My (pen)name is Jinpa Kangri. During my twenty year career in human services, I was involved with two labor unions: [AFSCME] when I was a shop steward for Local 470; [SEIU] when I was on local 509's organizing committee. While those experiences were not without their rewards, for the past seven years I have had a much more satisfying involvement with a labor association of a new kind: [ESWA]. This is not an official website, rather one person blogging his own experience.
Monday, June 20, 2011
Win, Win (9/12/09)
Today I picked up dinner for the full and part-time volunteers of E.S.W.A. I had stopped by at the office to bring in some research I had done. While I was there a full-time volunteer asked if I had time to pick up the meal. It was cooked by a member. When I arrived at the member's house there was a casserole made with a lot of the vegetables I had picked up on Friday at the Produce Market and some Honeydew melon all peeled and cubed that I had picked up on Friday at the Produce Market and there was corn-on-the-cob I had picked up on Friday at the Produce Market. Suddenly I got a strong sense that this is how it works. Volunteers pick up donated fruits and vegetables (which are primarily distributed to members) which are made into a meal by members and delivered to the office by volunteers for all the members and volunteers working on various projects (such as telephoning and filing) past dinner-time. People who could be described as working poor engaging themselves in coordination with people who could be described as middle class working towards the same end: focusing on ending poverty at the root, --misguided government policy that keeps service employee wages low, --while at the same time addressing in a material way the symptoms of poverty in the community.
The logic here is: there is strength in numbers. Before I came through the doors of ESWA, for many years I had been attempting to make the fragmented emergency services "safety net" work for my fellow Bostonians victimized by severe poverty. Some of my jobs included: street outreach worker; emergency shelter psychiatric clinician; and case worker helping the formerly homeless stay that way. I became pretty good at it but in the end I was just burned out trying to fight poverty within the same system that was creating it. Eastern Service Workers Association helps working people unite from all walks of life by teaching their unique method of organizing how to address with one voice the economic injustices of our society from outside the system. In this way there can be no failure because any response to their demands is a victory.
It is a myth that the system can be changed from within. A system will always maintain itself. This something even an amoeba knows. It took me twenty-five years of knocking my head against the proverbial wall to accept this basic truth. I am asking the gentle reader simply to think about it. If you that the system needs to be changed which is driving more and more people into severe poverty every day, I can save you a enormous head-ache. Check out Eastern Service Workers Association. It is the ultimate Win, Win.
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