Author Topic: Houston janitors held in jail on $39.1 million bond  (Read 1959 times)

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Lanya

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Houston janitors held in jail on $39.1 million bond
« on: November 19, 2006, 01:34:45 AM »
http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/061117/nyf130.html?.v=5

Press Release   Source: SEIU

Houston Crackdown on Right to Peaceful Protest, Freedom of Speech...
Friday November 17, 11:17 pm ET
44 Janitors Arrested in Non-Violent Civil Disobedience in Houston Held on Combined $39.1 Million Bond
For peaceful protestors charged with Class B misdemeanors, bond for each set at unprecedented $888,888 cash; For Harris County man recently charged with murder, bond set at $30,000

HOUSTON, Nov. 17 /PRNewswire/ -- In an unprecedented transparent attempt to severely limit the right to peaceful protest and freedom of speech of low-wage Houston janitors and their supporters, a Harris County District Attorney has set an extraordinarily high bond of $888,888 cash for each of the 44 peaceful protestors arrested last night. Houston janitors and their supporters, many of them janitors from other cities, were participating in an act of non-violent civil disobedience, protesting in the intersection of Travis at Capitol when they were arrested in downtown Houston Thursday night. They were challenging Houston's real estate industry to settle the janitors' strike and agree on a contract that provides the 5,300 janitors in Houston with higher wages and affordable health insurance.

The combined $39.1 million bond for the workers and their supporters is far and above the normal amount of bail set for people accused of even violent crimes in Harris County. While each of the non-violent protestors is being held on $888,888 bail ...

    * For a woman charged with beating her granddaughter to death with a
      sledgehammer, bail was set at $100,000;

    * For a woman accused of disconnecting her quadriplegic mother's breathing
      machine, bail was set at $30,000;

    * For a man charged with murder for stabbing another man to death in a bar
      brawl, bail was set at $30,000;

    * For janitors and protesters charged with Class B misdemeanors for past
      non-violent protests, standard bail has been set at $500 each.

More than 5,300 Houston janitors are paid $20 a day with no health insurance, among the lowest wages and benefits of any workers in America.

Community activists and leaders expressed concern and dismay today at the police's use of horses to intimidate and corral janitors participating in the non-violent civil disobedience Thursday night in downtown Houston. The police's choice to use horses to stop the protest resulted in four people being injured, including an 83-year old female janitor from New York.

In a statement released today prior to the bonds being set, U.S. Representative Sheila Jackson Lee said, "A protest is a sign of freedom in the United States and exercises our basic rights to free speech."

Photos and video shot by people in the crowd during the incident are available on http://www.houstonjanitors.org

Background:

More than 1,700 SEIU janitors in Houston have been on strike since October 23 over civil rights abuses and a failure to bargain in good faith by their employers, the five national cleaning companies ABM, OneSource, GCA, Sanitors, and Pritchard.

With five of the most influential players in Houston's commercial real estate industry refusing to intervene in the dispute, the workers' strike against five national cleaning firms is increasing in scope and intensity. In the highly competitive market of contract cleaning, it the building landlords that hire the cleaning firms that negotiate and set rates for janitors' wages and benefits. These five major landlords, Hines, Transwestern, Crescent, Brookfield Properties, and the oil giant Chevron, have the power to settle the strike by directing the cleaning contractors they hire to provide higher wages and health insurance all workers need to support their families.

In every city, the janitors work for many of the same national cleaning firms in buildings owned by the same national commercial landlords. But, while janitors in Chicago, Los Angeles, New York and other cities make more than $10 an hour, have health insurance and full-time work, Houston workers are paid an average of $20 a day, with no health insurance for part-time work.

Last fall, 5,300 Houston janitors made the historic choice to form a union with SEIU (Service Employees International Union). Their decision capped one of the largest successful organizing drives by private sector workers ever in the Southern half of the United States. Since forming a union with SEIU, Houston janitors have been seeking a raise to $8.50/hour, more hours, and health insurance in a citywide union contract. For more info, visit houstonjanitors.org

More than 225,000 janitors in 29 cities are members of SEIU.



http://www.mydd.com/story/2006/11/18/162219/61

Here's a testimonial from one of the organizers of the protest.  Brutality against workers should not be tolerated in our country.

    We sat down in the intersection and the horses came immediately. It was really violent. They arrested us, and when we got to jail, we were pretty beat up. Not all of us got the medical attention we needed. The worst was a protester named Julia, who is severely diabetic. We kept telling the guards about her condition but they only gave her a piece of candy. During roll call, she started to complain about light-headedness. Finally she just collapsed unconscious on the floor. It was like she just dropped dead. The guard saw it but just kept going through the roll. Susan ran over there and took her pulse while the other inmates were yelling for help, saying we need to call somebody. The medical team strolled over, taking their own sweet time. She was unconscious for like 4 or 5 minutes.

