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Minneapolis parks board and union dig in for protracted strike — and other labor news • Minnesota Reformer

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Minneapolis parks board and union dig in for protracted strike — and other labor news • Minnesota Reformer


Take a seat in the Break Room, our weekly roundup of labor news in Minnesota and beyond. This week: Minneapolis parks workers strike enters second week; Anti-union group targets public sectors workers with opt-out campaign; Minnesota nurses notch another victory; National teachers union locks out staff; and renowned labor organizer Jane McAlevey dies. 

Minneapolis parks workers extend strike indefinitely

What was supposed to be a weeklong strike by Minneapolis parks workers entered its second week on Friday after union leaders with LIUNA Local 363 announced earlier this week the strike would go on indefinitely.

Negotiations have already dragged on for seven months and become increasingly antagonistic. Last week, park board leaders threatened to lock out striking workers until a deal was reached, prompting the union to file an unfair labor practices charge and the park board to reverse its position.

The strike has already disrupted events in the parks and could force the park board to further curtail services. The union represents roughly 300 parks workers who maintain the grounds and facilities across 185 park properties, which include 75 beaches and pools, miles of trails and seven golf courses. The park system has been ranked among the top three in the country for the past decade.

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While the two sides appear close in their wage proposals, representatives for the union and the Minneapolis Parks and Recreation Board haven’t met since July 1 and have no plans to resume talks.

Minneapolis Parks Superintendent Al Bangoura said during Wednesday’s board meeting that negotiations would only resume after workers take a vote on their last offer. That prompted outcry from union members, who say managers have no power to dictate how the union conducts its business.

“A very fair offer has been proposed and (LIUNA Local) 363 leadership refuses to bring it to their members for vote. Why won’t they bring it for a vote instead of unilaterally holding their members to a strike?” Bangoura said.

Then on Friday, Bangoura released a statement saying negotiations could resume if the union provides a “substantial and meaningful counteroffer” by Monday.

Union members say the park board’s latest offer is worse than the one on the table when they voted to authorize the strike with 94% support last month.

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The latest offer by the park board would cost $4.6 million over three years, while the union’s proposal would cost $6.7 million, according to the park board. The $2.1 million difference spread over three years represents less than half of one percent of the park board’s budget — $157.1 million for 2024.

The park board’s finance director said in a special board meeting on Monday that residents would see their taxes go up by 1.25% under the board’s proposal and 2.1% under the union proposal. Union members balked at the projections, pointing out the board is sitting on $25 million in reserves, has $50 million in open contracts and awarded parks Superintendent Al Bangoura a 10% raise this year.

“That’s another way for them to spin the public against us,” said Paul Holevas, a union steward who’s worked full-time for the parks for more than a decade. “I live in Minneapolis … My taxes have went up every single year, astronomically, and it’s going to happen next year and the year after regardless of whether they’re paying us or not.”

The latest offer by the park board includes 10.75% raises over three years plus small market adjustments of 50 cents per hour for certain workers annually in the final two years of the contract.

The offer would give parks workers the highest raises they’ve seen in years, but the union points out it would not make up for recent inflation. Workers have also seen other union workers make larger gains, like the city of Minneapolis’ public works employees, who won 30% raises over the next three years. And the city is considering giving police officers historic raises of nearly 22%, pushing their pay to among the highest in the nation.

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Holevas says the larger sticking points remain over contract language that would weaken workers’ power, like limiting the number of union stewards and adding rules on the grievance procedure.

While the union authorized a strike with overwhelming support, many members have continued to work while their co-workers walk the picket line.

A spokeswoman for the parks system said 48% of union members are on strike by their count, while LIUNA Local 363 estimates nearly 60% are striking.

Holevas says workers are taking advantage of the opportunity to earn overtime pay, which hasn’t been offered in years, while others simply can’t afford to live on the union’s picket pay of $50 per day.

“They know most of the people that I work with live paycheck to paycheck, and aren’t going to be able to afford to strike without some help,” Holevas said. “So instead of trying to come back to the table and give us what we deserve, they would rather just wait it out, make us all broke.”

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Still, Holevas says he believes more of his colleagues are joining the strike and an outpouring of public support has doubled the union’s strike fund, allowing the union to increase its picket pay to $100 per day.

“We’re united. We’re winning. We have management on their heels,” Holevas said.

