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SEIU 721 has a newly elected board and President Bob Schoonover is in charge.

Bob Schoonover

Bob Schoonover

Overwhelmingly the membership spoke and got behind Bob Schoonover and his “No Givebacks” message.

Bob Schoonover is now facing a difficult road with the City of LA and LA County Board of  Supervisors, budget woes and furloughs are the situation at hand Bob Schoonover has made the promise of No Givebacks and he has the backing of one of the most powerful labor leaders in Southern California Julie Butcher.

Few people know the workings of LA City hall as well as Julie Butcher and SEIU International has been put on notice that this cash cow of  County and City workers in Southern California is ready to fight.

Julie Butcher needs to get back in control, and be given more responsibility in the running of Local 721, the membership has spoken and they have selected it’s leaders we can’t do it without the gritty tenacious leadership of Julie Butcher and her staff, we have elected local leaders who stand for local control and we expect our staff to be treated well and no longer undervalued.

It’s time the President of 721 tell the international thanks but no thanks and empower the true leaders to run campaigns the way they must be run and Julie Butcher is in the  best position to help LA City workers at this time.

Bob Schoonover working with Julie Butcher & Linda Dent will lead us through these tough times and will allow us to fight the way 347 would have,  gritty blue collar no nonsense.

Labor is down but not out in Los Angeles, the Fight is on!

Below are the official results from the SEIU 721 Election.

Congratulations to all!

President
Bob Schoonover

Vice President
Linda Dent

Secretary
Catherine Eide Nelson

Treasurer
Tony Bravo

LA County
Marlene Allen*
Rodolfo “Rudy” Gaona
Blanca Gomez*
Lucy Guerrero
Fred Huicochea
Lila Johnson-Crenshaw
Linda Mascorro
Tony F. Mendoza
Omar Perez
Jose Sanchez
Arnella Sims
Cindy Singer
Harold Sterker

LA / OC Cities
Joaquin Avalos*
Edwina Chism
Cheryl Elam-Collins
Cecilia Flores
Brian Hollenbaugh
Charley Mims
Andy Morales
Linda Stone*
Simboa Wright

Tri-Counties
Shannon Abramovitch
Tom Johnston
Perry Morefield
Dave Mulvey
Ted Perez
Angela Portillo*
Grace Sepulveda*

Inland Area
Lawrence (Larry) Beal
Tim Burke
Barbara Cayon*
Greg Hagan
Kevin Luke
Jack Porrelli
Glenn Sanders
Wendy Thomas*

We can’t afford more of the same!

Finally Service Employees International Union local 721 members will have the responsibility and the freedom to vote for those who will lead them and their union through some of the toughest times organized labor in the greater Los Angeles area, or the country for that matter has faced. Faced with this daunting task several leaders have emerged who believe it is ok to earn a decent salary and have medical benefits and live without the fear that they will be ripped away from us by politicians who we worked to elect.

“Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time. We are the ones we’ve been waiting for. We are the change that we seek.” Barack Obama

There is HOPE

We are ready to make history!  No Longer are we going to be kept down and ignored by leaders whose special interests always win out while we lose out. Los Angeles County & the City of Los Angeles along with our brothers and sisters in Ventura, Orange, Inglewood, Riverside and across Southern California  must come together and elect leaders brave enough to stand as a union as a labor force and make the tough calls.

VOTE FOR CHANGE!

We have put together a listing of the candidates statements which were willfully left out of the mailing in order to keep you in the dark.  SEIU Fat Cats and Andy Stern have fought us having our own elected board members and officers for years fighting tooth and nail to hold onto power at any cost, this willful attempt to keep the truth away from it’s members will only backfire on them once the voters read the positive message of change they have for us.

Ask yourself this. Can you afford to keep the same leadership around that has brought you furloughs givebacks and increases in what you pay for medical & retirement while giving back hard fought cost of living increases?

We need leaders who will lead and fight for our future, all of our futures, we need positive change for Southern California and our Local 721.

Yes We CAN!

