May 15, 2009 LA ILWU Local 13 75th Commemoration March in Wilmington at 10:00 AM

by repost (full disclosure) Sunday, May. 03, 2009 at 4:49 PM

On May 15, 2009 ILWU Local 13 will have a march to honor members killed and injured in their strike

May 15, 2009 LA ILWU...
rallypostermed.jpg, image/jpeg, 400x533

May 15, 2009 LA ILWU Local 13 75th Commemoration March in Wilmington at 10:00 AM
Three mile march begins at corner of Harry Bridges Blvd. and Neptune Ave. in Wilminghton
at 10:00 AM

http://www.ilwu.org/press/2008/upload/ILWU_PensionersMemorial_rls.pdf.

INTERNATIONAL LONGSHORE & WAREHOUSE UNION AFL-CIO 1188 FRANKLIN STREET SAN FRANCISCO CALIFORNIA 94109 (415) 775-0533 (415) 775-1302 FAX WWW . ILWU . ORG ROBERT McELLRATH JOSEPH R. RADISICH WESLEY FURTADO WILLIAM E. ADAMS President Vice President Vice President Secretary-Treasurer Monday, May 12, 2008Contacts: Art Almeida, ILWU Pensioners, 310.833.2872 Bill Orton, Communications Consultant, 562.637.6330

ILWU REMEMBERS WORKERS KILLED ON LOCAL DOCKS (LOS ANGELES HARBOR)—When International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) leaders and retirees come together on Thursday morning to honor dockworkers killed on the job in Los Angelesharbor since 1934, they will gather barely a month after laying to rest longshoreman Carlos Rivera, whose April 4th death makes him the twelfth longshore worker killed on the job on west coast docks since 2002. "Working on the docks is dangerous," ILWU Local 13 President Joe Cortez told the press in April, "but it doesn't have to be deadly." The ILWU's annual May 15th worker memorial is sponsored by the union's Southern California Pensioners Group (SCPG) to remember workers of Local 13 (longshore), Local 63 (marine clerks) and Local 94 (foremen) killed on the job. The May 15th annual worker memorial event marks the day in 1934 when striking longshoremen fought with police, guards and replacement workers in Wilmington. In Feb. 1934, westcoast dockworkers approved a coastwide strike, called for May 9th. The two workers shot by police in Wilmington on May 15 -- Dickie Parker and John Knudsen -- came just six days into the strike and became the first killed on on the waterfront in the tumultuous strike that led to the formation of the ILWU. Pensioner Art Almeida, a retired longshoreman and former ILWU Local President, organizes the annual event. The pensioners erected a permanent memorial in 2005 and now feature a port chaplain and bagpipe player at each year's ceremony. "It's a very special, hallowed place for us," said ILWU SCPG President Al Perisho. "Unfortunately, we're going to add another name, from April 4th when Carlos Rivera was killed and that's a tough proposition. We've lost a lot of people." Rivera, a longshoreman with 40 years on the waterfront, was crushed by a heavy-lift forklift as a crew was unloading steel at the California United terminal. "If someone get hurt now, they're usually losing their life," said Perisho. "The machines are big. These cranes are big. It's productivity, productivity, productivity." Safety is a key issue between the ILWU and employers. The two sides are currently negotiating the next version of the west coast longshore contract that is due to expire on July 1. The event, usually attended by several hundred, features city officials, retirees, loved ones, current workers, and leaders of the Pensioners group and the ILWU Locals for longshore workers, marine clerks and foremen.The ILWU Southern California Pensioners Group annual tribute to fallen workers takes place Thursday, May 15th at 10 am at the ILWU Worker Memorial and Benches, located in John S. Gibson waterfront park on Harbor Avenue, between 5th and 6th streets, in San Pedro.
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ILWU PensionersThe ILWU's Southern California Pensioners Group (SCPG) is made up of retired longshore workers, marine clerks and foremen who serviced the ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles. Longshore workers load and unload cargo. Marine clerks track the flow of cargo. Foremen run the cargo handling operation. This release may also be found at http://workernews.org-30-The International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) represents 60,000 working women and men in five states (California, Oregon, Washington, Alaska, Hawaii) and Canada. Through more than 60 locals ILWU unites longshore workers, warehouse workers, watchmen, clerks, ferry and tugboat workers, tourism industry workers and agricultural workers. ILWU WORKER MEMORIAL: Thursday, May 15th, 10 am, John Gibson waterfront park, 6th & Harbor, San Pedro -- Event occurs on 74th anniversaryof waterfront murders of Dickie Parker and John Knudsen, first workers killed in tumultous 1934 west coast dockworkers strike -- Honors 58 dockworkers killed on the job in Los Angeles Harbor since 1934 -- Recent death makes at least 12 ILWU dockworkers killed on the West Coast since 2002