Anti-union group targets Minnesota state workers

State employees and other public workers have been receiving emails from the anti-union Freedom Foundation encouraging them to cancel their union membership. Workers received emails twice from OptOutToday.com since April, promising workers “financial freedom” by halting their union dues payments, according to copies shared with the Reformer. 

The emails direct workers to a website that will generate a form for workers to send to their union and employer canceling their membership. While workers say they didn’t sign up for the emails, a link provided in the email says their contact information was obtained through a public data request.

Public sector employees can’t be required to pay union dues under the 2018 Supreme Court decision in Janus v. AFSCME. Even if public workers opt out of paying dues, however, their unions will continue to represent them in negotiating wage increases and benefits.

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In the private sector in Minnesota, workers who are represented by a union can opt out of membership but often must pay “fair share” dues to cover the costs of representation. That’s different than in so-called right-to-work states, where unions cannot compel workers to pay dues even if they benefit from union representation.

Labor advocates worried the Supreme Court decision would deal a deadly blow to public sector unions, which represent teachers, transit workers, public works employees, personal care attendants, state bureaucrats and others. But the vast majority of workers continue to voluntarily pay dues to fund their unions’ operations negotiating contracts and lobbying on their behalf.

In Minnesota, for example, roughly 94% of all workers covered by union contracts are also union members, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Minnesota nurses union notches another victory

Nurses at Essentia Health-Duluth Clinic 3rd Street and Patient Flow hospital voted to unionize with the Minnesota Nurses Association, marking another victory for the nurses union in its campaign to organize more workers in the north country.

Nearly 250 Essentia workers have voted to unionize with the nurses union this year, while even more are scheduled to vote on unionizing this month at St. Mary’s-Superior Wisconsin Clinic. Votes will also be tallied later this month by advanced care providers — including nurse practitioners and physician assistants — at 70 Essentia Health hospitals and clinics across northern Minnesota and parts of Wisconsin.

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National teachers union locks out its staff

The National Education Association, the largest labor union in the country, deployed one of the most aggressive tactics available to employers against its own unionized employees on Sunday and locked them out amid stalled negotiations. That means the union’s nearly 300 staff members will not be allowed to work or get paid until the two sides reach a deal on a new contract, Education Week reported.

The lockout comes after the staff union, the National Education Association Staff Organization, launched a three-day strike on July 5 that halted the NEA’s annual representative assembly that brings together thousands of union delegates. The assembly couldn’t continue in person because the union would not cross its staff’s picket line. The strike also led President Biden to cancel his appearance at the assembly meeting in Philadelphia.

In a statement to Education Week, a NEA spokesperson criticized staff members for “abandoning” members and “depriving them of the opportunity to convene and deliberate the business of the union.”

The staff union, which has filed three unfair labor practice charges with the National Labor Relations Board, called the lockout “a dangerous, reckless, and reactionary move that undermines the rights of every union worker in this country.”

Labor organizer and writer Jane McAlevey dies at 59

Renowned labor organizer and writer Jane McAlevey died Sunday at 59 years old from cancer. McAlevey was a charismatic figure in the labor movement who practiced — and later taught — zealous bottom-up organizing that sought to put rank-and-file workers at the helm of union campaigns and negotiations.

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She authored four books that became well-worn handbooks to many union activists and trained thousands of organizers in her theory of change at the U.C. Berkeley Labor Center and the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation.

McAlevey was also a brash and polarizing figure, earning the nickname “Hurricane Jane” and a reputation for being hard to work with. She was a frequent critic of union leaders, especially after failed campaigns, and admonished those she believed were too timid, complacent or close to management.

McAlevey publicly disclosed her cancer in a profile in the New Yorker last fall after keeping her diagnosis largely private for two years. It was her second bout with cancer, which also claimed her mother, brother and sister. She entered hospice care in April, writing to her followers, “No matter how much I love the challenge of a good fight, this was never one I could win.”



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Minneapolis, MN

Ellison, Minneapolis, St. Paul update lawsuit against Operation Metro Surge with new data

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Ellison, Minneapolis, St. Paul update lawsuit against Operation Metro Surge with new data


(ABC 6 News) – Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison and Minneapolis and Saint Paul updated their lawsuit over Operation Metro Surge with new survey data on economic harm.

Researchers at the University of California San Diego conducted two surveys tied to the amended lawsuit. The lawsuit says the federal operation violated the Constitution and caused lasting economic damage.

The first survey was done between February and March and included nearly 1,400 residents. It found workers lost more than $240 million in wages during the operation.

