As seen on People's Weekly World
Janitors represented by SEIU held coordinated actions around California
late last week as they kicked off their campaign to win new union
master contracts covering workers in southern and northern California.
The current contracts expire April 30.
Among key demands as workers marched and rallied here, in Los Angeles,
Sacramento, San Diego and other cities are higher wages, access to
affordable health care, and respect.
SEIU, which represents 20,000 California janitors who clean commercial
office buildings, high tech and biotech offices around the state, says
wages are so low that many workers are forced to live in single rooms,
mobile homes and even garages. The union says Los Angeles and Oakland
janitors working full time currently earn an average of $23,000 per
year, less than half the nearly $51,000 the Economic Policy Institute
says a California family needs to meet basic requirements without
government help. Sacramento janitors average only about $17,680 per
year.
Under their current contract, janitors in Oakland, Sacramento and San
Jose must wait 30 months to be eligible for family health coverage.
Among key janitorial service contractors are ABM/One Source, Able
Janitorial Services and Somers Building Maintenance, Inc. Major clients
include high tech firms such as Hewlett-Packard, Oracle and Genentech
as well as real estate giant Shorenstein and the State of California.
The California janitors can take heart from some year-end developments
on the opposite coast. Just before the New Year, SEIU Local 32BJ, which
represents some 85,000 property workers in six states, announced that
workers in Washington, D.C., Baltimore and nearby areas had won
significant wage increases as well as better health benefits including
family prescription drug coverage. At the same time, New York City
office cleaners won 16 percent pay increases over four years as well as
improved pension benefits.