www.newsandletters.org












NEWS & LETTERS, APRIL 2003

Workshop Talks

War hits workers

by Htun Lin

Even before the first bomb of Bush's war fell, workers back home were suffering from domestic collateral damage. Deep cuts in California threaten the jobs of 10,000 teachers. In economically depressed areas like Oakland where I work, the cutbacks are the severest.

The Oakland school board warned that up to 1,000 teachers, one third of the total, are facing layoffs. Teachers are in a state of uncertainty over who will be gone tomorrow. For teachers, students and parents, education is the latest aspect of homeland insecurity.

A few short years ago there was a state surplus. There was an effort to reverse the decades-long neglect of education by hiring more teachers. This ray of hope motivated a lot of young people to go into the profession. However, they are learning that for capitalist planners human concerns are always expendable. Many teachers say that if they are laid off they will not return to this profession.

This is true especially for those who put all their energy into a promising new small school program that Oakland is going to discontinue. Small schools were aimed at those who were dropping out. Planners project that there is going to be an even more dramatic shortage of teachers for the next decade. Once a public good is dismantled, it is very difficult to put it back together again.

We experienced this in health care over a decade of restructuring. Staffing levels have been cut so drastically that wards are understaffed as a matter of course. Every manager is called on the carpet for being a penny over budget. There has been a massive depopulation of health care professionals. A lot of veteran nurses, once they were given pink slips, never returned to the field.

Now nursing schools have a shortage of applicants and there is a critical shortage of nurses in the wards. Management is offering thousands of dollars as a reward for finding a successful candidate for a nursing job. The shortage is so severe that they throw a lot of money to subcontracting personnel agencies, which bring in nurses from afar. These nurses are not familiar with our hospital routines and patient population. Our current nursing contract includes a landmark quality care clause.  Quality care means you can't treat nurses as mere replacement parts in an assembly line.

LABOR CONTRACTORS

Capitalists like to delude themselves about their ability to allocate resources efficiently. Resources for them are a quantitative abstraction, which they can manipulate from their corporate suites. Workers know that any human endeavor is a cooperative one. In health care or education, cooperation of living labor creates an accumulation of knowledge and experience in the group as a whole, which cannot be replaced with discrete quantities of labor provided by temporary agencies.

Cooperation, like Humpty Dumpty, cannot be easily put back together. The bean counters congratulate us during employee forums for the company's "fiscal health." The shop floor reality is ignored by their illusion that managing money is managing health care.

This illusion is magnified on a national scale by Bush's health policies. One of the latest is to take more money out of Medicare by forcing patients into HMOs in order to obtain prescription drug benefits and to diminish Medicare patients ability to appeal denials for care. Bush also wants to shift more of the federal government's responsibility for Medicaid to the states.

The one area where there is absolutely no restraint is Bush's permanent war. Schools and hospitals are expendable. Management has defended health care cutbacks because of massive reduction in health expenditure. They say that the new reality in health care means we're going to have to collect ever-increasing co-payments from individual patients.

While Bush is hell bent on dismantling health care as we know it, to him, his one health issue above all others is the possibility of bio-terrorism.  The Bush homeland security apparatus has obligated local health agencies to prepare for mass inoculations beginning with us health workers. Health professionals know that hundreds are expected to die from the smallpox vaccine itself.

HOODWINK PUBLIC

One local health official said it is reckless for the Bush regime to use vaccinations and jeopardize the health of millions to market this war. She felt Bush is trying to hoodwink the public into believing that authorities are doing something to protect them when in reality they are not.

The everyday reality for us workers under capitalism is that the health of workers and the education of our children are sacrificed to the needs of capital. Nurses and teachers know better than generals that it takes a long time to build a working system, which once dismantled is difficult to put back together.  How will planners rebuild what they are destroying right here at home--our health and educational infrastructures. Bush's permanent war is also a war against workers, and is forcing many of us to question the whole system.

Return to top


Home l News & Letters Newspaper l Back issues l News and Letters Committees l Dialogues l Raya Dunayevskaya l Contact us l Search

Subscribe to News & Letters

Published by News and Letters Committees
Designed and maintained by  Internet Horizons