(BUFFALO) – As
a direct result of incumbent Mark Schroeder’s high-profile and recent support for
an anti-Union/anti-Worker Walmart store in South Buffalo,
the Western New York AFL-CIO Area Labor Federation (WNYALF) has issued a “no
recommendation” in his 145th District State Assembly election race
and will ask the New York State AFL-CIO not to endorse Schroeder’s re-election
bid.
In addition to Schroeder, the WNYALF also issued “no
recommendations” in two other races, the first involving the 144th Assembly
District and incumbent Sam Hoyt, and in the 58th Senate District
Primary - which pits Democratic incumbent William Stachowski against fellow
Democrat and Erie County Legislator Tim Kennedy.
In an interview with WNYLaborToday.com, WNYALF President Angelo
Vellake - who also serves as executive vice president and area director for UFCW (United
Food & Commercial Workers) Local One - minced no words when it came to
addressing Schroeder, a Democrat, and his public stance on Walmart. Vellake sharply
called Schroeder a “hypocrite” for describing himself as a “champion of Labor,”
while “doing the exact opposite” when it came to championing a new Walmart
store within his district.
“The
UFCW is happy the Area Labor Federation has taken this action,” said Vellake,
whose Union represents grocery store workers in Western
New York. “(Schroeder) is not worthy of Labor’s support. He held
secret meetings with Walmart without (Labor’s) knowledge and was given an
opportunity to ‘cease and desist.” He refused to do that. He’s a hypocrite for saying one thing and
doing the exact opposite. This is why the WNYALF will ask the New York
State AFL-CIO not to issue an endorsement in the 145th District race.”
Last
week, Schroeder was one of a number of 25 area local and state elected
officials and candidates to come before the WNYALF’s endorsement committee
meeting that was held at the IUPAT (Painters) District 4 Union Facility in
suburban Cheektowaga.
Area
Labor Leaders said an “emotional” Schroeder “jumped right in to it” during his
interview and verbally “lashed out” at WNYALF Vice President Richard Lipsitz,
who also serves as Business Agent/Labor Movement Liaison with
Cheektowaga-headquartered Teamsters Local 264, and Buffalo AFL-CIO President
Michael Hoffert – who, along with Vellake, recently met with Schroeder to
discuss his public stance on Walmart.
Several
Union Officials who attended the WNYALF candidates’ meeting tell WNYLaborToday.com
that Schroeder was also upset that details of what he believed was a “private meeting”
and discussion with the three Labor Leaders was reported on by Labor’s
Regional, On-Line Labor Newspaper.
“We
didn’t even ask the question. He jumped right into it. Did he think we would publicly approve of
what he’d done? Did he think we would
just sit on our hands and do nothing?” Buffalo AFL-CIO President Hoffert asked.
Another
Labor Leader, who asked to remain anonymous, said: “Schroeder’s in The (Buffalo) News, quoted as saying the Walmart project was a ‘game-changer” in
his district and that he had been meeting with Walmart, and he doesn’t like
Labor making the community aware of what’s going on in ‘our’ newspaper?”
Added
Vellake: “(Schroeder) knows about Walmart (and its anti-Union/anti-Worker track
record). He chose not to share with Organized Labor
what he was meeting with Walmart about. We found out about that in Buffalo’s daily newspaper.”
Despite the fact Walmart is known
as an anti-Union retailer that has been charged with numerous worker wage
violations, Schroeder publicly calls the decision by Walmart to open a new
115,000-square-foot supercenter - which would employ 300 and straddle the
border between South Buffalo and West Seneca - a "game-changer" for
Seneca Street. Reportedly, the store would feature general
merchandise and a full-service grocery store under one roof.
For years, Walmart has come under
fire for years for its shoddy treatment of its employees.
For example, WNYLaborToday.com
recently published a Labor News Report from California detailing Walmart's agreement to
settle a class-action lawsuit and pay up to $86 million to 232,000 affected
employees. Walmart employees
had charged they were collectively denied over $12 million in vacation pay and
$74 million in other unpaid wages mandated by California law.
