LOCAL
Join effort to save UW laundry workers’ jobs
UPDATE (April 10, 2018) — Dozens rallied in support of the University of Washington laundry workers on Monday, and then a group of students took the protest a step further…
► From The Stranger — UW students occupy building to protest closure of unionized laundry — About 20 students are currently occupying UW Medicine administrative offices urging the university not to shutter its laundry service. The laundry currently employs about 100 people who clean linens and scrubs for University of Washington Medicine hospitals and clinics.
The following is from the Washington Federation of State Employees, Council 28:
SEATTLE — Last Thursday, right before the start of the Easter and Passover holidays, University of Washington Medicine issued layoff notices for 15 workers at the Consolidated Laundry, effective for the end of May. Also in May, UW Medicine plans to issue bids for proposals that could privatize the Consolidated Laundry. Workers have no guarantees that UW’s Consolidated Laundry will not be privatized and closed!
TAKE A STAND — Show your support at the second rally with University of Washington Laundry Workers, who are fighting to keep their union jobs as UW Medicine threatens to privatize and close their facility. Rally to stop the contracting out of their jobs on Monday, April 9 at 2:30 p.m. at Drumheller Fountain on the UW Seattle campus. RSVP on Facebook.
BACKGROUND: Union members of the Washington Federation of State Employees (WFSE) and Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Local 925 are rallying to stop UW Medicine from contracting out/privatizing its laundry facility, which employs more than 100 workers who are protected by a union, have a voice on the job, earn a living wage, receive healthcare benefits, and have retirement security.
The UW’s unionized Laundry Workers will be rallying with community supporters, including students, to highlight how contracting with private sector vendors undermines Seattle’s tradition of respecting high labor standards- by paying workers living wages, offering them employer-provided healthcare, and providing defined-benefit pension plans.
Come show your support for the UW’s Laundry Workers, and tell the University to stop trying to balance UW Medicine’s multi-million dollar hospital and clinics operating losses on the backs of a hard-working and incredibly diverse workforce – the majority of whom are women, people of color, and immigrants.