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The Office and Professional Employees International Union, Region VII, founded in 1945, is one of the largest and fastest growing unions in Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, and Wisconsin areas. We represent over 150,000 members in both the public sector and private sector employment. Our members work in a variety of technical, professional, clerical, white collar and blue collar professions.

Please click on any one of the links on the left hand side of the page to learn more about OPEIU, Region VII.

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News
06

No one needs to tell America's families that unemployment and underemployment are at crisis levels. We need jobs—and we need them now.

Wall Street has gotten its bailouts. Now it's time for Main Street to get some immediate help.
 
 Working America and the AFL-CIO is calling on Congress and the Obama administration to take five steps now to care for jobless workers and put America back to work.
 
1. Extend the lifeline for jobless workers. Supplemental unemployment benefits, additional food assistance and the expansion of COBRA health care benefits were cut during the last extension fight, and will not be restored in the next extension. Renewing extended unemployment insurance, though, is still necessary to the millions of workers who will otherwise lose their benefits. Extending unemployment insurance also will boost personal spending and create jobs throughout the economy.
 
2. Rebuild America's schools, roads and energy systems. America still has at least $2.2 trillion in unmet infrastructure needs. We should put people to work to fix our nation’s broken-down school buildings and invest in transportation, green technology, energy efficiency and more.
 
3. Increase aid to state and local governments to maintain vital services. State and local governments and school districts have a $178 billion budget shortfall this year alone—while the recession creates a greater need for their services. States and communities must get help to maintain critical front-line services, prevent massive job cuts and avoid deep damage to education just when our children need it most.
 
4. Put people to work doing work that needs to be done. If the private sector can't or won't provide the needed jobs, the government should step up to the plate, putting people who need jobs together with work that needs to be done. These should never be replacements for existing public jobs. They must pay competitive wages and should target distressed communities.
 
5. Put TARP funds to work for Main Street. The bank bailout helped Wall Street, not Main Street. We should put some of the billions of dollars in leftover Troubled Asset Relief Program funds to work creating jobs by enabling community banks to lend money to small- and medium-size businesses. If small businesses can get credit, they will create jobs.
 
America's jobs situation would be even more dire without the economic stimulus program President Obama and Congress enacted, which has saved or created 1 million jobs. But the depth of this crisis demands that we do more—and that we do it now, before more people lose their jobs, their homes, their health care and their hope.
 
 Our Economy Does Not Work for Working People
America's workers are the most productive in the world. We work longer hours than workers in any other developed country, and we live in a country with more than $13 trillion a year in income. Yet we face stagnant wages and family incomes, increasing income insecurity, eroding health care benefits and disappearing pensions.
 
 What Happened?
 
Our economy did not always work the way it does now. When the middle class was built in the years after World War II, the economy generally worked for all of us. During this period, real family incomes doubled — the most rapid improvement in living standards in history. Incomes for the poorest families increased even faster than those of the richest families, so incomes became more equally distributed. This was a period of great social movements and struggles for justice — women's rights, civil rights and rights for people with disabilities, to name a few. Unions also grew during this period, and the power of workers helped create a more just society.
 
 After 1973, we saw the end of the Vietnam War, the decline in manufacturing and industry, rapid technological change and the expansion of globalization, which brought dramatic change to our economy.
 
  • Since 1973, U.S. workers have constantly increased our productivity, but our wages haven't kept up. As a result, average wages today are only 15 percent higher than in 1980, while productivity increased 67 percent in the same period.
  • The growth of family incomes slowed greatly after 1973, while the incomes of the richest 20 percent of families have risen much faster. See chart.
The number of workers in unions declined during this period, so workers lost power and the ability to protect their living standards.
Today's faltering economy hits certain communities harder than others. According to the Economic Policy Institute, household income from 2000-2006 among African Americans declined by 8 percent and among Latinos by 2.7 percent. Similarly, real annual earnings for women declined by 1 percent in 2005, the largest one-year drop since 1995. (See EPI's Income Picture for the full report.)
 
 Where Did the Money Go?
 
 Over half of all the benefits of economic growth since 1973 have gone to the richest 10 percent of America's families, most of it to the top 1 percent. CEOs and other corporate insiders have taken much of the increase in productivity, in the form of increasing profits and returns to shareholders. The average CEO earns more on the first day of the year than the average worker earns all year. While the ratio of CEO pay to the pay of average workers was 42:1 in 1980, today it is 364:1.
 
 Today we are growing farther apart, not closer together — economically, socially and politically.
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