Workers
Eager to Join America’s Strongest Union
March 27, 2008
(Jacksonville, FL) -- First
Student school bus drivers joined with area Teamsters today to rally outside of
Jacksonville’s largest bus yard to demand fair wages, improved benefits, safe
conditions for themselves and the children they transport, and respect on the
job.
The drivers and aides are
waging a campaign to join the Teamsters Union, which has organized more than
5,700 First Student and Laidlaw bus drivers nationwide in the past year.
“These drivers and transit
workers work hard every day to ensure the safety and security of our children,”
Jim Hoffa, Teamsters General President, said at the rally. “They deserve our
respect. They deserve safe working conditions and fair wages and benefits.”
More than 900 bus drivers
are employed by First Student in the Jacksonville area. The rally was held at
the Arlington yard, the largest of the five bus yards and maintenance facilities
in the region. The drivers and transit workers transport thousands of area
school children each day.
“Our campaign is about
driving up standards for bus workers and transit workers, and the children they
transport,” Hoffa said. “First Student wants to keep treating its employees like
second-class citizens, but the Teamsters won’t stand for it.”
“I believe that safety will
improve for the children and the drivers once we have Teamsters representing
us,” said Rhonda Johnson, a two-year First Student driver in Jacksonville.
“Being Teamsters will definitely bring a higher standard to our workplace.”
Gaining respect on the job
is important to many First Student drivers who have chosen Teamsters. “The
reason I want to be a Teamster is so that I can have a voice at work,” said
Corlene Isaacs, a seven-year employee of First Student. “Management doesn’t
respect us now, but they will with a union.”
Driving Up Standards, the
national organizing campaign for private school bus drivers, is a coordinated
project with the Teamsters and the Transport and General Workers’ Union (T&G)
to improve safety, service and work standards in the private school bus
industry.
The Teamsters Union
in the past year has organized thousands of First Student bus and transit
workers from Alaska to Mainemore than 5,700 workers
at 50 different bus yards. The Teamsters’ effort has led to improved
safety, higher wages and better benefits for First Student employees and the
children they transport.
More information about the
effort and testimonies from First Student workers can be found at
www.schoolbusworkersunited.org.
The International
Brotherhood of Teamsters was founded in 1903 and represents 1.4 million hardworking men and women throughout the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico.