Road to Nowhere. Ch1. Mistakes of a Young White Organizer.
Along with feeding my need for human contact, community organizing also matched up perfectly with my inner rage. I had a habit of talking back and fighting. Organizing gave me targets to talk back to, to fight against, where the vicious and ruthless stuff came in handy…Vengeance–for injustice, for racism, for inequality, for greed: some may have been lured to organizing by the need to make things right, but I was there at least partially to do some damage to the bad guys.
Road to Nowhere. Ch2. The Taller Boy.
I remember to this day the look on the taller boy’s face: I sensed that he was charged with protecting the little ones. What a set-up. There was no way for him to win. I could see that he tried so hard, and I knew something about trying hard, never winning. I never forgot him.
Road to Nowhere. Ch3. The Sign.
Issues are tools that allow organizers to build powerful organizations. But I hadn’t yet found any good issues in Pine Bluff. That was why I was so excited when I pulled up to Walker’s small gas station on Ohio Street and noticed a large, hand-written sign posted out front. In big, bold, colorful letters, it declared “This Ain’t HUD’s Mud!”
Road to Nowhere. Ch4. Tremors.
Despite my feeling that I had nothing to offer, organizers do have one bit of magic. We can become a mirror for the person we talk to. When we listen excitedly to what they have to tell us, when we laugh at a great sign, when we answer tough questions honestly, when we ask questions of folks whose opinion is never otherwise solicited, we send a message: I see you. I see the leader you really are, I hear your great ideas, I’m excited to have the chance to work with you.
Road to Nowhere. Ch5. Mr. Epperson.
I was beginning to love my job. I just showed up, and folks had already been making a plan. That was good because ACORN had taught me how to knock on doors and ask folks to join and pay their dues, but they didn’t have enough time to tell me what to do about the issues that people cared about. I was very excited to have found a tight-knit community that already seemed to know.
Crunch Time at McMaid!
McMaid, in fact, employed about 150 overwhelmingly Black and Brown homecare workers. The workers were not maids, either, they were homecare workers – providing vital in-home care to hundreds of seniors and people with disabilities across Chicago…While the company’s millionaire CEO did quite well living on his estate in Barrington Hills, surrounded by his collection of Jaguar automobiles, the workers toiled at minimum wage with no benefits. Providing health care services to consumers, but having no health care themselves.
Fast Food Fight
On February 22, 1980, workers at the Greyhound Burger King in downtown Detroit won the first union election at a fast-food restaurant in the United States by a vote of 25-23.
The Fight for a Caring Economy
The overwhelming 97 percent union vote margin by a group of over 43,000 childcare providers in California is the most recent victory in a decades-long movement of hundreds of thousands of home-based childcare providers across the United States. It is also one of the largest victories for labor unions in the U.S. in recent history.
Growth of a Modern Union Local: A People’s History of SEIU Local 880
Keith Kelleher's Canvassing Rules: Training and working with experienced and inexperienced canvassers over the years and especially the last few weeks, right before the big elections, has brought back some key rules I've learned for canvassing. I've been lucky enough to do all types of doorknocking and canvassing: labor, community, political, issue, fundraising, or all of the above; and here are a few tips that help you keep it together through hours of doorknocking.