Protesters Hope to Sway Incoming Mayor
Wednesday, December 04, 2013
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(Stephen Nessen/WNYC)
Across New York City, small groups of pro-union activists,
supporting various causes, are holding flash demonstrations. What they
have in common is a belief that the pro-labor momentum that began with
Bill de Blasio’s election will lead to higher wages for workers and a
union-friendly administration.
Customers sipping coffee and reading the paper at the Grand
Café, outside of Grand Central Terminal had their quiet morning smashed
by a dozen protesters and the Rude Mechanical Orchestra marching band.
They claimed four workers were unfairly fired for organizing.
Over at the High Line, where condos can sell for millions of dollars, another labor group that represents building workers, unfurled a banner that read: "High Line Living, Low Wage Workers," in front of a building they say pays its workers a starting wage of $13.37 an hour.
And on the Upper East side, protesters inflated a nearly 2-story, bloated, top-hat-wearing, cigar chomping pig outside the home of Cablevision director Vincent Tese. They complained about Cablevision's alleged anti-union busting tactics.
Buoyed by Bill de Blasio’s narrative about income inequality in the city , protesters claim on their website that “The sun is setting on a city run by the and for the 1 percent.
While protests are planned for the rest of the week, any changes that might happen will have to wait until after the new mayor takes office in January.
Protesters inside the Grand Cafe, claiming the owner unfairly fired 4 workers for union organizing. (Stephen Nessen/WNYC)
Protesters with 32BJ SEIU hang a banner on the High Line calling for luxury condos to pay building workers higher wages. (Stephen Nessen/WNYC)
Over at the High Line, where condos can sell for millions of dollars, another labor group that represents building workers, unfurled a banner that read: "High Line Living, Low Wage Workers," in front of a building they say pays its workers a starting wage of $13.37 an hour.
And on the Upper East side, protesters inflated a nearly 2-story, bloated, top-hat-wearing, cigar chomping pig outside the home of Cablevision director Vincent Tese. They complained about Cablevision's alleged anti-union busting tactics.
Buoyed by Bill de Blasio’s narrative about income inequality in the city , protesters claim on their website that “The sun is setting on a city run by the and for the 1 percent.
While protests are planned for the rest of the week, any changes that might happen will have to wait until after the new mayor takes office in January.
Protesters inside the Grand Cafe, claiming the owner unfairly fired 4 workers for union organizing. (Stephen Nessen/WNYC)
Protesters with 32BJ SEIU hang a banner on the High Line calling for luxury condos to pay building workers higher wages. (Stephen Nessen/WNYC)
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