A separate newly released survey of about 900 businesses found more than $600 million in lost revenue. The updated lawsuit from Keith Ellison and the cities of Minneapolis and Saint Paul adds that new data to its claims.

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Minneapolis, MN

Prince’s legacy still shines in downtown Minneapolis 10 years after his death

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Prince’s legacy still shines in downtown Minneapolis 10 years after his death


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10 years later, our Prince superfan shares his Prince Pilgrimage

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10 years later, our Prince superfan shares his Prince Pilgrimage


April 21, 2016.

Ten years later, that day still doesn’t seem real to me.

I was sitting in the newsroom of The Montclair Times in the early afternoon when word came that Prince had died.

I was incredulous. One of my musical heroes was gone. No way.

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I was skeptical because I am a reporter. But also because it was Prince — a superstar so secretive and controlling of his music and public image that you could imagine he would have to give his permission to let the world know of his demise.

As the day passed, videos showed grieving fans standing outside his home and music studio complex, Paisley Park, not far from his beloved Minneapolis. That’s when the reality dawned on me.

Prince Rogers Nelson had gone 2 the afterworld at only 57 years old.

He was gone so young — he had so much more music in him to record, release and perform in public for an adoring audience. He died alone after collapsing in an elevator at his complex.

Those things made me sad.

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But I was also annoyed at myself. For not being a better aficionado of his music — by never seeing him in person and not collecting every piece of music he ever recorded.

After a few days of listening to the radio and online to “Purple Rain” and “1999” being played ad nauseam, I also heard lesser-known cuts like the heartbreakingly melancholic and sadly appropriate “Sometimes It Snows In April.”

When I heard the depressing reports that he died due to an accidental fentanyl overdose, I resolved to pay proper tribute to The Purple One.

I would go to Minnesota on a Prince Pilgrimage.

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‘Nothing Compares 2 U’

April to June 2016.

I said I would go to Minneapolis, to Prince’s home ground, to pay my respects to him. I didn’t think I would go through with booking a ticket on United Airlines from Newark for the weekend before his birthday.

I had used up most of my vacation days and had one to spare, but not another to stay through Prince’s actual born day. Just my luck.

At least I was fulfilling a commitment to an artist I adore.

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I wouldn’t say I was a fanatic for his Royal Badness (one of the many nicknames he carried in his lifetime). But he’s one of the few musicians who really moved me.

I heard his music growing up in the 1980s in Jersey City as a matter of course when the radio dial was set on R&B or pop music stations like KISS-FM and Z-100.

When Prince’s sixth studio album, “Purple Rain,” was released in the summer of 1984, it was a revolution that pushed the rising star into the stratosphere.

I couldn’t go anywhere without hearing the screeching guitar and chanting of Prince that provided the intro to “When Doves Cry,” or the rhythmic strumming of the guitar and the clashing electric drums that start off the album’s title song.

However, it was watching “Purple Rain,” the movie, that put me on the Prince Express. It didn’t matter that he couldn’t act to the satisfaction of critics or that the plot seemed corny. I was just absolutely enthralled by him and his band, The Revolution, tearing through numbers that were a mélange of funk, rock and new wave, while in a musical rivalry with another badass, Morris Day, and his group.

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My 13-year-old self also developed a crush on the leading lady, Apollonia Kotero, for her sultry voice and because she stripped nude to purify herself in the waters of Lake Minnetonka. It blew my mind then (and still blows my mind now).

Prince would remain in the background of my music listening as the years passed.

If it wasn’t his voice, it was the voice of others singing his songs, because he was as adept a songwriter as he was a performer. “I Feel for You” (Chaka Khan), “Manic Monday” (The Bangles) and “Nothing Compares 2 U” (Sinéad O’Connor) are some of the major hits that came from his pen.

The first vinyl album I ever got, in my teens was “Around the World in a Day,” his 1985 anti-commercial and purposely obscured follow-up to “Purple Rain.”

In college and afterward, whenever I had a few bucks in my pocket, I bought various albums on CD: “Diamonds and Pearls,” “The Black Album,” “The Gold Experience” and “Rave Un2 the Joy Fantastic,” and “Lovesexy” on cassette. I paid for a ticket to watch what may be Spike Lee’s worst movie, “Girl 6,” in part to hear Prince’s music.

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But it wasn’t just Prince’s virtuoso musicianship that made me a believer. It was also his personality, confounding and infuriating at the same time, that intrigued me.

