Wednesday, December 11, 2013
Sample resolution on Health Care Reform for precinct caucuses and conventions
Note:
This Resolution is submitted for discussion, dialog, debate and
action by the Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council as our part
in celebrating the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human
Rights on December 10, 2013: http://www.un.org/en/documents/udhr/
Feel free to circulate.
Resolution on Health
Care Reform (267
words)
Where as the for-profit health care
system has failed to provide the American people with adequate health
care;
Where as this for-profit system of
health care has resulted in forcing millions of Americans into
poverty as a result of huge health care bills;
Where as a National Public Health Care
System would create twelve to fifteen million new jobs providing the
American people with free health care which is a human right;
Therefore, be it resolved a National
Public Health Care System is required;
Therefore, be it resolved health care
should be publicly financed, publicly administered and publicly
delivered based on the model provided by public education---
everyone in, nobody out.
Therefore, be it resolved a National
Public Health Care System should be funded and financed through these
various methods in combination:
1. “Peace dividends” resulting from
ending militarism and wars.
2. A hefty tax on the wealthy.
3. A payroll tax levied one-quarter on
employees and three-quarters on employers.
Therefore, be it resolved that a
single-payer universal health care system of short duration is an
acceptable first step in implementing a National Public Health Care
System;
Therefore, be it resolved the American
people are entitled to free health care as a human right;
Therefore, be it resolved that health
care will be publicly delivered through a network of neighborhood and
community health care centers and shall include: primary health care
including, but not limited to, general health care, eyes, ears,
dental and mental health; pre-natal through burial.
Therefore be it resolved this becomes
the position of (name of organization/party)
Sample resolution on the Minimum Wage for use in precinct caucuses and conventions
Note: This Resolution is submitted for
discussion, dialog, debate and action by the Midwest Casino Workers
Organizing Council as our part in celebrating the United Nations'
Universal Declaration of Human Rights on December 10, 2013:
http://www.un.org/en/documents/udhr/
Feel free to circulate.
Resolution on the Minimum Wage (209 words)
Resolution on the Minimum Wage (209 words)
Where as workers who are without jobs
are going to be poor;
Where as workers paid poverty wages are
going to be poor;
Where as a “living wage” is a
non-poverty wage;
Where as hundreds of thousands of
working class Minnesotans and their families are poor because of
unemployment and poverty wages;
Where as the United Nations' Universal
Declaration of Human Rights declares the right to a job with a real
living wage to be the criteria for a decent standard-of-living as a
human right;
Where as we can not call for a “living
wage” and then legislate a poverty Minimum Wage;
Where as “cost-of-living” is
the only way to establish what is a decent
“standard-of-living” and what constitutes a “living
wage;”
Therefore, be it resolved that the
Minimum Wage should be a real living wage legislatively tied to all
“cost-of-living” factors, empirical data, based on
all cost-of-living factors as tracked by the United States
Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics indexed to
inflation and increased periodically to provide an improved
standard-of-living;
Therefore, be it resolved we support a
guaranteed annual income;
Therefore, be it resolved that every
Minnesotan is entitled to, by legislation, a decent standard of
living based on cost-of-living and is also entitled to
a guaranteed annual income based on
cost-of-living;
Therefore, be it resolved that this
becomes the position of the (name of party/organization here).
Sample resolution on the plight of workers employed in the Indian Gaming Industry for use in precinct caucuses and conventions
Note: This Resolution is submitted for
discussion, dialog, debate and action by the Midwest Casino Workers
Organizing Council as our part in celebrating the United Nations'
Universal Declaration of Human Rights on December 10, 2013:
http://www.un.org/en/documents/udhr/
Feel free to circulate.
