News

AFSCME Council 13 sent mailers to the last known address of each member. 

DATES

  • (no JAN)
  • (no FEB)
  • TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 2022
  • WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 2022
  • WEDNESDAY, MAY 11

DATES

  • (no JAN)
  • (no FEB)
  • (no MAR)
  • Thursday, APRIL 09, 2020 (CANCELLED)
  • Thursday, MAY 14, 2020 (CANCELLED)
  • Thursday, JUNE 25, 2020 (RESCHEDULED from June 11)
  • Thursday, JULY 30, 2020
  • (no AUG)
  • Thursday, SEPTEMBER 10, 2020
  • Thursday, OCTOBER 08, 2020
  • Thursday, NOVEMBER 05, 2020
  • (no DEC)
  • Further meetings TBD.
  • Or click on our 

The 1965 Voting Rights Act worked. In the years and decades that followed its implementation, the law helped minority voters make their voices heard, especially African Americans who had been discriminated against at the polls. As a result, our democracy became stronger.

But in 2013, despite bipartisan reauthorization of the law by Congress, the Supreme Court gutted it, ruling 5-4 that a key provision was no longer necessary because the Voting Rights Act had worked and the problem was fixed.

Despite high levels of stress on the job, many state and local workers say they highly value serving the public and their communities and feel generally satisfied with their jobs.

This finding, from a national survey commissioned by the National Institute on Retirement Security, will not surprise many AFSCME members, who work in state, county and local governments and never quit on their communities.

AFSCME members who work in health care and social services jobs face workplace violence daily. Now they are closer to having it.

Election Day 2019 was a big victory for working families. In states and cities across the country, they made their voices heard, electing pro-worker candidates for state and local government and providing further evidence of growing political momentum for working people.

Last year, nearly half a million workers went on strike across the nation, the largest number since 1986, when the country’s union membership rate was considerably higher (17.5%) than it was in 2018 (10.5%).