While agreeing to settle the multimillion-dollar lawsuit, Walmart continues to
refuse to acknowledge cheating its workers out of hard-earned wages. The report also noted the settlement is
separate from the $640 million agreement in 2008 in which Walmart agreed to
settle 63 federal and state class-action lawsuits that claiming similar illegal
wage violations.
Schroeder,
meanwhile, stood behind his nearly 100% voting record with Organized Labor on issues important to Unions during the
WNYALF endorsement meeting. But, Vellake said, Schroeder “went off the
deep end” at one point - blaming New York State Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver
and the “three men in a room” for the overall inability of locally-elected
state officials to bring to fruition a number of important projects and
initiatives in Western New York.
“If
that’s the case, maybe (Western New York’s Labor Leaders) should go straight to
Albany and meet
with the ‘three men in a room’” to get things moving, Vellake said.
Vellake,
meanwhile, said he was still having a hard time understanding why Schroeder
would back such a project. He added the reaction from the WNYALF will impress
on any elected official or candidate that “you can’t take Organized Labor for
granted.”
“It
doesn’t make sense to me (why Schroeder would involve himself in the Walmart
project). It doesn’t bring about economic development. This would
take jobs away. This also shows that you can’t engage in any
action that damages any (Union) affiliate of
the Federation. (Organized Labor) has never been more unified
in this decision and I thank all the individual Unions that took part in the
process,” Vellake said.
Asked
how the action might be taken by the individual member Unions of the Buffalo
Building & Construction Trades Council – which has traditionally been a big
supporter of Schroeder – Vellake replied: “What Mark Schroeder did would be no
different that if he had met with the (non-Union) ABC (Associated Builders
& Contractors, Inc.) and the
Trades would have come to the WNYALF afterward and asked he not get our
endorsement.”
Despite
the way things rolled out, Hoffert said Schroeder informed “all Labor
Representatives the WNYALF endorsement meeting that he was in favor” of the
Walmart project.
Democratic
Buffalo Assemblyman Hoyt, meanwhile, did not get the needed two-thirds support
from Organized Labor to receive a “positive recommendation,” WNYALF Vice
President Lipsitz tells WNYLaborToday.com. Instead, Hoyt received “non-recommendation”
status after the area’s Teachers Unions had addressed a number of issues and
problems they have had with Hoyt, which led to the “non-recommendation,”
Lipsitz said.
A “no
recommendation” was also issued by the WNYALF in the 58th Senate
District race pitting Stachowski and Kennedy.
No immediate reason was given by the
WNYALF for the non-recommendation in that race.
Another
Assemblyman – Republican Jack Quinn, who is vying for the 58th State
Senate seat held by Stachowski – also found himself in the middle of a charged
discussion with Buffalo AFL-CIO President Hoffert, who took issue with Quinn’s
stance on the use of taxpayer subsidies to large companies such as Bass Pro on Buffalo’s Waterfront.
“It
got a little hot,” is the way Hoffert described the question-and-answer session.
“(Quinn)
starts talking about how the Republicans are doing this and that to roll back
taxes. I said, ‘Hey Jack, this is our money here. You’re
going to be giving thirty-five-million dollars to Bass Pro so they can sell
Chinese-made lures,” Hoffert said he told Quinn. “You’re looking to roll back taxes? How about rolling back taxes for the Working
Man instead of corporations?’”
Editor’s Note: The
WNYALF’s recommendations will be forwarded to the New York State AFL-CIO. The New York
State AFL-CIO Executive Council will then submit their final recommendations
for a vote that will be held at the New York State AFL-CIO COPE Convention on
August 15th & 16th. The following is a full list of the WNYALF’s recommendations:
New York
State Senate:
District 60 - Antoine Thompson
District 61 - Marc Coppola
District 62 - George Maziarz
New York
State Assembly:
District 138 - Francine Delmonte
District 141 - Crystal
Peoples
District 143 - Dennis Gabryszak
District 146 - Brad Rybczyinski
District 150 - William Parment
U.S. Senate: Charles Schumer & Kirsten
Gillibrand
U.S. House of Representatives:
Congressional District 27 - Brian Higgins
Congressional District 28 - Louise Slaughter
Congressional District 29 - Matt Zeller