Remarks by Richard L. Trumka, President of the AFL-CIO, San Diego Jobs Rally, San Diego, CA January 06, 2010
Thank you, Art (Pulaski), for
that introduction, and for your leadership in taking on the jobs crisis in California.
I am happy to be in San Diego on my first trip to California as president of the AFL-CIO.
California is Exhibit 1 of what’s happening
across our country and I came here to listen and to learn.
What I’ve seen here this morning
– as I sat with some of the hard-working people of this great city – people who
through no fault of their own are without jobs -- is another grim reminder of
the ever-present struggles of working families in this city … this state … this
country … at this decisive moment in our history.It’s a reminder of the responsibilities born
by our nation’s leaders – including our labor movement – to respond as never
before to create a different kind of economy.
And I can tell you this:We cannot – and we will not – hesitate
in fighting back.
And we will not turn away anyone
who will work together with us to create an economy that recognizes and respects
the lives and futures of the people of this great state.
The spirit and innovation and
leadership I’ve seen here have affirmed my decision to come to San Diego – you’re an inspiration not just
for our labor movement but for our entire country.
I’m really proud to join such a
great bunch of leaders today — Art Pulaski, Tom Lemmon, Mickey Kasperian, Rabbi
Coskey, Lorena Gonzales and City Council President Ben Hueso --- all of you
committed to saving and creating the jobs we so desperately need.
Most of all, I’m proud to join
all of YOU rallying together here today.
Jobs.It’s what it’s all about.
Good Jobs.
And they should be Local Jobs.
I love your T-Shirts ---- “Local
Jobs” are the key.
You are leading the way with so
many initiatives ---- YOUTHBUILD .... your CLC Jobs Agenda for 2010 ... your
plans to adopt a programmatic Project Labor Agreement for the city.
Great work, San Diego!
And I know we can count on you for more.
On December 3rd, I
was invited to President Obama’s Jobs Summit to deliver a message on behalf of America’s
working families and our unions.Our
message was that we need to take urgent action NOW to create jobs.
While our country is slowly beginning
to recover from the recession, we can’t just sit around and hope for the
best.Our jobs picture remains grim –
and I don’t need to remind anybody here of that.
President Obama agreed with us
and said we need to fundamentally rebuild our entire economy.
While Wall Street is busy
cashing bonus checks, working families are living a nightmare of layoffs,
mortgage foreclosures and personal bankruptcy ... and that, brothers and
sisters, is totally unacceptable.
Congress also agrees with us and
before the holiday recess, the House of Representatives passed a jobs package
that will extend unemployment insurance, send more financial aid to state
governments, and fund more important infrastructure projects ---roads, bridges,
railways, school construction, water treatment projects.
The House bill isn’t big enough
to resolve the jobs crisis, but it’s a good first step and we have to convince the
Senate to pass it now.
The AFL-CIO has adopted a five
point plan to add urgency at all levels of government.
First, we have to extend the
lifeline to the unemployed — the unemployment benefits, food assistance, COBRA
benefits that help people deal with layoffs and the chaos they create.
Second, we have to pump more
money into rebuilding our infrastructure and investing in green
technology.We have at least $2.2 trillion
in this country in unmet infrastructure needs --- $2.2 trillion.More than one in four of our nation’s bridges
are in bad shape .4,000 dams are deficient .30 percent of our schools
are overcrowded and 3.5 million students attend schools where a building is in
poor condition.Every dollar we spend
employs workers all down the supply chain in construction, manufacturing,
design and engineering – and ripples out into every sector.
We also have to increase our
commitment to helping state and local governments, who are facing deep
shortfalls like the one here in California — nationwide, we’re facing proposals
for the layoffs of teachers, police and fire fighters – 2700 firefighters
alone.An investment in state and local government
will not only save jobs, it will maintain critical frontline services and avoid
devastating damage to education.
It is equally important for us
nationally to take a cue from what you are doing here in San Diego and fund
jobs in our local communities — not replacements for current public jobs, but
good new jobs to help address priorities in distressed communities.
Finally, we believe we have to
put TARP to work for Main Street
by using some of the leftover funds to create jobs by hiring community banks to
lend money directly to small and medium-sized businesses.The bank bailout helped Wall Street and now
we have to help Main Street
--- without reservation … without delay.
These great needs present
awesome opportunities -- if we can summon the resolve as a nation to rebuild
our country and create the jobs we need in the process.Over the next few months, we’ll be asking
international unions, local unions, and all of our state and local affiliates
to help turn up the heat on government at every level.
And we must make sure American
jobs are good jobs – that’s why the next step is fundamentally
rebuilding our economy.
It’s why one of our most urgent
priorities is restoring the freedom of every working person to join a union to
bargain for a better life by passing the Employee Free Choice Act.
And it’s why fights like the one
you are waging at Doug Manchester’s Grand Hyatt are absolutely critical.
We know that when we make our
voices heard, we get action — you are doing that here in San Diego ….
And we can do it all across our
country if we do more of the hard work it takes to get our elected officials
moving.
You’ve proven that when we work
together, and stand together and fight together, we win together.
Let’s get busy and roll up our sleeves and get
the job done.