Labor Day rally for janitors rights draws hundreds of marchers
Hundreds of union workers marched from Boston Common to Copley Square this afternoon in a Labor Day rally supporting efforts to win 14,000 New England janitors the right to work full time -- and receive benefits such as health insurance -- when their contract expires at the end of the month.
“I’m here today because I’m proud of what I’m doing for this country and for my family,” said Silvia Clarke, who lives in Lowell. “We deserve a better life for all of us. When we are here today, we are saying to our companies that we want more because we deserve more. We do the job, they get the money.”
Clarke works part time as a janitor cleaning an office building in Lowell. In four-hour shifts, she is expected to clean 160 offices, plus bathrooms, conference rooms, and eating areas by herself, she said.
“They increase what we have to clean, but they don’t give us more hours,” she said. “We go home like a zombie.”
Because she is not allowed to pick up more hours to bump her over into full time, Clarke does not qualify for health insurance. She supports two of her adult children, who live with her. Her son and son-in-law have lost their jobs.
“We want people to know that we know we deserve a better life,” she said. “It’s not only us alone. All workers in the United States deserve a better wage and a better life.”
Service Employees International Union Local 615, which organized the march, represents 18,000 workers in Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Rhode Island. The union is in the process of negotiating a new contract with local contractors for 14,000 janitors.
Currently, according to local union president Rocio Saenz, about two-thirds of those janitors only work part time, making as little as $56 a day and often cobbling together a rough living out of two or three jobs.
The union hopes to win a commitment from contractors to provide opportunities for full-time work, and the benefits that go along with full-time employement, to its employees.
About 750 people turned out for the march. Chanting “Sí se puede” -- a rallying cry that means “Yes we can” -- and carrying purple flags and homemade banners, they were joined by Lieutenant Governor Tim Murray, Congressional Candidate Joseph Kennedy III and other local politicians, who threw their support to the workers’ fight.
“Here we are on labor day,” said Murray, standing on the bandstand in the heart of Boston Common. “You epitomize the labor movement. You are the strength of the labor movement. We are your partners.”
Evan Allen can be reached at evan.allen@globe.comOn the beat

Columnist Adrian Walker says UMass Dartmouth is shaken after revelations that one of the Marathon bomb suspects was a student there. Read more
|
|
Recent posts
- Roslindale woman bitten in hand as she breaks up fight between two pit bulls
- SJC upholds murder convictions of two men who shot and killed unborn baby on Orange Line train in 2003
- Black bear sighted in Acton over the weekend
- Myrtle the Turtle returns to her home: the big tank at the New England Aquarium
- Man is struck and killed by commuter train in Brockton



Editor's Choice

'You will run again,' Obama tells shaken Boston

For Boston, a time to heal, a time to play hockey
- Amid capital splendor, Warren gets prefab perch
- Down with those paper tax forms
- Prepping for jobs in the casino economy
- Hospital charges bring a backlash

LOCAL BLOGS
Universal Hub
The Chinatown Blog
CommonWealth Magazine
Red Mass Group
Blue Mass Group
Boston 1775
The 1851 Chronicle
The Berkeley Beacon
The Daily Collegian
The Daily Free Press
The Harvard Crimson
The Heights
The Huntington News
The Suffolk Journal
The Tech
The Tufts Daily