Resolution on the
Plight of Casino Workers Employed in the Indian Gaming Industry
(140 words)
Where as over 40,000 Minnesotans are
employed in the Indian Gaming Industry;
Where as these 40,000 Minnesotans are
forced to work in loud, noisy, smoke-filled casinos and associated
enterprises of the Indian Gaming Industry at poverty wages;
Where as these 40,000 workers have no
rights defined under state, federal, tribal labor or international
laws capable of being enforced to protect them;
Where as the United Nations' Universal
Declaration of Human Rights clearly declares all workers are entitled
to such protections as basic human rights;
Therefore, be it resolved that the
“Compacts” creating this Indian Gaming Industry be re-opened and
re-negotiated to include the state, federal and international
protections enjoyed by all other workers;
Therefore, be it resolved this becomes
the position of (name of organization/party).
Sample resolution on Full Employment for use in Precinct Caucuses and Conventions
Note:
This Resolution is submitted for discussion, dialog, debate and
action by the Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council as our part
in celebrating the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human
Rights on December 10, 2013: http://www.un.org/en/documents/udhr/
Feel free to circulate.
Resolution
on Full Employment (705
words)
Where
as the politicians talk about “jobs, jobs, jobs” but have not
taken on to themselves the responsibility for "Full
employment;"
Where
as the “free market capitalist system” has proven to be very
unstable with boom and bust cycles---
and with
the massive unemployment producing bust cycles of economic “slumps,”
recessions, and depressions occurring with
greater frequency and with full
employment failing to be achieved
even during the short periods of economic boom;
Where
as "Full
employment" is
all about governmental accountability to the people;
Where as "Full employment" is all about peace and democracy;
Where as "Full employment" is all about the most fundamental human right of all--- the right to a job at a real living wage;
Where as "Full employment" is all about peace and democracy;
Where as "Full employment" is all about the most fundamental human right of all--- the right to a job at a real living wage;
Where
as unemployment is the major source of poverty for tens of millions
of people;
Where
as unemployed workers are going to be poor;
Where
as unemployment has been used by government,
business
and industry as an “economic lever” to keep all wages down
instead
of controlling prices of food, housing, health care, college tuition,
electricity, home heating fuels and gas to create a more stable
economy;
Where
as wars kill jobs just like they kill people;
Where
as the “Full Employment Act of 1945” would have mandated “Full
Employment”
which was passed by the United States Senate but defeated by the U.S.
House after a massive campaign by big business interests who realized
they were about to lose super-profits obtained by unemployment
pushing all wages down;
Where as the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights declares in no uncertain terms:
Article 23.
(1) Everyone has the right to work, to free choice of employment, to just and favourable conditions of work and to protection against unemployment.
(2) Everyone, without any discrimination, has the right to equal pay for equal work.
(3) Everyone who works has the right to just and favourable remuneration ensuring for himself and his family an existence worthy of human dignity, and supplemented, if necessary, by other means of social protection.
(4) Everyone has the right to form and to join trade unions for the protection of his interests.
Article 24.
Everyone has the right to rest and leisure, including reasonable limitation of working hours and periodic holidays with pay.
Article 25.
(1) Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control.
(2) Motherhood and childhood are entitled to special care and assistance. All children, whether born in or out of wedlock, shall enjoy the same social protection.
Therefore, be it resolved a “Full Employment Act” to be known as the “21st Century Full Employment Act for Peace and Prosperity” shall be enacted which shall include:
1. A mandate requiring the president and Congress to work together to attain and maintain full employment.
2.
Rely on government programs making the the government the employer of
first choice whenever required.
3.
Include a provision for the enforcement of Affirmative Action to
assure people of color, women and the handicapped receive the jobs to
which they are entitled.
4.
Include a Minimum Wage provision making the federal Minimum Wage a
real living wage based on all “cost-of-living” factors as
monitored and tracked by the United States Department of Labor's
Bureau of Labor Statistics, indexed to inflation quarterly and
periodically increased to provide an improved standard-of-living.
5.
A guaranteed annual income the equivalent of a living wage during any
period of time when employment is not available for individuals.
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