Plan for Sustainable Economic Development in
SE Massachusetts: Putting the Needs of People
and the Environment First
In order to build and secure sustainable and environmentally sound
economic development for the 21st century in SE Massachusetts’s
communities, development should be rooted in the following principles:
* Significant community and labor voice in shaping development decisions
* Accessible and affordable public transportation
* Environmentally positive development
* Workers have the right to organize without fear or obstacle
* Living and sustainable wage
* Safe and healthy workplace
* Accessible, affordable healthcare
* Accessible, affordable childcare
* Job Benefits include retirement and paid time off, including paid sick and family leave
Economic development policy initiatives must create and retain “good
jobs”. These initiatives must have clear goals and employers who
benefit from public resources and economic development initiatives must
be held accountable to providing good jobs.
Emphasis on Training and Education
Workers need and deserve accessible and quality training and education
to maintain their skills in the changing economy. The state, cities,
and towns, along with the business community, must provide the
resources and opportunities for workers to continue upgrading their
skills, including apprenticeship programs. Training should prepare
workers for quality jobs with career ladders and not dead-end jobs that
don’t pay a living wage. In addition, training should provide portable
skills rather than skills limited to one company.
Economic development must preserve, protect, and harmonize with the
environment. Economic development must improve conservation of the land
and resources and employ healthy, safe, and efficient renewable
technologies.
Any public funded or supported economic development committee or
planning agency must include meaningful numbers of labor and community
representatives chosen by their respective organizations.
Workers, residents, and community organizations have traditionally play
a very limited role, if any, in shaping our economic future. This has
kept us on the “outside looking in”. Economic development responds to
corporate interests whose primary goal is making money rather than
providing for the welfare of workers and our community. This creates a
growing wage gap between the owners, the producers, and the consumers.
Corporate influence and profits grow while our incomes and communities
decline.
We need an economic development policy that puts improving the
standards of people and our environment first - not last. We need a
policy that gives our community more power over its economic engine and
improves the economic, social, political and spiritual well being of
its residents. We need a policy that encourages alternative forms of
business; including worker owned and operated enterprises, consumer and
producer co-ops. We need a policy which supports a progressive tax
structure and the delivery and expansion of public services.
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Immigrant Support Rally - March 17, 2007
Future of Work
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Immigrant workers' rallies in New Bedford - Labor Center played a role in the coalition
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Future of Work Conference on the future of the Labor movement
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Regional Future of Work Meeting, March 2005 with Barney Frank
