National Committee for Sanitation Worker Justice Demands Safe Conditions
at Waste Management
April 3, 2008
(Memphis, TN) – On the eve of the 40th anniversary of the assassination of
Martin Luther King Jr. Teamsters and religious leaders from across the country
stood in unity today with waste workers from 1968 and 2008 to demand Waste
Management Inc. [NYSE: WMI] and other sanitation companies make immediate and
substantive improvements in worker safety.
The Teamsters and religious leaders announced at St. Mary’s Episcopal Church
in Memphis, Tennessee, the formation of the National Committee for Sanitation
Worker Justice (NCSWJ). The coalition was formed by Interfaith Worker Justice (IWJ)
in response to the findings of the investigative report, "In
Harm’s Way," which was issued last month by the National Commission of
Inquiry into the Worker Health and Safety Crisis in the Solid Waste Industry.
The report shows that waste workers still face very real threats to their health
on a daily basis, threats that have caused an average of more than 80 deaths a
year in this industry.
"Forty years ago Dr. King joined with the maligned and abused sanitation
workers of Memphis to insist on human dignity and economic justice," said Rev.
Nelson Johnson, Director of the Beloved Community Center in Greensboro, North
Carolina, Co-President of the Board of IWJ and Co-Chair of the NCSWJ. "The 40th
anniversary of Dr. King’s assassination ought to serve as a clarion call to
faith leaders and people of good will all over the nation to join together to
complete the unfinished work for which Dr. King courageously gave his life."
"Today’s plantation capitalism is as rapacious and cruel as it was in the
sanitation strike 40 years go, which I chaired," said Rev. James Lawson, pastor
emeritus of the Centenary Methodist Church in Memphis and renowned civil rights
leader. "It is past time for this most religious country, this most religious
people, to repudiate the economics of the plantation. Jesus insisted that
without justice you miss the meaning of the Torah and the prophets."
The family of deceased Waste Management, Inc. (WMI) mechanic Raul Figueroa
from West Palm Beach, Florida, joined SWJC, 1968 strikers, safety advocates and
representatives from the Teamsters Union at the press conference to show their
support for the goals of the committee.
Figueroa was the victim of an accident on January 3, 2008 at the North
Broward Waste Management facility when a hydraulic arm on the truck
malfunctioned, pinning him against the cab and severing his body in half. His
family hopes to enact real change at WMI by partnering with the Teamsters Union
and other concerned advocates like the NCSWJ to prevent Figueroa’s fate from
befalling other workers in the sanitation industry.
Figueroa’s family was also showed their support at the launch of "In Harm’s
Way" in Miami, Florida on March 25, 2008. It is their hope that through raising
awareness of the safety problems that currently plague the solid waste industry
through the report and the efforts of SWJC real change can be made that will
reduce injures and save lives.
"We hope that through our joint and continuous efforts with the Teamsters and
the SWJC we can finally bring about regulations in this industry," said Alina
Miranda, widow of Raul Figueroa. "We hope that Waste Management finally realizes
that their employees are not just numbers, but human beings and as such they pay
attention to their basic needs, needs such as parts, tools or safety equipment
that could be the difference between life and death."
The National Commission of Inquiry into the Worker Health and Safety Crisis
in the Solid Waste Industry launched an investigation into safety issues at WMI
and found systemic problems within the company, characterizing WMI’s safety
program as using an "archaic, misguided approach".
The commission conducted a series of in-depth interviews with solid waste
drivers, mechanics and other workers at WMI. With the workers’ help, an
anonymous questionnaire was created and distributed to hundreds of sanitation
workers across the country and formed the foundation for the findings in this
report.
The report found that 40 years after Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. gave his
life in an effort to fight for civil and worker rights for striking sanitation
workers in Memphis, the same issues that led to the strike remain prevalent in
the industry even today. The questionnaire revealed that commonplace issues for
workers in the industry that are part of their daily routine include long hours
and the handling of hazardous materials without proper safety equipment.
"When Memphis sanitation workers Echol Cole and Robert Walker died on
February 1, 1968 it set in motion a series of events that saw an entire nation
swept up in a battle for basic civil and worker rights," said Teamsters General
President Jim Hoffa. "The issues in this industry that Dr. King died fighting
for, and the 1968 strikers stood united against, still remain at Waste
Management. By working with the National Committee for Sanitation Worker
Justice, our union has gained an invaluable ally in the fight to change the
course of this industry."
The NCSWJ is comprised of religious leaders from across the country and from
many different denominations. The leaders have come together to demand safe
working conditions at WMI and other solid waste companies.
Interfaith Worker Justice is an organization that calls upon religious values
in order to educate, organize, and mobilize the religious community in the U.S.
on issues and campaigns that will improve wages, benefits, and working
conditions for workers, especially low-wage workers.
Founded in 1903, the International Brotherhood of Teamsters represents 1.4
million hardworking men and women in the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico.
In Harm’s Way is available at:
http://www.teamster.org/divisions/solidwaste/wmi_report.asp