people are stuck at home, limiting emissions—for
now. Going back to business as usual is not an option for the climate—and it’s
not an option for workers either. This is not to argue that the pandemic is in
any way a good thing: There is no doubt that the pandemic has ravaged our
society, and there’s no way to spin that positively.
The
coronavirus crisis is a wakeup call for the climate crisis, which will be far
worse. Our only choice is to reimagine our society—to make jobs safer, and to
massively invest in public transit, in order to help workers through this crisis
and mitigate the climate crisis, which is poised to be far worse. Because of
coronavirus, the fossil fuel industry is in total disarray, with prices
collapsing and demand falling. By increasing public transportation, we can
continue decreasing carbon dioxide emissions, even when businesses begin to
reopen and more people go back to work. This is also an opportunity to create
more good, union jobs—especially when unemployment is at nearly 25%. Bus
drivers have already proven that they’re willing to take action to fight for
health and safety on the job—and win. But what else can transport workers
struggle for?
ATU
says its “members already know that
public transit is far more environmentally sustainable.” The union obviously
supports expanding public transit—that means more workers, and more members—but
it also supports making it free and powering it by the wind, sun, and seas. A
retiree from Local 732 in Georgia, Paul McLennan, agrees that “it’s a no
brainer. We need more public transit to get people out of cars.” Building and
using electric-powered buses and moving away from fossil fuels would of course
be gigantic undertakings for the union, but there’s really no other choice if
we have any hope of a real future for our climate. The union choosing to
prioritize fighting for expanded public transit—and fighting against
austerity—opens up doors to work with environmental groups and free transit
advocates, and to build the coalition necessary to actually win these huge
demands. We’ve already seen this coalition at work during coronavirus—350.org,
Sierra Club, and Sunrise Movement joined with ATU and TWU to demand that
Congress increase the allocation for emergency assistance to public
transportation.
This
work is no small feat, but President Costa said that “we’ve been shut down for
six weeks. Oil is worthless, they’re giving it away. Now the air is
better, the world is cleaner. It pays to have a good and safe transit system in
our world, and the Green New Deal means creating better jobs.” If we want to
transition to a more just society, transport workers’ jobs must be safe and
dignified, and we have to create more of them by expanding public transit. In
the words of McLennan, “when we see problems from all sides, it makes for
better solutions.”
>> The article above was written by Mindy Isser, and is reprinted from In These Times.
1 comment:
Post a Comment