Bob Simpson

Bob Simpson
Location
Oak Park, Illinois, United States
Birthday
August 05
Title
Retired history teacher and part-time social media writer.
Company
Webtrax Studio
Bio
So who is this guy? Well, my name is Bob “Bobbo” Simpson. I work part-time for WebTraxStudio. We mostly do website and print design for unions, non-profit groups, social advocacy organizations and educational institutions. I am also 1/2 of the Carol Simpson labor cartoon team.

Bob Simpson's Links

Salon.com
JANUARY 25, 2012 1:00PM

Hard Work Deserves More Respect

Rate: 17 Flag

R-E-S-P-E-C-T
Find out what it means to me
R-E-S-P-E-C-T
Take care, TCB---- from the song "Respect"-- by Otis Redding

If you drive down I-55 or I-80 out of Chicago toward Joliet, they are hard to miss. Sprawling boxy-looking buildings, often windowless, but with constant activity as semi's pull up to disgorge their contents. These are the warehouses of Will County, where goods meant mostly for North America's big box stores are routed to their ultimate destinations. They employ thousands of people, mostly people of color, many of them immigrants. It is one of the largest and fasting growing USA centers for product distribution by truck and rail.

It was among those warehouses that Uylonda Dickerson, a single mom, found a job. What she did not find was respect. Not only was the pay rock-bottom, but when she reported for work, she was often sent home instead, because there was not enough to do. This is in direct violation of Illinois law, making it a case of wage theft. If workers are scheduled to work, but are sent home, the company must pay them at least 4 hours of wages. 

Uylonda Dickerson sometimes did not receive hourly pay, but was paid by piecework, the hated system used by the sweatshops of the early 20th century. Piecework meant being paid according to the many trailers that she unloaded, a race against time to empty them, resulting in higher stress levels and a greater possibility of injury. Despite the mental and physical hazards of piecework, she received no health benefits, sick days or vacation time.

Warehouse
A Will County warehouse

Uylonda Dickerson endured sexual harassment, constant pain and eventually developed a bladder infection because the womens'  bathroom was so far away and using it angered her supervisors. Although the boxes that she unloaded were bound for Walmart, she did not work directly for Walmart, but for a temp agency. Her mind and body driven to the limits of exhaustion, she eventually quit and lived on public assistance, accompanied by the aches, pains and migraines that came from working in the Walmart empire, an empire that has no respect for hard work.

Welcome to the warehouse gulags of Will County. In Stalinist Russia, gulag meant the system of forced labor camps where prisoners were worked to the point of exhaustion and even death. In the area around Joliet, Illinois with its official unemployment rate of 9.6%, workers are often forced to take these low paying warehouse jobs just to survive. The stress and physical hazards associated with an inhuman work pace take their toll and can shave years off of a person's life. Unlike a Soviet gulag, people are always free to leave , but the punishment can be even worse poverty. Uylonda Dickerson ended up in a house without electricity and running water.

Cartoon

It is the temporary workers who have the worst of it. The median wage for warehouse temps is $9 an hour while direct hires make $3.48 more. The majority of Will County warehouse workers are below the federal poverty line. One study calculated a living wage in Will County for a family of four to be $15.87, above what most warehouse workers make.

Chris Williams,an attorney who handles many legal cases for aggrieved Will County warehouse workers believes that wage theft may cost the nation millions in lost workers' pay, thus increasing company profits. He focuses lawsuits against the temp agencies that service Walmart and distance it from the many abuses. Williams says

"I believe Walmart is experimenting...You'll see temp agencies that supervise temp agencies that deal with temp agencies. It just adds another level of distance."
There is a heavy turnover of temps as they often have move from warehouse to warehouse, making it hard to establish relationships with other workers and with management, relationships that can be important for career advancement. One veteran teamster who took one of these non-union jobs to survive thinks that this a deliberate policy. Uncertain schedules make it more complicated to arrange for doctors'  appointments, school visits and proper leisure time, damaging both individual and family life. It also makes it difficult to organize for better wages and conditions through unionization.

 

Photobucket
Workers at a Sony distribution center meet to discuss grievances

Some will say with sneering contempt that, "Those people are lucky to have a job." This  is thinly disguised racism since most Will County warehouse workers are people of color. Others will say it with more good will, but with condescending pity and a sigh of relief, "Better them than me."

The Will County Center for Economic Development issued a glowing report about the future of Will County's warehouse industry, but did mention possible environmental and traffic congestion problems. No mention though of the tax breaks to attract corporations, the fact that many warehouse workers rely on public assistance, or the generally poor quality of the jobs that have been generated.

All of this demonstrates a profound contempt for hard work in a nation that claims to revere it. When it comes to job creation, we set the bar way too low, especially considering how much wealth flows to the top.

Monica Morales of Warehouse Workers for Justice (WWJ) certainly agrees that we could be doing better. 

