Organize - Mobilize - Empower
“When workers come together, they have the power to challenge the status quo and create a better future.”"
WHAT IS IT GOOD FOR???
Central Labor Councils (CLCs) are crucial for the labor movement because they coordinate collective action among different unions at the local level, fostering solidarity and advocating for workers' rights. They serve as a bridge between local unions and the broader AFL-CIO, enabling a unified front on issues like organizing, political action, and community engagement.Amplifying the Voice of Labor: CLCs provide a platform for unions to collaborate and speak with a unified voice on issues affecting workers in their area.
Facilitating Collective Action: They coordinate activities like organizing campaigns, political endorsements, and community events, allowing unions to pool resources and maximize their impact.
Building Solidarity: CLCs strengthen the bonds between different unions, fostering a sense of shared purpose and mutual support.
Promoting Political Engagement: They engage in political education, candidate endorsements, and voter mobilization efforts, working to elect officials who support workers' rights and advancing labor's legislative agenda.
Community Involvement: CLCs participate in community service projects, build coalitions with other organizations, and promote the interests of working families in their local areas.
Strengthening the Labor Movement: CLCs are the grassroots foundation of the labor movement, working at the local level to build power and ensure that the needs of working families are addressed.
In essence, CLCs are vital for translating the collective power of individual unions into a force for positive change at the local and regional levels.
Contact any of the folks below for more info:
"History is a great teacher. Now everyone knows that the labor movement did not diminish the strength of the nation but enlarged it. By raising the living standards of millions, labor miraculously created a market for industry and lifted the whole nation to undreamed of levels of production. Those who attack labor forget these simple truths, but history remembers them."
Martin Luther King Jr.
- Joe Hancock, joe_r_hancock@yahoo.com (MFPE)
- Natsuki Nakamura, nenakamura4@gmail.com (Teamsters)
- Colette Campbell, only1tigress@gmail.com (MFPE)
- Zeth Stone, zethstone@gmail.com (Working on it)
Being union is an action
Credits:
Colette Campbell only1tigress@gmail.com