At a minimum, you would expect sizeable pay and benefits for engaging in such risky work. After all, billion-dollar Chicago buildings like Trump Tower enjoy massive tax breaks.
Yet many of the workers who scale these gleaming edifices are paid as little as $12 an hour, not nearly enough to make ends meet and raise a family in this expensive city.
Demanding decent pay and affordable healthcare, hundreds of Chicago window washers — dressed in superhero costumes – and family members poured into Chicago’s downtown the morning of July 10 to protest. Their signs said, “Window washers are Chicago’s real skyline superheroes.” They temporarily blocked the busy intersection of Michigan Avenue and Randolph Street before rallying in Millennium Park.
About 260 union window washers represented by Service Employees Local 1 have been on strike since July 2 — right in the middle of peak washing season. When their contract expired on that date, they traded in their squeegees for picket signs. The six companies that employ them handle most of the windows in the city’s downtown buildings.
The union seeks an increase in starting wages to a range of $16 to $25 per hour. It also wants an increase in life insurance coverage (which makes plenty of sense, given the risks of the job) and removal of the current cap on employer health insurance contributions.
The workers say they won’t go back to work until their employers start bargaining in good faith.
The following letter was signed by more than 30 organizations, including Workers World Party, International…
Dozens of people attended an event, held at New Canaan Baptist Church in Brooklyn on…
Boston Hundreds of pro-Palestine activists rallied on Jan. 20 at Parkman Bandstand on the Boston…
July 26 was the 57th anniversary of the murder of three Black teenagers by Detroit…
By Rémy Herrera From a speech by Rémy Herrera of the National Center of Scientific…
Minutes after the murder of George Floyd, Derek Chauvin said to a passerby that "he…