COLUMBUS—A massive crowd, estimated at over 15,000, descended on the Ohio statehouse July 12 demanding that a rapidly growing crisis in our nation’s pension system be fixed. A sea of camo shirts and caps worn by miners filled the open area in front of the statehouse and chants of “Fix It!” echoed off the surrounding buildings, as the “Rally to Save Our Pensions” kicked off. Thousands of blue-shirted Teamster retirees, victims of huge pension cuts, filled out the crowd.
Union singer Mike Pomeroy from West Virginia had demonstrators singing lines from Woody Guthrie. “This land belongs to you and me,” they sang. It became clear however, that this land, as now constructed, belongs to billionaires, something this crowd intended to change.
The statehouse, according to Mark Fluharty, Secretary-Treasurer of the Central Ohio Labor Federation, “looks like it did during the Issue 2 fight a few year’s ago. That’s how OUR house should look!”
Fluharty was referring to the massive labor-led referendum in 2011 that overturned a Republican effort to force a “right-to-work” anti-labor bill onto Ohio’s workers. This rally, like the huge Issue 2 fight, showed a myriad of colors—including purple SEIU shirts and red CWA colors. Steelworkers were in blue while building trades groups, wearing their hardhats, were outfitted in work gear.
The rally was called to coincide with a field hearing the following day by the Senate Joint Select Committee on Solvency of Multiemployer Plans, of which both Ohio Senators, Democrat Sherrod Brown and Republican Rob Portman, are members. That committee was created by the Senate to attempt to reach consensus on a plan to save workers’ pensions from multiemployer plans. A massive, and growing, crisis has developed over the past decade, as large numbers of multiemployer pension plans saw a wave of bankruptcies and failures after the housing crisis hit.
The crisis was made far worse by the GOP majority in Congress in 2014, when they passed the Multiemployer Pension Reform Act allowing, for the first time, cuts in pension plans taken over by the Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation (PBGC), the government agency set up to take over failing pension plans, and distribute funds to pensioners. Some retirees saw their pensions cut down to $150-200 per month. Worse still, their healthcare was also taken away. The field hearing will deal with pension plans covering 1.5 million Americans, over 60,000 from Ohio.
“This is shameful, immoral,” said Ohio state Sen. Hershel Craig. “Government is supposed to help people, not legislate to destroy their families. It has become government by and for the billionaires, while they break contracts with our people!”
A large pension rights movement, led by rank and file retirees and workers, is spreading across the nation in response to the pension cuts. “It isn’t just retirees themselves and their families who are hurt by these cuts,” according to Norm Wernet, president of Ohio Alliance for Retired Americans.
There were huge cheers when Sen. Sherrod Brown’s name was mentioned from the stage. Sherrod has introduced legislation to raise federal monies to be used to strengthen funding of the PBGC, which holds the failed plans, and to protect the multiemployer plans. As with all economic issues, GOP proposals to address the issue all put the entire burden on retirees, proposing even further pension cuts.
The miners and Teamsters backed Republican Portman in the 2016 election, but both unions have strongly endorsed the Democratic ticket this year, including Sen. Brown. Union members are part of the Democratic Party’s state slate, including Betty Sutton, candidate for lieutenant governor, and Rob Richardson, a young African-American Laborers’ Union leader. Rich Cordray, Democratic gubernatorial candidate, led the national Consumer’s Agency, winning billions from corporations.
“We tried to tell everyone 20 years ago when this was happening to us that they’d all be next,” said retired steelworker and SOAR leader Butch Deems. “Now, everyone else is next’”
“We learned long ago that we had to stand together, united, if we are to win, and that these corporations are not here to give us anything. Everything we have, we’ve had to fight for,” stated Ohio Labor Federation President Tim Burga at the rally.
“This is the People’s House! We have to come here every once in a while and remind the folks here about that. I want to thank you all for reminding them all of that today!”
Dave Fields is a miner that got hit by the pension cuts, and traveled here from North Carolina to have his voice heard. He is a lifelong Republican and supported Trump last year.
“Never again,” he said. “We had a contract and I worked 40 years, with my contractually guaranteed pension waiting on me. Trump promised to help us, but he passes his tax cut for the billionaires and forgets about us.”
“When you won’t stand up for something, Martin Luther King told us that we’d lay down for anything. Those great powers that be,” UMWA President Cecil Roberts told the fired-up crowd, “told us, when we faced far harsher conditions, ‘You can’t win!’ So, we organized and we fought! We won our union! They told us, when we all joined together to fight for civil rights, ‘You can’t win, give up!’ So, we organized and we fought, united, and we won! Always, the powers tell us that we can’t win, that we shouldn’t organize, we shouldn’t fight. But we organized and we fought and we won because we stood together united! We’re organized, we’re fighting, and we are going to win!”
Like free stuff? So do we. Here at People’s World, we believe strongly in the mission of keeping the labor and democratic movements informed so they are prepared for the struggle. But we need your help. While our content is free for readers (something we are proud of) it takes money — a lot of it — to produce and cover the stories you see in our pages. Only you, our readers and supporters, can keep us going. Only you can make sure we keep the news that matters free of paywalls and advertisements. If you enjoy reading People’s World and the stories we bring you, support our work by becoming a $5 monthly sustainer today.
Comments