Democratic mayor Bill White, SEIU-affiliated
janitors in Houston, and the Houston Police Department has conspired
to teach me one more lesson in my ongoing campaign to edjumucate myself
on labor in America, circa 2006. Those us who are not janitors can probably
begin to imagine what a difficult job it can be, and janitors who clean
the offices of Chevron, Shell, and Exxon Mobil were being paid $5.30 an
hour (whereas, as
Rep. Waxman says in this pdf of a letter, workers in Chicago and LA
make upwards of $10/hour with benefits), had no health care, and were
given just a couple of hours of work a day. When the decided to protest
in the city streets, they reportedly got trampled
by horses and thrown
into jail where they spent the night on concrete floors.
Now
we're hearing that the janitors have worked out a tentative three-year
contract that raises the hourly wage by $2.65 over the course of the contract,
establishes a $20/month single payer health care plan, gives them two
weeks of vacation and six holidays a year.
I'm committed to thinking through American labor without an ideological
bent, to assess the facts and its history with an open mind. But reality
ain't making it easy. Five dollars and thirty cents an hour to keep the
wheels of big economy spinning? No real way to address you and your family's
health needs when
even Americans with insurance still spend every dime to address
the threat of something like cancer? Trampling other human beings
in the streets for agitating for the resources that the oil company employees
who occupy the offices they clean and maintain would consider pocket change?
Getting a bit difficult to stay objective.