"If it wasn't for us, none of the stuff you have in your house would be in your house,"says Monica Morales, a former worker at a warehouse for Bissell, the vacuum cleaner maker. "There's not many items that we don't touch."
Bissels
Demonstration for justice at a Bissels distribution center

Morales was fired in 2009  because she was among 70 workers who filed charges against labor contractor Maersk Logistics for civil rights, minimum wage and labor law violations. Maersk is a global Danish-based conglomerate with over 100,000 employees in 130 countries. Warehouse Workers for Justice is a group of warehouse workers with a crowded office in Joliet who take on some of the largest and most powerful corporations on the planet.

No one expects Warehouse Workers for Justice to win easy victories, but it has had successes by using the courts combined with worker solidarity and organizing community support. WWJ recently filed suit against a company contracted to food giant Tyson for forcing employees to work an extra 45 minutes without pay, a form of wage theft. This only the most recent in a series of lawsuits. In another case Latino workers alleged racial discrimination when they were fired. After a large group of Latino community leaders visited and threatened a boycott, the workers were rehired.

Warehouse Workers for Justice is sponsored by the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers a union with a history dating back to 1936. Once one of the largest unions in the USA, it was hit by red-baiting during the McCarthy period. It evolved into a much smaller, but member-driven democratic labor organization. It organized the Republic Windows and Doors plant occupation that caught the world's attention in 2008.

Uylonda Dickerson, who quit her warehouse job for health reasons, is an enthusiastic member of WWJ:

"We talk amongst ourselves to see what we can do better. We make each other feel good, because we might be down and out. If you can go sit down and talk with strangers that feel like family to you, that makes a big difference."

WWJ is part of a nationwide movement of labor organizations who work outside of the National Labor Relations Board traditional model. In our labor-hostile economy with its primitive labor laws and uncertain enforcement, workers are experimenting with new ways of winning victories and gaining the respect that is in such short supply. It is unclear where this movement is going, but one can find evidence of it across the country. Even some AFL-CIO unions support it in the hope that will eventually rejuvenate our now battered and shrinking labor movement.

Smiley and West
Cornel West and Tavis Smiley visit Warehouse Workers for Justice

The warehouses of Will County are only a part of a vast supply chain of exploited labor that begins in the 21st century sweatshops of China, Vietnam, Thailand, Cambodia, Indonesia and other developing countries and then goes through the USA to the shelves of the big box stores with their underpaid and distressed retail workers. Is this the only way to do modern manufacturing and distribution? Is this how we respect hard work?

And do we really need ALL of this manufactured stuff, given the human unhappiness that accompanies it? Some of the stuff is useful, but how much of it is wasteful production that unnecessarily harms our environment, and misuses valuable resources? How much valuable time and human labor is lost that could go toward better purposes? How much of this stuff is simply filling a consumer products addiction among people bereft of sufficient human connection and spiritual fulfillment?  These are hard questions we need to be asking, not just for the benefit of the warehouse workers of Will County, but for ourselves as well.

Warehouse Workers for Justice
Warehouse Workers for Justice office

 

Cartoon by Carol Simpson CartoonWork

Sources Consulted 

The New Blue Collar: Temporary Work, Lasting Poverty And The American Warehouse by Dave Jaimeson

Illinois County Unemployment Rate Rankings

Wal-Mart Warehouse Workers File Class Action Wage Theft Lawsuit by Kari Lyderson

Wage theft lawsuit against a Walmart distributor from Crain's Chicago Business

Warehouse Workers for Justice

Bad Jobs in Goods Movement by Warehouse Workers for Justice & the  Center for Urban Economic Development at the University of Illinois at Chicago

Will County Center for Economic Development

Chicago Warehouse Workers Navigate Maze of Contractors to Organize by Jane Slaughter

Our Walmart

Group maintaining fight for fair labor by Cindy Wojdyla Cain 

Work stress and risk of cardiovascular mortality: prospective cohort study of industrial employees by Mika Kivimaki and others

 

 

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"Is this how we respect hard work?" Yes.

And if it can happen to them, it can happen to me. Temp contract labor is popular in Boise, Idaho. The HP printer plant here uses it, I'm sure they'll be happy to also find jobs for the college grads that now have to work for less. Nine bucks an hour is still better than zero, you just get used to living with the grind. Until you break.

People who didn't have to do this forget, the laws are the same for everyone. That's what equality means. Thank you for this post, I had no idea about the warehouses.
What a shame this piece went unnoticed!

I'm amazed how in our life time America has gone from a post war flourishing economy with a healthy middle class to its present state - an Orwellian animal farm in which the pigs keep getting fatter and meaner, while the work horses leaner and starve.

Thank you for an excellent exposé.

