Thursday, April 14, 2011

Local college student wants to raise awareness about unions

MACKENZIE ISSLER
Recorder Staff

GREENFIELD -- Inspired by the recent rights protests in Wisconsin, North Africa and the Middle East, Greenfield Community College student Samuel King wanted to raise awareness, so he organized a teach-in at the college.

"Despite being a fairly pro-union state, I wanted to show that we support these popular movements," in particular, the Wisconsin public employee labor troubles, said 23-year-old King. "I have always been in favor of groups getting together to further rights."

GCC's teach-in fell on the anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., where 43 years ago he stood with sanitation workers demanding their rights. Monday's event featured several speakers, who argued that collective bargaining is a constitutional right and that these "attacks" on collective bargaining rights aren't just happening in Wisconsin, but all over the country and in Massachusetts.

"The issue that brings us together here isn't just an issue of contract rights," said Buz Eisenberg, GCC professor and local human rights lawyer, to a group of about 15 that had gathered in the college lecture hall. "It is an issue of constitutional importance, which like all constitutional issues, involves interpreting key provisions of the U.S. Constitution to decide where our values lie as Americans."

Eisenberg cited some previous times in history "when workers' rights were contested and the Constitution was invoked." By 1933, he said, West Coast dock workers felt a growing desperation with the harshness of the Great Depression and a rising anger at the danger and indignity of working conditions. "With the National Industrial Recovery Act, for the first time Congress recognized and codified the right to organize and bargain collectively. "But, on the West Coast, budding union activity led to great resistance from the owners and from the police who protected their interests."

"Pitched battles over the right to collectively bargain resulted in injuries and deaths up and down the West Coast these battles eventually culminated in the largest general strike in America history and resulted in 1934 in a victory for the strikers."

"Those dock workers won control of their hiring halls in 1934," he said. "They fought to create a union open to all races, religions and political leanings."

They argued for safe working conditions and eventually secured healthcare benefits and established pensions. They negotiated the need for paid holidays, vacations and took public stands on a wide range of issues that impact American workers and workers throughout the world, he said.

"While many spoke of it as a victory for the National Industrial Recovery Act, many others recognized it is as a victory for the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution the right to freely assemble with whomever you choose."

"The right to join others and collectively bargain should not be a right afforded only to certain people," he said. "It is an American right, to be enjoyed by each and every individual in our society." "Those Wisconsin workers demand it, our Constitution demands it and we should demand it."

The speakers all discussed their views on unions rights, in light of the Republican-controlled Wisconsin Legislature's and its governor's rollback of the state public employees' right to collective bargaining.

Not just Wisconsin

"What is happening in Wisconsin is not just happening in Wisconsin," said economics professor Tully Fitzsimmons.

Across the country, there are battles over the rights of unionized labor playing out in state legislatures, Fitzsimmons said. He applied economic principles to the labor markets. He said individual workers sell their labor to their employers, which could be private or public. Those employers then sell the final products, whether goods or services, to consumers.

He said there are fewer solutions available to public employees to even the playing field. Anti-trust laws can not be applied to government structures, and government can not be broken up. "The only solution, then, to create equivalent market power, is to permit those at the bottom of the chain, the laborers, to organize and speak with a single voice," he said, on his blog. "And that is what unionism is all about."

Rosemarie Freeland, coordinator of GCC's Women's Resource Center, is a member of the Greenfield Community College Professional Association, a union affiliated with the Massachusetts Community College Council and the Massachusetts Teachers Association.

In 1993, Freeland came to GCC as a single mother with three children on welfare. "I was told then that welfare reform was necessary to balance the budget and now public workers are being told it is necessary to strip your right to collective bargaining to balance the budget."

"What I really want to get across is that we as a faculty and professional staff union are very aware of budget constraints and we work with the governor and with our employer all the time to come to terms with the difficulty of funding contracts," she said, after the event.

The Wisconsin move, billed as a necessary cost-savings measure, has been criticized by unions and others as a power play to emasculate the labor movement. But, the law is on hold, as a judge declared that the law hadn't properly been published and wasn't in effect as they claimed. The law would force public employees to pay more for their health care and pension benefits, which amounts to an 8 percent pay cut. It also would eliminate their ability to collectively bargain anything except wage increases no higher than inflation. The Associated Press contributed to this article.

