Tag Archives: janitors

Chicago Janitors Kick off their Campaign for Good Jobs for the 99% and the Revival of the Middle Class

With the third highest poverty rate and the highest rate of racial income disparity of any major city in the U.S., Chicago’s working families are working harder than ever to secure a better future that seems further out of reach every day. Chicago janitors are coming together to change that.

With their union contract set to expire April 8, about 3,500 Chicago-area janitors and community supporters rallied at the Chicago Theatre Sunday and marched to Chase Bank to call on the richest 1% to do their part to create and protect good middle class jobs for Chicago. The convention kicked off the janitors’ contract negotiations, which begin in March and impact more than 13,000 janitors in SEIU Local 1.

“We’re struggling because it seems that in Chicago no matter how hard you work, you’re stuck and can’t get ahead.” said Ed Washington, a janitor at Yale Elementary School in Chicago. “We’re working to change that. I want my children to have a better life than I had, just like my parents wanted a better life for me”

Bargaining a new union contract with fair wage increases will enable Chicago janitors to provide for their families, but that alone won’t restore balance to the economy. That’s why Chicago janitors are joining with workers across the city, with clergy and community leaders, and with the rest of the 99% to call on banks and corporate executives to do their part to fix our economy—to create good jobs, raise wages, and pay their fair share in taxes. Janitors ended the rally with a march to Chase Bank, urging the multi-billion dollar corporation to do its part.

“Chase Bank made $8.5 billion in profit last year.  It would take me or any Chicago janitor who keeps Chase clean 31 years to make what Chase profits in just one hour,” said Urszula Domaradzki, a downtown janitor.  “If the 1% just paid their fair share, Chicago would have more good jobs, better schools, and safer neighborhoods.”

Chicago janitors clean the equivalent of nearly 33,000 miles of office space every night. In spite of their hard work, the average Chicago janitor is paid about $20,000 below the estimated annual cost of living for a family of four in the Chicago area.

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Vacation Pay Victory for Chicago Janitors

More than 300 Chicago janitors who work for Pritchard Industries will finally receive nearly $400,000 in vacation pay owed to them.

For months, Pritchard had been refusing to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars in vacation pay the company owed the janitors.

Unfortunately, while workers in Chicago celebrate their victory, other Pritchard janitors are struggling this holiday season. In Houston, Pritchard has refused to bargain with janitors for a fair contract, and has even cut some workers’ pay down to minimum wage.

To get our economy back on track, working people need to make ends meet. We can’t let companies like Pritchard balance their books on the backs of hard-working janitors.

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Janitors Host Convention and March

With negotiations to improve more than 3,200 local jobs set to start at the end of the month, Houston janitors today are hosting a convention and march to call for an economy that works for all Houstonians.

“When some people have more money than they can possibly spend while others do not have enough to make ends meet, it holds Houston’s economy back,” says Houston janitor Ascención Blanco. “We need an economy that works for everybody.”

While Houston has weathered the economic downturn better than many other cities, those at the bottom have been disproportionately hurt. One in four Houstonians report having trouble buying groceries to feed their family. More than 1.3 million residents in the metropolitan area have no access to quality, affordable health care.

In 2006, Houston janitors stood up to win better jobs for Houston after they were forced to go on strike. At the time, most janitors were paid just $20 a day with no benefits. They won a collective bargaining agreement that gave them access to affordable healthcare and more than doubled their income to $7.75 an hour with additional work hours. (more…)

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