Brothers and Sisters this is no ordinary time and this is no ordinary election this may be the last chance we have to reclaim our union local together we can make this change your vote is your voice speak up and we can make this change, YES WE CAN!

Read the Candidates statements here!

721.lacityworkers.com Or http://bit.ly/bHlo17

WE Support Members for a Democratic Union or MDU on your ballot

In this piece Mayor Villaraigosa lends his support to Marcos Aguilar, a close friend of Juan Alvarez who killed 11 innocent people in the second deadliest commuter crash in Metrolink history.

How can anyone trust a Mayor with such radical anti American views?

Mayor Recall should stop taking over the LAUSD and allowing his friends school to continue when it is clearly failing, much like his leadership!

Mayor Osama Bin Villaraigosa Failed Terrorist sympathizer.

Bob Schoonover makes it clear in this piece he wrote, LA City Workers are done with concessions not just this budget year but next as well!
Read his great piece below.

Don’t Give Up on LA
LABOR
By Bob Schoonover

As of today, city workers are the only stakeholders who have taken aggressive and effective action to address the budget shortfall. Fitch’s last observations about the City’s finances note the coalition agreement as structural, substantive budget action. Even the LA Times begrudgingly acknowledged that LA’s frontline service workers have good ideas about delivering quality cost-effective services.

The labor agreement reached last fall with 22,000 city workers delayed four contractually obligated raises to workers in jobs as varied as these: librarians, refuse drivers, 911 police civilians, recreation & parks workers, sewer & wastewater workers, street services workers, zoo workers, police & fire mechanics, building trades workers, engineers, chemists, criminalists, and crossing guards to name a few.

We eliminated millions in overtime, agreed to limited unpaid hours off this year, and to increase our pension contributions. The immediate budget savings are $153 million this year, $323 million in the first two, and $2.12 billion over five years.

Since our members approved this agreement, the City has overspent budgeted expenditures by $98.7 million and approved raises to DWP workers that now endanger the utility’s ability to meet its commitment to the City of Los Angeles.

Some businesses propose a fire sale of City assets to themselves, and a reduction of City employee pay, benefits, and pensions to match what they would like to offer their own employees.

The CAO’s three-year budget proposal seeks to privatize the City’s Zoo, golf courses, parking lots, parking meters, maintenance including safety equipment and vehicles, Convention Center, ambulance billing, tree trimming, street sweeping, engineering, park maintenance, childcare services, arts, culture, & El Pueblo.

The City does not provide these services and maintain these facilities for profit. These are services and facilities that the public and the business community expect from a major city. LA workers will not stand for commercialization of municipal services, conversion of self-sustaining City assets to corporate cash cows, and loss of the facilities the City owns to line the pockets of LA’s richest suits.

The people of Los Angeles pay dearly for quality cost-effective city services and the workers of LA gave city management the tools they needed to make city government work the way it should – efficiently, publicly, focused and essential.

We expected retirements to occur randomly and all across the top levels of city government. Given that, we’ve encouraged smart, strategic consolidations of city functions.

Does it really make sense that seven different city departments trim trees – that LAWA contracts out tree trimming for a cost of $800 a tree while the CAO is proposing to offload tree trimming onto the fiscal backs of us home owners?

Now, I’m pretty conservative, but I believe trees belong to the whole City. It’s work that enhances public safety and the quality of LA life. The response of LA’s urban forestry workers during recent rains reminds all of us why it’s critical to have professional arborists and skilled city tree surgeons who cost considerably less than private tree work and provide reliable service.

Contracting just 10% of the tree work DWP contracts out would keep every city tree crew working for a year.

On Friday, the Mayor addressed union leaders at the County Federation of Labor. He was pressed by Cheryl Parisi, chair of the Coalition of City Unions, AFSCME 36 head:  “You come here to the House of Labor, talking about unavoidable layoffs. Yesterday, when you spoke in the Cathedral of Business, did you ask them to pony up with a 10% across-the-board cut to the $2.5 billion in private business done with the City of Los Angeles?”

