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Omaha Steve

(99,660 posts)
Sun Jan 4, 2015, 02:12 PM Jan 2015

January 4, 1965 (NYC)


http://nhlabornews.com/2015/01/january-4-1965/




Eight thousand social workers represented by two different unions in New York City go on strike over workload and wages. Mayor Robert Wagner fired all of the strikers and threw nineteen leaders in jail for two weeks, but the workers won the strike within a month. Supported by organized labor, the civil rights movement, and a community coalition, it was the longest labor action by public employees in the history of New York City.

About Today In Labor History

The NHLN has joined with multiple other websites to help highlight some of the struggles that workers have faced throughout our history. We want everyone to know what the workers of the past had to endure for the rights we take for granted now. If you do not learn from the past, you are doomed to repeat it.
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January 4, 1965 (NYC) (Original Post) Omaha Steve Jan 2015 OP
Alas. I'm thinking we are doomed to repeat it. Smarmie Doofus Jan 2015 #1
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