A teen's struggle with eating disorders makes her want to spread the word

By MACKENZIE ISSLER
Recorder Staff

DEERFIELD -- When 17-year-old Jenna Gagnon first developed an eating disorder, her family didn't realize why she was losing weight -- they thought that she was just eating healthy and exercising and complimented her often on the way she looked.
Gagnon, a friendly and articulate blonde-haired senior at Frontier Regional High School, said she is in recovery from bulimia now and first became anorexic when she was 12. Several traumas in her family, including the deaths of her grandparents, intensified her eating disorder and she became bulimic, which means that she would eat, sometimes bingeing, and then would throw up her food.
She said her friends, frustrated, would sometimes yell at her about her eating disorders, but she was in denial. So, when Gagnon started helping organize this year's Community Coalition for Teens' Youth Conference, she wanted to make sure that there was a workshop offered about eating disorders. She wanted to help her peers understand the illnesses and what they can do to help.
About 200 students from across the area gathered on Wednesday at Frontier Regional School for the 20th annual youth conference. Each year, the conference offers myriad workshops and performances addressing youth issues, which included, this year, media education, stress, travel, mental health, employment, racism and publishing.
A group of Frontier students, known as the Frontier Friends, led by youth conference coordinator Gagnon, have been planning the conference since September.
Gagnon worked tirelessly to get Katie Heimer from the Multi-Service Eating Disorders Association in Newton to come and speak. The association is a nonprofit dedicated to the prevention and treatment of eating disorders and disordered eating.
Heimer, 26, spoke to a group of about 25, about her own experiences with an eating disorder, shared harrowing statistics and reiterated that people can fully recover from eating disorders and that they are "about emotions, not food."
Eighty percent of women are dissatisfied with their bodies, Heimer said. "It is kind of an epidemic when you think about it in those terms."
There are four primary types of eating disorders: bulimia, anorexia, binge eating disorder and "Eating Disorders Not Otherwise Specified," where, in some cases, someone may exhibit the signs of the other disorders but not completely fulfill the diagnostic definition.
Conservative estimates suggest that bulimia and anorexia affect 5 million to 10 million girls and women and 1 million boys and men and binge eating disorder affects as many as 24 million men and women, according to handouts at the workshop.
Heimer said the common causes of eating disorders are major life transitions, family problems, social/romantic problems, trauma, genetics, social values/messages and failure at school, work and/or competitive events.
Some of the medical complications associated with eating disorders are nausea, insomnia, increased risk of diabetes, high blood pressure and some forms of cancer, high cholesterol, dental problems (like damaged or discolored teeth), loss of monthly menstrual period, hair loss, hollow facial features, dry skin, osteoporosis, acid reflux, gastrointestinal problems and heart palpitations and heart failure, weight-related hypertension and/or fatigue.
Ten percent of people with anorexia die each year, Heimer said.

Second marriage story: Engagement

By MACKENZIE ISSLER
Recorder Staff

MONTAGUE -- In the home they built together, Oliver Williams asked his girlfriend of five-and-half years, Christina Chubb, to marry him.
Williams said once the couple got through building a house together, he knew that he was ready to make the commitment of marriage.
"We built a home together, not just a house," he says.
"I just gave her the ring right here," he said, as the couple sat in their kitchen recently.
Chubb said she had no idea the engagement was coming. In fact, she said they had recently gone to a wedding and that Williams was acting "so weird and so standoffish." She thought he was acting that way because he was "terrified of the idea of marriage."
"It turns out that he had bought the ring that morning," she said with a grin.
The two met through friends and went on their first date, which was a double date, after he called her two days later. "I kind of thought something was there a little spark," he said.
Both described their first date, which was spent on the Connecticut River on a warm summer day in 2005, as a success. For the next month, the two saw each other once or twice each week, and often Chubb would come to visit at the dairy farm where Williams worked.
The couple was apart for a bit, after they broke up briefly, but they got back together and started planning the house they wanted to build in Montague. They moved about a year ago into the two-story cream-colored house, and Chubb brought her two horses, her dogs and some recently added chickens to their homestead.
On May 25, 2010, her birthday, Williams proposed. The wedding is planned in Conway on Aug. 13.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Hector Is Gonna Kill Nate

"Hector Is Gonna Kill Nate" by Ari Issler is a tense drama about a dedicated high school basketball coach and his emotionally charged students. Judging from the dedication in the end credits, the compelling main character appears to be a tribute to the filmmaker's father. This short world premieres in Aspen. -- from Indiewire.com

At the end of Ari Issler's smartly visceral story of a high-school basketball coach who intervenes to stop an act of retribution, I wrote down the director's name. Then I noted his cinematographer (Jeffrey Kim) and editor (Matt Ruskin) They should all surface again. It's an agile bit of work with actual emotional payoffs. -- from the Denver Post.


