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Nine members of the IBEW joined the "America Can Do Better" tour through Virginia, West Virginia, Pennsylvania and New York.

Close Race Inspires
IBEWs Political Activists

October 2004 IBEW Journal

(continued)

The August 28 Chicago delegation, whose members belong to Local 9, 21 and 134 awoke in Ohio at 7 a.m., where they were received by members of Toledo-area Locals 8, 245, 1076, 1194, and 1413, who greeted them with a hearty welcome and much-needed coffee and doughnuts. Then the walkers donned the IBEWs signature neon greenish-yellow T-shirts, received a quick orientation and door-to-door packets, and were paired with Toledo members for six hours of canvassing.

Electrical Workers Minority Caucus Chairwoman Robbi Sparks, business manager of Local 2127, flew in from Georgia for the walk, and members of other labor unions participated, including those from AFSCME, SEIU, the plumbers and pipefitters, and laborers. All told, nearly 100 union members fanned out across Toledo, reaching out to hundreds of their brothers and sisters.

The August 28 Take Back Ohio effort did not stop there. In Cincinnati, more than 50 walkers from Locals 212, 1347 and 71 (Columbus) joined several members from Kentucky who bussed in to pound the pavement. Members who traveled to Cincinnati from out-of-state were from Locals 369 and 2100 in Louisville and 1627 and 2220 in Lexington.

"It was a massive effort," said International Representative Tom Curley, who took part in the Toledo walk. "The amazing thing is you hear that there so many people who are apathetic about politics today but people from several states away were interested in what was going on in Ohio because they felt they could make a difference. If we win Ohio, it could be because of their efforts."

In Cleveland, 13 members of Local 129 walked. Six members of Local 306 in Akron went door-to-door and Marietta Local 972 members also took part. Also on August 28, walkers from Ohio and Wheeling, West Virginia, members from Local 141 knocked on doors in West Virginia, which is another battleground state.

Both Bush and Kerry have visited Ohio frequently throughout the campaign. But all the political attention showered on Ohio cannot mask the fact that it has suffered through the Bush years. The Ohio Department of Job and Family Services estimates that the state has lost more than 200,000 jobs since Bush took office. The unemployment rate in July was 6.1 percent, compared to 5.5 percent nationally.

Hundreds of the jobs lost in Ohio have been manufacturing jobs held by IBEW members. In March, Thomson closed its television glass-making plant in Circleville, leaving 500 members to find their way in a job market that has more low-wage, no-benefit jobs than the ones that pay living wages and health insurance.

"I have lost 8,000 members in the last two years just in this district," said Fourth District Vice President Paul Witte, whose region covers Ohio, Kentucky, Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia and the District of Columbia. "I have closed out five local unions and I have three more yet to close that are phasing out. We have been hit very hard by the Bush administrations deliberate outsourcing of jobs."

But the state still has a formidable labor presence. Ohio has more than 5,000 IBEW manufacturing members working in factories across the state, making power distribution equipment, vacuum cleaners, lighting fixtures and electric motors. Manufacturing Department Director Bob Roberts said the state is still one of the top five in the country for manufacturing members.

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