Andy Stern
A Test For Union Leadership
The LA Times today published an excellent investigative story on Tyrone Freeman, the leader of California's largest SEIU local, which represents home health care givers. It's an outrageous tale of self-dealing, with money from union affiliates going to the business pursuits of Freeman's wife and mother-in-law.
Freeman is a young and talented leader; I saw that firsthand as a reporter covering labor for the LA Times in 2006. Freeman is popular within the union movement, and close to SEIU's international president, Andy Stern. (The last time I saw Freeman, he and Stern were sitting down to a meal at the Pacific Dining Car). So this is going to be a difficult test of the union movement in LA and nationallly. But it's a test. Freeman needs to step down and offer a full-throated apology. The union needs to ask for an independent audit of the local. And the public needs to hear immediately from union leadership -- Stern, county labor chief Maria Elena Durazo, other top SEIU leaders such as janitors' union chief Mike Garcia -- about how such conduct must not be permitted in the movement. So far, the silence is deafening. Stern, in the story, refuses to address the conduct in question. That won't cut it.
SEIU vs. SEIU
It's worth checking out the Sacramento Bee's excellent coverage of a fight between the Service Employees International Union, the largest labor union in the country, and the president of its California chapter. SEIU now has filed suit, which focuses on an account that the California chapter established in anticipation of a 2008 ballot measure campaign that never materialized. But, as with most labor battles, this one is about money and control. Who will get to be the SEIU boss for California? The international president, Andy Stern, has the upper hand for now.


