DC Jobs With Justice Corner: Day Laborers Organize in DC:
Thursday, May 22, 2008
(Metropolitan Washington Council, AFL-CIO)
More than two hundred day laborers gather
each morning on street corners and in parking
lots around DC to seek work. Though many of
them perform skilled labor, they are often paid less than the
minimum wage and work without proper safety
equipment. Many contractors take advantage of
the informal work arrangement by cheating
workers out of their wages. In 2006, day
laborers in DC came together and formed the
Union de Trabajadores de Washington, DC. This
worker-led organization - with the support of
DC Jobs with Justice (JwJ), Foundry United
Methodist Church (UMC), the DC Employment
Justice Center, the American Friends Service
Committee and others - works to promote dignity
and justice for day laborers in DC. In addition
to gaining access to health and legal services
and building community among day laborers, one
of the main concerns of the Union de
Trabajadores has been to create a safer and
more orderly situation at their main gathering
place – the Home Depot
in Northeast DC. In 2007, DC JwJ and Interfaith
Worker Justice joined the Union de Trabajadores
in supporting plans to build a center in Ward 5
where day laborers could seek work under just
conditions and unemployed and under-employed DC
residents could access job services. Realizing
that day labor issues are at a critical
juncture, DC JwJ has committed to devote more
resources in 2008 to supporting the development
of the Union de Trabajadores and pursuing a
worker center in DC. Our first step was to hire
an organizer – Pedro Cruz – to work
directly with the Union de Trabajadores. Our
next step is to convene allies to lead a
campaign for a worker center in DC that will
further our mission of securing the rights of
all workers and increasing access to good jobs
for DC residents. DC JwJ is being supported in
this new work by Foundry UMC, the Hill-Snowdon
Foundation, Holy Trinity Catholic Church, and
the Public Welfare Foundation. For more info
and to get your organization involved, contact
Mackenzie Baris, mbaris@dclabor.org;
202-974-8224.