He answered that in response to a question from David Abel, he announced that he was calling for a 20% cut in contracts. That’s good news because that’s worth $500 million. That matches the $400 – 600 million in reported outstanding debt owed to the City.

After the staff of the CAO’s office worked hard to process thousands of early retirement applications, LACERS dragged its bureaucratic feet then rewarded GM Sally Choi with a raise.

Last week, the LACERS board’s mayoral appointees hired an additional Assistant General Manager, not even affording that opportunity to someone struggling on the City’s beleaguered general fund.

Retiring all ERIP applicants within 30 days saves $22 million this year. Encouraging the retirement of an additional 300 applicants adds $10 million savings this year.

For 15 years traffic officers have advocated that the collection of parking tickets should be in-sourced. Two hundred twenty million of the City’s uncollected debt is uncollected parking ticket revenue. ACS, the company responsible for collecting parking tickets for the City, still owes the Department of Transportation $141 million in services and technology products.

City Attorneys represented by SEIU 721 will be meeting this week in part to identify ways they can help bolster collections. Ideas put forth by city workers are worth hundreds of millions in city services.

LA’s unions did not create this emergency, yet we are the first and only responders. The City has misinterpreted our forceful and massive relief effort as weakness. The City’s agreement with its unions protects coalition members from being laid off this fiscal year. The Mayor’s decision to devastate city services as he formulates his 2010-11 budget will cost the City added millions in deferred raises.

Our members have voted to give all they can afford to give. They say, “No more. We are tapped out.”

As a leader of these workers, I say, “NO MORE FROM US!”
We have given the City the flexibility, the tools, and the materials necessary to get this job done.

We don’t want to hear that we are now expendable and should be laid off. We want to see sensible actions and programs that use the City work force to get this city back on its feet.

(Bob Schoonover is President of SEIU Local 721; Heavy Duty Equipment Mechanic, General Services — 31 years)

EAA Executive Director Bob Aquino challenges Board of governors for referendum on his future.

Should I stay or should I go now? Bob Aquino

If I go there will be trouble & if I stay it will be Double.

EAA Leader Bob Aquino blasted the elected board of governors going directly to the members laying it all out on the line.

In an email sent directly to the EAA Members,  Mr. Aquino reportedly laid out the obvious,  EAA will continue to be raided by SEIU,  City Management is much cozier with SEIU and Julie Butcher then EAA,  and that he wants the membership to decide his fate and their future.

Below are the referendum questions as reportedly posed by Bob Aquino,

Should your Board of Governors immediately negotiate termination to Executive Director Aquino’s contract, and hire a new Executive Director in an effort to establish better rapport with City management?
OR
Do you support keeping Executive Director Aquino through the end of his contract in August of 2011?

What is not mentioned in the email according to sources familiar with EAA is that in order to terminate the contract Aquino has, EAA would be on the hook financially for a very large amount of severance which has caused the cash strapped union & the board of governors to hold off on any action resulting in a large expenditure.

So the real questions are;

Is Aquino really to blame for the missteps during the raid?

Is EAA a sinking ship ripe for a takeover by SEIU?

Do Members realize just how many bad choices the board of governors made during the raid essentially handing over the election to SEIU?

When EAA members face certain decertification attacks from SEIU, the City of LA is determined to fight EAA at every turn, and the budget picture looks grim, who would want to stay?

Should the members have the right to decide on ending the contract of their executive director without interference from the board?

Can EAA afford to terminate Aquino, & is he willing to negotiate the amount of severance?

Whichever way it goes, disclosure is needed on both sides, Aquino must disclose his severance package, and the governors need to step up and take responsibility for their failures during the raid, EAA members will soon enough decide they want the security of a larger union and the bargaining power of SEIU unless EAA steps up it’s game.

If the remaining governors aren’t smart enough to realize they are in a war, maybe the referendum needs to be should EAA members clean house completely?

With the departure of Michael Davies, EAA leadership is struggling for direction, it’s time for the members to decide their future, and they had better decide quickly.