Black labor activist have unveiled appalling diversity
statistics in a new report that turns a spotlight on systemic racism within Illinois
construction trade unions. Congressman
Danny Davis office along with the chairman of Chicago Black United Communities
(CBUC), Eddie Read, are bringing to the public’s attention data that shows black
workers statewide are being systematically locked out of unionized construction
trade professions. The loss of these high-paying skilled union jobs is costing
black workers billions of dollars and earned wages and union benefits.
“Additionally, 15 apprentice programs had a minimum of 80
percent white participants. Another 13 programs had 70 percent to 79 percent
white participants,” CBUC Chairman Read said in a statement.
This endeavor to expose the Illinois construction labor
unions pattern of widespread racial discrimination in nothing new for ‘Chicago Black
United Communities’ (CBUC), a grassroots organization that unites youth and
adults across Chicago. Along with their leadership, CBUC has fought for decades
to address the horrors of being black in the construction industry for decades.
Usually their direct actions include physically ‘shutting down’ construction
sites.
“Combined with the ravages of a pandemic that has sent
countless Americans to the unemployment lines, a lack of access to jobs in the
building trades and construction industry exacerbate the disparate impact on
Black unemployment.”
Congressman Danny Davis, who joined with CBUC in condemning the
above mentioned union apprenticeship programs, is calling for a renewed push of
Black union workers in hopes that the nationwide reckoning with systematic
racism over the summer can lead to increased Black union membership.
“We’re going to have to do something about it. Don’t tell us
there is no room at the inn, because if there’s no room, then we just have to
kick the door down and come on in anyway. I’m tired of seeing young men on my
block standing around with nothing to do, because they can’t get into these
trade unions.”
Some of Chicago’s unemployed Black tradesmen, who are
certified in skill trades but hit brick walls in seeking union work, gathered
this past Labor Day to protest how they have been systematically blocked from
jobs leading to living-wage careers as Journeymen tradespeople.
“I’m just disgusted, angered that we’re still fighting for
something we were fighting for in the ’90s, when my mother was alive,” said
Guana Stamps, of Humboldt Park, whose three sons are seeking pathways to
becoming electricians or plumbers.
Stamps is daughter of the late legendary activist Marion
Stamps, and in July, she testified
before the City Council, saying that eradicating racism in unions would create
jobs and help solve Chicago violence. As Read out it “a gun won’t fit in a hand
that’s got a hammer in it.”
CBUC is currently accepting testimony to build a case for a
class action lawsuit in order to receive compensation for Black workers who
have been denied jobs. CBUC believes
that many students who worked to gain access to the trades and a middle-class
lifestyle were wrongfully denied that opportunity, which would be a breach of a
city ordinance.
“An ordinance passed under the late Mayor Washington
stipulated workers on public works jobs must be 50 percent city residents. We
don’t believe that’s enforced,” Read said. “All the Black children who
graduated from trade programs at high schools like Dunbar, CVS and Simeon
between 1999 and 2018 believed they could enter the trades. These numbers
clearly show they could not. So, we believe they too have standing in a
class-action lawsuit.”
Though past wages have been lost due to the lack of opportunity for Black workers in the trades, future opportunity and income is still available. Right now, there are 13 major Chicago megaprojects in the works. Some are already under construction, while others are decades away from completion, such as a $6 billion plan to turn 55 acres of industrial riverfront real estate between Lincoln Park and Bucktown into a sprawling mixed-use campus. Another huge project is underway to redevelop Chicago’s historic Union Station and surrounding Amtrak properties. These mega projects are projected to create high demand for construction jobs in the city limits.
“The City Of Chicago alone is projected to create a $40
billion to $60 billion construction boom in the next two years,” CBUC said in a
statement. “That means that very few African Americans will be able to obtain
jobs in the unions that awarded contracts in these new developments,” due to
the fact that black workers are behind the eight-ball as a result of rampant racially
based union apprenticeship discrimination toward them and their families.
If you believe that you have been racially targeted and denied a union construction trade apprenticeship opportunity in the State of Illinois, and would like to be added to CBUC class action lawsuit, contact CBUC @
Chicago Black United Communities
330 E. 37th St., Chicago, IL
773-548-2000