BOSTON SCHOOL BUS UNION
WINS HUGE VICTORY
In 10 Minutes, Jury Returns Not-Guilty Verdict
Commonwealth’s Case Exposed
as a Fraudulent Anti-Union Frame-Up
The
campaign to rehire four Boston school bus drivers, illegally fired by the
union-busting Veolia Corporation, got a shot in the arm on Thursday when a jury
took only ten minutes to acquit union leader Steve Kirschbaum of all charges
brought by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
The
ten-minute verdict was the result of an eight-month peoples’ mobilization that
included six pack-the-court rallies; national call-in days to both the district
attorney and the mayor; and weekly busyard rallies organized by the local.
Peoples’ lawyers Barry Wilson and John Pavlos skillfully and passionately tore
the frame-up apart and successfully turned the tables, putting the union-busters
on trial.
School
bus drivers and community supporters of the union packed the court for three
days, transforming the inside of the courthouse into a de
facto union hall. During lunch breaks the drivers held militant picket
lines outside the building, with placards saying “Drop the Charges” and “No
Contract, No Work”!
Dorchester
District Courthouse became ground zero for the political movement, as Brock
Satter with the Mass Mobilization Against Police Violence, as well as Sandra
Macintosh of the Coalition for Equal Quality Education and former City
Councilmember Chuck Turner all showed up to support the union. City
Councilmember Charles Yancey gave updates to the overflow crowd outside the
courtroom, and for two of the three trial days, I-93 protester Tsung
attended.
Herculano
Fecteau of the Boston Teachers Union showed up, as did Tony Van Der Meer of the
Africana Studies Department at UMass. The verdict was a victory not only for
this political, social union – which not only fights for its members but
marches with the Black Lives Matter movement, resolutely defends LGBTQ rights
and marches for Palestine – but a victory for the movement as well.
And
it was a defeat for the union-busters, Boston’s 1%, and the city’s entrenched
racist forces who want to re-segregate public education.
From
the moment the four bogus charges were filed against Kirschbaum in July 2014, it
was clear that they were part of the union-busting campaign being waged against
the local – a campaign that included the November 2013 firing of Kirschbaum as
well as three other union leaders.
When
a June 30, 2014 rally of hundreds of school bus drivers – held to demand the
rehiring of the four — ended with an indoor rally in the drivers’ breakroom,
Veolia managers provided false statements to the Commonwealth to make it look
like they had been attacked by Kirschbaum and that the premises had been
violently entered.
The
charges were totally made-up but serious: three were felonies, initially
including breaking and entering to commit a felony; malicious destruction of
property; assault and battery with a dangerous weapon; and trespassing.
The
evidence was so obviously manufactured that in October the first two charges
were dismissed by the judge. On Thursday, a working class jury of six –
including two union members — “dismissed” the remaining two charges with a
not-guilty verdict in record time.
In
fact, it was Veolia and its co-conspirators who were put on trial as witness
testimony and Kirschbaum’s legal team showed that the events in question had
everything to do with the fact that the contract was expiring that day at
midnight – and that, in violation of the contract, Veolia had attempted to
prevent the union from holding a meeting.
In
October 2013, the notorious union-busting company fired four of the union
leaders – including Grievance Chair Kirschbaum, Recording Secretary Andre
Francois, Steward Garry Murchison and Vice President Steve Gillis – after
locking out the workers and falsely claiming that the union had conducted a
“wildcat strike.”
The
not-guilty verdict — which has so thoroughly discredited the version of events
put forward by Veolia managers — can only help the campaign to rehire the four.
Those in the Boston establishment who were holding their breath over this trial
and hoping to see one of the union’s leaders convicted are now facing a renewed,
fighting union that is not afraid to take things to the next level.
Those
who know this local also know that its members intend to fight not only to
rehire the four but to deepen the Black Lives Matter movement and the struggle
against racism; stop the school closings announced by Mayor Walsh; defend public
school transportation by keeping middle school students off the subway and on
school buses; and defend the righteous I-93 protesters and their First Amendment
rights.
No comments:
Post a Comment