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An Alabama man who spent more than 40 years behind bars speaks out, Florida natural habitats are disappearing, and spring allergies hit hard in Connecticut.

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After another campus shooting, President Trump says people, not guns, are the issue. Alaska Sen. Murkowski says Republicans fear Trump's retaliation, and voting rights groups sound the alarm over an executive order on elections.

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Money meant for schools in timber country is uncertain as Congress fails to reauthorize a rural program, farmers and others will see federal dollars for energy projects unlocked, and DOGE cuts threaten plant species needed for U.S. food security.

Vermont union workers cry foul over immigration service center layoffs

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Friday, August 30, 2024   

Unionized workers in Vermont with the federal agency responsible for processing immigration and asylum paperwork claim they are being forced to turn their jobs over to nonunion labor.

Members of the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America said the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Center is laying off union workers in Vermont and other states and moving the jobs to nonunion operations.

Laurie Gadouas, member of the union's Local 208 in Essex Junction, said she believes the company is trying to break the union.

"The union gives us recourse on things that they try to do to us that is either not fair, not right," Gadouas emphasized. "If they didn't have a union, they would save money all the way around and there'd be more money for the contractor to put in his pocket."

Gadouas said the union workers are a skilled, experienced workforce, performing clerical and pre-adjudication tasks. They serve the immigration pipeline for asylum seekers, refugees and victims of human trafficking and domestic violence. The agency did not respond to a request for comment.

Gadouas said the agency is laying off union workers and moving their jobs to a nonunion operation in Dallas. She claimed the operator is trying to pay workers the minimum amount instead of the living wage stipulated in the union contract.

"A lot of my colleagues are in my boat," Gadouas pointed out. "They got a few more years. They thought they could retire there. Now we're going to have to be going out looking for work. I mean, everybody's under stress every day."

Union locals in Vermont, Nebraska and California have recently organized protests against the staff reductions, calling for the government to stop so-called "rolling layoffs" aimed at eliminating two-thirds of the unionized workforce by 2025.

Disclosure: The United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America Research and Education Fund contributes to our fund for reporting on Climate Change/Air Quality, Human Rights/Racial Justice, and Immigrant Issues. If you would like to help support news in the public interest, click here.


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