    They really tried to break us down. The first night they put the temperature so high that a woman--one of the other inmates--had a seizure. The second night they made it freezing and took away many of our blankets. We didn't have access to the cots so we had to sleep on a concrete floor. When we would finally fall asleep the guards would come and yell `Are you Anna Denise Solís? Are you so and so?' One of the protesters had a fractured wrist from the horses. She had a cast on and when she would fall asleep the guard would kick the cast to wake her up. She was in a lot of pain.

    The guards would tell us: `This is what you get for protesting.' One of them said, `Who gives a shit about janitors making 5 dollars an hour? Lots of people make that much.' The other inmates--there were a lot of prostitutes in there--said that they had never seen the jail this bad. The guards told them: `We're trying to teach the protesters a lesson.' Nobody was getting out of jail because the processing was so slow. They would tell the prostitutes that everything is the protesters' fault. They were trying to turn everybody against each other.

    I felt like I was in some Third World jail, not in America. One of the guards called us `whores' and if we talked back, we didn't get any lunch. We didn't even have the basic necessities. It felt like a police state, like marshal law, nobody had rights. Some of us had been arrested in other cities, and it was never this bad before.

    They tried to break us down, to dehumanize us. But we were stronger. We made friends with the other inmates and we organized them. The prostitutes felt a lot of solidarity with us. All of us together told stories, and played games like telephone and charades. We even did stand-up comedy monologues about what was happening to us and we all laughed. One woman--a woman of deep faith--gave a sermon that was both funny and deadly serious. We showed them that we weren't afraid. We did it all together. Now we're ready to fight on for basic American rights like the freedom of speech and the right to protest.  --Anna Denise Solís, Lead Organizer, SEIU Local 1877, San José, CA.
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BT

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Re: Houston janitors held in jail on $39.1 million bond
« Reply #1 on: November 19, 2006, 02:07:22 AM »
Makes sense for prostitutes to join a service employees union.


R.R.

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Re: Houston janitors held in jail on $39.1 million bond
« Reply #2 on: November 19, 2006, 02:16:43 AM »
U.S. Representative Sheila Jackson Lee said, "A protest is a sign of freedom in the United States and exercises our basic rights to free speech."

True, but these radical protestors do not have the right to stand in front of traffic and back it up for several blocks like they did do for several hours. It's just rude. They don't care about anybody else but themselves. 

I couldn't find any independent verification from a reputable news source of the alleged amount of bail.

Lanya

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R.R.

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Re: Houston janitors held in jail on $39.1 million bond
« Reply #4 on: November 19, 2006, 01:03:59 PM »
Fuller served 18 years in prison before being released in 1999. He was sent back to prison last year for a parole violation.

--------------------------

The state of Texas should make this man an instant millionaire to make up for his loss of freedom.

Lanya

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Re: Houston janitors held in jail on $39.1 million bond
« Reply #5 on: November 22, 2006, 12:16:12 AM »
Houston janitors reach agreement to end strike

Houston Business Journal - 10:06 AM CST Tuesday

   

Striking unionized Houston janitors who had been off the job for a month reached an agreement with janitorial services firms Monday that will dramatically raise their wages and add health insurance benefits.

The 5,300 janitors, representing about 72 percent of janitorial staff in the city, will see their wages rise 21 percent on Jan. 1, 2007 to $6.25 an hour. The three-year agreement calls for a raise to $7.25 an hour in 2008 and $7.75 in 2009.

The contract also increases shifts for janitors working daily shifts of four hours to six hours by the end of 2008. They will also receive six paid holidays per year and accrue vacation time.

Starting Jan. 1, 2009, the workers will receive basic health insurance at a cost of $20 for individuals and $175 for families.

The workers joined the Service Employees International Union in the fall of 2005, and began negotiations with the city's janitorial service companies. A breakdown in negotiations paved the way for the strike, which had more than its share of tense moments when strikers blocked busy downtown intersections, resulting in myriad arrests.

Among the companies that agreed to the new terms are ABM Janitorial Services, Sanitors Services of Texas, OneSource Facility Services and GCA Services Group.

A union spokeswoman said Tuesday that the wage and benefit increases would ultimately be passed on by the janitorial service companies to customers.

http://www.bizjournals.com/houston/stories/2006/11/20/daily16.html?jst=b_ln_hl
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