Health Care
Health care is a basic human right. America’s labor movement has worked for more than a century for guaranteed high-quality health care for everyone. The Affordable Care Act is a historic milestone on this journey, but we still have a long way to go.
America must continue moving forward toward a more equitable and cost-effective health care system. Moving forward means working with employers to demand health care payment and delivery reforms to control costs, allowing people of all ages to buy into the equivalent of Medicare through a public plan option and allowing Medicare to negotiate lower drug prices. Of course, the most cost-effective and equitable way to provide quality health care is through the social insurance model (“Medicare for All”), as other industrialized countries have shown.
The worst thing we could do is move backward by repealing the Affordable Care Act or its key provisions; privatizing Medicare or turning it into a voucher program; raising the Medicare eligibility age; increasing Medicare co-pays and deductibles or otherwise cutting Medicare benefits; or taxing employment-based health care benefits.
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On Thursday, more than 40 CUNY faculty and staff members locked arms and blocked the doors in front of Governor Cuomo's Manhattan office. The "die-in" was designed to Highlight the demand for increased investment in CUNY in the State budget.
After nine months of bargaining, Verizon is still refusing to negotiate a fair contract for 39,000 workers across the Northeast.
Join thousands of workers from across the state as they converge on the Capitol Building in Albany, NY to demand a $15 minimum wage.
Transportation will be provided as necessary, please click the link below to reserve a seat.
Join workers from across the Labor Movement, activists, and allies calling for a raise for millions of low-wage workers.
Go to FightFor15.org to sign-up for updates.
What do fast food workers, construction workers, new media, entertainment workers, teachers, transportation workers, and retail workers have in common?
They are all fighting for change by putting workers' voices & faces front and center in their fights!
New York City Central Labor Council, AFL-CIO President Vincent Alvarez today released the following statement regarding Congress' failure to reauthorize the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act, which provides continued funding for health care programs designed to treat those affected b
Join
Jon Stewart
to support the extension of the
James Zadroga 9/11 Health & Compensation Act
Wednesday, September 16, 2015
Verizon workers are fighting for good jobs building and servicing FiOS, and properly serving copper network customers.