Rated♥
There are so many places to comment, all merely to expand on what you have written so well. When big business began to campaign for Free Trade, we didn't know it meant freedom to abuse workers everywhere. The goal, it seems, is to reduce the entire globe to a network of third world countries, the U.S.A. included.
Thanks for posting this, Bob. It's shameful. When I was in college I worked for a temp agency and ended up in lots of factories covering for people on vacation. Same work, minimum wage, treated like crap. How lucky I didn't have to rely on this to pay a mortgage, feed a family, etc.
Excellent piece on so many different levels. I hope it gets wider distribution.
Americans have this hard time recognizing that they have little problem with the enslavement of other people, as long as it doesn't interfere with their own freedoms. They believe in rights, liberty and pursuit of cheaply purchased goods for themselves- and rarely stop to think about the human toll for their own greed. While they may shake a fist at "illegals" and "the lazy poor" encroaching, they don't realize that they live off the sweat and blood of others less fortunate. Is it luck? Is it hard, virtuous work? Or is it denial that slavery still exists- just in a form of low wages and limited rights? As to Maersk, the Danes have the highest standard of living in the world, and yet must turn a blind eye to the reality that they can't afford to purchase anything made in Denmark if they are to pay the humane wages everyone is entitled to. Now their medical system is falling apart. There are no easy answers, because we can't all get in the same boat.
Bob,
I don't know how I missed this gem. Thank you, Fusun, for bringing it to my attention. This is citizen journalism at its finest. You are writing about issues the mainstream press doesn't care about because reporters can't fight monsters who are close friends with their corporate publishers, or they are too tired and struggling themselves, or they are privileged and just don't care (the big media outlets back East employ mostly wealthy, Ivy League males who can't relate to "Middle America").

You must submit this to a major news outlet as an op/ed piece. It needs broader play than just OS.

Deb
And Indiana is passing the Right-to-Work legislation as we speak, so that if you work in a facility that has a union, you get to benefit from the union labor negotiations without paying the union dues. Same pay and benefits, everything. I'm waiting to see who moves into the state after this law is passed.

The politics of greed are disgusting. I worked for a vet who truly believed that since he was the one who went to college and got the degree, that his techs, receptionists, and kennel help should be grateful to him and not ask for any more than he was willing to give us. His family wore designer clothes, the kids went to private school and the wife drove a new SUV every year but he couldn't afford paid vacation for his help, let alone health insurance. He had it through the AVMA. He didn't understand that he wouldn't have been as successful without us. We were expendable.

Greed comes at all levels.
The race to the bottom is presented as "success." Anyone who doesn't succeed is just lazy, stupid or otherwise a waste of skin. This is decreed by the few at the top. Excellent piece. Should be on the front page of everything, but we know how that plays out.
Great post, Bob. I too would love to see this get reposted in other venues with greater readership. All the Gingrich talk about "food stamps" as opposed to an "earned paycheck" conveniently overlooks the fact that many people who are working still qualify for food stamps. And many homeless people (upwards of 35-40%, last I checked) actually are regularly employed--they just don't earn enough to afford both food and housing. These two groups are the working poor and I fear their numbers are going to keep growing. [R]
Well done. While we can hear tell of the plight of the Chinese, Cambodian, Malaysian sweat shop worker and rail at his misfortune at the hands of the "evil empire" makers known as International Corporations, it's getting harder and harder to ignore that these very same corporations are doing their level best to create the exact same conditions here.

And to some degree, it's working. We even have some of us in the 99% who still mouth the platitudes, scorn and stupidity that those on top have sold -- we should be glad we have work, we should be willing to work for the same level of wages as the Chinese, Cambodian, Indian and whatnot, if we were truly hard working, we'd take all the shit they can shovel our way and say, "Please sir, may I have another?"

How did we get so distracted that we cannot see how greed, the love of money, in and of itself, by a privileged few has torn down the very fabric of the society that made it possible? Worse yet, how is it that so many still clasp their hands to Hear No, Speak No, See No Evil in this madness?

You paint the picture of our situation, striking from within the heartland, Middle America, with a deftness and surety that, as others have said, should be given much wider exposure.

--r--
I echo Fusun's sentiments above. This piece was worthy of an EP.

Interesting that there is capital enough in our capitalist system to ensure fair wages and a high quality of life for all. Sadly, too many of those who control the capital rationalize away their responsibilities to workers and to our larger economy, and much of our populace is too distracted to apply consistent and credible pressure.

This essay represents a meaningful stride toward change. Super post.
What a travesty. Excellent research and reporting, Bob. This should have made the cover. Rated.
Thanks for all of your kind words about the warehouse workers of Will County. I was at an Occupy Chicago labor conference over the weekend. The warehouse resistance continues and organizers think it will grow. A luta continua.
Superb piece, Bob! Back in the 1950s my grandparents worked in a factory that made electrical components. They worked 6-day weeks and were paid by piecework. Supper table discussions about what went on at work that day were horrifying to my young self. It seems we are going full circle, back to the way things were in the 50s. That just sucks!

Lezlie
Great post. You might appreciate this one as well:

Arbeit Macht Frei
.
GOOD FOR YOU! Excellent article. I am so proud of these people who are standing up for workers rights, and agree that we need to look at the whole system of consumerism and what it does to our families. In Iowa we are addressing those issues through "Blue Zones," lifestyle changes that make for healthier and happier workers. But we need human rights and respect.