I chatted with NYU classmates about how he slept no more than two hours a day because he worked so hard in the studio, playing all the instruments and producing every track. Yet he looked like he hadn’t aged a minute.

You would hear stories of him boosting artists that he admired by having them play on his albums and in concert. Then you would hear stories of his unkindness and controlling nature toward his bandmates and others in his inner circle.

He was a man who attained a level of stardom that demanded he bask in the spotlight at all times. Then there was the man who operated in secrecy and would alternate between the public, large-scale appearances and his surprise late-night concerts at small venues.

He was a true Gemini.

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In the late spring of 2016, I was taking in all of who Prince was, as he was no longer among us mere mortals, while preparing to pay homage to him.

‘MPLS’ and ‘Uptown’

June 3 to 5, 2016.

“Rock ‘n’ Roll Is Alive! (And It Lives in Minneapolis)”

Prince’s 1993 song popped into my head as the United Airlines plane landed at Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport around 10:30 p.m. on June 3.

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In the morning, my Prince Pilgrimage was underway as I took a bus near my hotel toward downtown Minneapolis.

While on the bus, I could see out my window why he spent nearly his entire life in or near this city, and created songs like “MPLS” and “Uptown” that presented his hometown to the world.

The widest boulevards I have ever seen outside of Paris. The streets where you saw yards with no fences and many trees. The heat normally expected in late spring was tempered by the Minnesota coolness.

I had an itinerary of the stops I needed to make on a sunny Saturday.

First Avenue and 7th Street Entry was a Greyhound bus depot converted into two music venues starting in the early 1970s. On the wall outside, a giant painted gold star etched with the name PRINCE. Only fitting, as the “Purple Rain” movie was filmed inside First Avenue.

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539 North Newton Ave. in the northern part of Minneapolis is where a teenage Mr. Nelson lived with his dad for a short time until he was thrown out.

When I stopped by to view the three-bedroom house, an African American couple was chatting up a man standing outside the house. After they were done, it was my turn to engage Maurice Phillips, Prince’s former bodyguard, who married his boss’ sister Tyka.

I went into reporter mode to get the inside scoop from him on my favorite recording artist.

What was Prince like? “He’s just a normal kind of guy like us. He put on his pants the same kind of way.”

Are there other thoughts about Prince you want to share? “No. But I know Prince is looking down. I got to get done with this yard work.”

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Later, I made my way to the Parkway Theater in South Minneapolis for what I thought was the best way to mourn the man: “This Thing Called Life — The Prince Tribute.”

Julius Collins, on lead vocals, was backed by members of Prince’s 1990’s band, the New Power Generation, along with other singers and instrumentalists. They regaled attendees with renditions of Prince songs while photos and videos of him played on a screen behind them.

Collins’ voice boomed as he sang, “Good times were rolling/She started dancing in the streets,” (“Uptown”), “Do I believe in God?/Do I believe in me? — Controversy” (“Controversy”), and “Police ain’t got no gun/You don’t have to run” (“DMSR”).

It was the perfect end to day one of the pilgrimage. I got back to my hotel in the late evening to have a meal and prepare for day two.

I should have skipped the takeout from the nearby fast-casual joint, because the resulting heartburn had me down for the count  — and nixed plans to visit the last stop on the pilgrimage: Paisley Park.

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Yet I had a Plan B for the following day, so I wouldn’t let Prince down.

At 2000 Fourth Avenue South in Minneapolis is Electric Fetus, the iconic record store where Prince reportedly made his last public appearance and last music purchases five days before he died.

On my shopping list was his shopping list:

  • Stevie Wonder, “Talking Book.”
  • Chambers Brothers, “The Time Has Come.”
  • Joni Mitchell, “Hejira.”
  • The Swan Silvertones, “Inspirational Gospel Classics.”
  • Missing Persons, “The Best Of Missing Persons.”
  • Santana, “Santana IV.”

I got only three of those CDs, as the others were (unsurprisingly) sold out. I couldn’t have regrets, because, in a weird way, it was the closest to being there when he was there, the closest I would ever get to meeting him.

His famous opening line to “Let’s Go Crazy” also came to mind: “Dearly beloved. We are gathered here today to get through this thing called ‘life.’”

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RIP Prince (June 7, 1958-April 21, 2016).

Ricardo Kaulessar covers race, immigration, and culture for NorthJersey.com. For unlimited access to the most important news from your local community, please subscribe or activate your digital account today.

Email: kaulessar@northjersey.com

Twitter/X: @ricardokaul



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