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How women organizers used Berger-Marks grants
Groups & research funded by Berger-Marks
Women organizing women:
special report

Last updated: May 21, 2010
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| We are here! |
Effective May 28, the Berger-Marks Foundation has a new home, a little farther uptown in Washington, D.C. Our new office is located at:
4301 Connecticut Avenue, NW
Suite 108
Washington, D.C. 20008
Our new phone number is: (202) 243-0133. The email address stays the same.
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| New video funded by Berger-Marks grant |
Eleven winners emerged from among the many exciting grant proposals the Foundation received this Spring. Many will create innovative resources to help women organize, often using media like websites, video and dramatic readings, and several offer training to help specific groups of women workers organize. They are developing new ways to organize women who work in isolation -- from immigrant domestic workers to freelance journalists. And two research winners are looking into what it takes to be a winning organizer, with some surprising conclusions.
Does organizing make a difference for working women? Can you really gain more rights, pay and fairness at work, just by getting together and agitating for them?
Yes you can! Our history proves it. Things may be far from perfect today, but women have much more opportunity than even a generation ago.
Want some hard proof-- and evidence to show other working women who aren't so sure they can make a difference? For Women's History Month, we put together a few short stories about women who got fed up, stood up and made huge breakthroughs, and how they did it.
Organizing has made a huge difference, for all working women. And it's still happening today, as other women take up their banner.
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| Womens Way of Organizing report |
As traditional industries decline, people are hiring into "informal and low-wage sectors" where turnover is high, legal protections are scarce, unions are rare, and workers tend to be immigrant women of color. Organizing such jobs is especially hard, because many people work in their homes or their employer’s home, with no central workplace, and many worry about their status in the U.S. Researchers used ideas from other Berger-Marks reports as the jumping-off point for a series of focus groups and roundtable discussions in 2008 and 2009, where workers and organizers, most of them women, talked about how they mobilized diverse and fragmented workforces, and the experiences of women in unions.
At the core of the report are four exciting, non-traditional campaigns, run largely by and for women. The report reveals how they succeeded and poses provocative questions such as, "Is there a successful way of organizing that is unique to women-focused campaigns?" It investigates how seven key, non-traditional strategies helped make these campaigns work, and arrives at strong conclusions that challenge every union to shake up its approach to organizing if it is to succeed with today's workers.
Read more about it
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| Alanna Stone (r.) with new union members & local Guild officers |
The massive Thomson Reuters media company fought tooth and nail to keep six workers in New York from joining a union at its Buyouts Magazine. The company challenged the unit, forcing the National Labor Relations Board to hold a hearing about it. Then, for three weeks, the company forced those six workers to attend "captive audience" meetings, both together and individually, where it trashed the union.
But backing up the workers was Alanna Stone, a staff organizer for The Newspaper Guild of New York, TNG Local 3/CWA Local 31003. Stone had won a Berger-Marks grant to get in touch with non-union workers at companies her union represents, and help them organize.

Free calendar from rlmarts.com features this "I'm am organizer" graphic on its April page.
"Attracting and retaining a talented activist core of organizers who understand what it takes to organize women is not optional for the labor movement; it’s essential.
––"Is There a Women's Way of Organizing?" report
"We’re not interested in reproducing the same top-down structures internally that out there in the world have kept working people at the bottom.”
– Young organizer,
"Is There a Women's Way of Organizing?" report
"Our customer service training is... a great recruitment tool for us and it upgrades their skills. It’s led by union members for nonunion members and it’s open to anybody.”
– RWDSU,
"Is There a Women's Way of Organizing?" report
"We have seminars and workshops on domestic violence, housing, and women in leadership roles. Whether it be informal meetings or formal meetings, it’s all an education process.”
– 1199SEIU,
"Is There a Women's Way of Organizing?" report
"We try to keep people knowing that their culture is important to the country. At every general membership meeting, members do poetry or skits and we even had a calypso.”
– DWU,
"Is There a Women's Way of Organizing?" report
“More members, more power, more progress.”
–Slogan on Coalition of Labor Union Women website
"A ship in port is safe, but that is not what ships are for. Sail out to sea and do new things.“
–Rear Admiral
Dr. Grace Hopper