My brother, Ari Issler's, short film premiered at the Aspen ShortsFest on Saturday. I am so proud of him!! And, his film brings me to tears every time and is so beautifully and skillfully done.

Monday, April 4, 2011

Haiti: "Sweet Micky" elected president

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti – One of Haiti’s most popular entertainers, a provocative Carnival singer previously best known for disrobing and swearing on stage, has been elected president, a senior Haitian election official said Monday, placing him at the helm of a nation still struggling to recover from last year’s earthquake, a cholera epidemic and chronic poverty.

Photo: www.kreyolnetwork.com

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Marriage series: 50 years of marriage and still going strong

Recent research shows that fewer Americans are marrying, and those who do, choose to do it later in life. This is the first of a three-part series.

By MACKENZIE ISSLER
Recorder Staff


NORTHFIELD — On a cool and sunny autumn day, 17-yearold Kay Lombard put on her white wedding gown of chantilly lace. Her short, dark brown hair was fastened with a flowing, translucent veil.

The church was decorated with baskets of chrysanthemums, fall foliage and potted greens. It was Oct. 22, 1960.

At 3:30 p.m. that day, Lombard picked up her bouquet of white roses, stephanotis and ivy, and walked down the aisle to marry her finance, 23-yearold Harold Snow. Snow waited at the end of the aisle, dressed in a black tuxedo with a white rose boutonniere and black bow tie.

The two said their “I dos” and set off on their week-long honeymoon. Since then, they have raised three children together and have watched them have families of their own. The couple celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary last October and now are “going on 75 years,” joked Mr. Snow.

But, since the two were married five decades ago, opinions about dating, marriage, cohabitation and spousal responsibilities have changed and evolved — some say for the better and others, for the worse.

Taking notice that 72 percent of all adults in the country were married in 1960 and, by 2008, the
number had dropped to just 52 percent, the Pew Research Center did research and compiled a report, asking several intriguing questions, like:

Is marriage becoming obsolete?

How much have gender roles within marriage changed?

When it comes to marriage, does love trump money?

The Pew report, done in association with Time magazine, compiled its report after conducting a nationwide survey of 2,691 adults from Oct. 1 to 21, 2010 and including in its analysis half a century of demographic and economic data, drawn mainly from the U.S. Census.

Nearly four in 10 of the survey respondents (39 percent) said that marriage is becoming obsolete. Back in 1978, when Time magazine posed the same question to registered voters, just 28 percent agreed.

Those most likely to agree included those who are part of the phenomenon, 62 percent of cohabiting parents, as well as those most likely to be troubled by it (42 percent of selfdescribed conservatives).

Part of the decline may be explained by the average age at which men and women first marry — it’s now the highest
ever recorded.

Also, part of the decline can be attributed to the near tripling of the group that is currently divorced or separated — to 14
percent in 2008 from 5 percent in 1960.

Greenfield man to distribute free fuel in Japan

By MACKENZIE ISSLER
Recorder Staff


This morning, Greenfield resident Bob Picariello boarded a flight to Tokyo, Japan, with his final destination being Ishinomaki, a city heavily hit by the recent earthquake
and tsunami.

Picariello, 64, is traveling with and is on the board of the nonprofit, Fuel Relief Fund, which is now distributing heating fuel in Ishinomaki and Onagawa, a city and town in the Miyagi prefecture
, where thousands are estimated to have died and are still missing after the two natural disasters.

The fuel distribution is now being manned by the nonprofit’s chairman, Ted Honcharik, a fuel distributor from southern California.

Honcharik will stay with Picariello for a few days after he arrives to show him the ropes, but then he will be departing, leaving the operation to Picariello and a translator. He will be in Japan for three weeks to distribute oil. If there is time left and no money left for oil, Picariello plans to find a carpentry crew to work with. Picariello has spent half of his career in the building trades and the other half as a counselor.

Fuel Relief Fund began donating and distributing heating fuel in Japan on March 24, where temperatures in the northeast region drop below freezing at night. The kerosene is being mostly used in small heaters. The nonprofit is giving out 2.5 gallons to each person and has already served hundreds of people, Picariello said.

Picariello first met Honcharik when he was doing relief work in Haiti weeks after the devastating earthquake there. This spurred another trip to Haiti for Picariello, this time with Fuel Relief Fund, where he helped deliver fuel to areas within 50 miles of Port-au-Prince, the country’s capital.