Labor Council for Latin American Advancement
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Labor Council for Latin American Advancement | |
Founded | 1973 |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Head union | Milton Rosado, president |
Affiliation | AFL-CIO |
Office location | Washington, D.C. |
Website | www.lclaa.org |
The Labor Council for Latin American Advancement (LCLAA) is a nonprofit, nonpartisan Latino organization affiliated with the AFL-CIO. It was formed in 1973 to provide Latino trade union members in the United States with a more effective voice within the AFL-CIO, to encourage Latino participation on the democratic process, and to encourage the organization of Latino workers into labor unions.
LCLAA is the official "voice" of Latinos within the AFL-CIO, and one of six official "constituency groups."
LCLAA is based in the headquarters of the AFL-CIO in Washington, D.C. In 2006, it had 65 chapters in the U.S. and Puerto Rico, and claimed to represent 1.7 million Latino workers.
Contents |
[edit] History and goals
LCLAA was founded in 1973 as part of a wave of constituency group organizing within the AFL-CIO. The AFL-CIO had chartered its first retiree organization, the National Council of Senior Citizens (NCSC), in 1962 and its first civil rights organization, the A. Philip Randolph Institute, in 1965. The Coalition of Black Trade Unionists followed in 1972 to give a broader, more effective voice within the AFL-CIO to black workers, and the Coalition of Labor Union Women was chartered in 1974. But it was the large influx of Latino workers brought about by the chartering of the United Farm Workers in 1966 that led to a push by Latino labor union activists for a separate organization of their own.
Several years passed, however, before the growing militancy and political muscle of the emerging Latino movement moved AFL-CIO president George Meany to agree to a Latino constituency group. In 1972, the AFL-CIO brought together hundreds of Latino labor activists and members of local Latino labor committees to form LCLAA. The organization's founding conference was held in Washington, D.C., on November 16, 1973. LCLAA's first president was Ray Mendoza, a member of the Laborers' International Union of North America.
LCLAA has three primary goals. The first is to work with unions and community groups to organize Latino workers into unions. The second is to advance the social, economic, political and civil rights of Latinos by building coalitions with and among other unions and other national groups. The third goal is to promote Latinos' participation in the American democratic process.
LCLAA engages in a wide variety of projects in the furtherance of these goals. It has a significant lobbying and legislative presence in the nation's capital, and coordinates the work of state-level legislative work on certain issues such as immigrant rights and access to social services. LCLAA also conducts research on a number of policy issues affecting Latinos and non-citizen immigrant workers (whether Latino or not). It is currently very active in the U.S. immigration policy debate. LCLAA also conducts voter registration, education and mobilization efforts throughout each election cycle.
[edit] Structure
LCLAA is governed by its members in accordance with the constitutions of the LCLAA and AFL-CIO. Membership is open to any union member, active or retired. The membership meets biannually in even-numbered years (a policy and education conference is held in even-numbered years.) representatives to the national meeting are elected by local LCLAA chapters, international unions, AFL-CIO state federations, certain large AFL-CIO central labor councils and certain qualifying local AFL-CIO unions on the basis of a complex proportional representation formula.
The membership elects nine national officers. The offficers includ a president, secretary-treasurer, executive vice president and six vice presidents to four-year terms.
The membership also elects an executive board of 36 members to four-year terms as well. In addition to the elected members, the nine officers of the organization also automatically sit on the board. All past-presidents (as of 2006, there are five living past-presidents) and the executive director of LCLAA are ex-officio members of the board as well. The board governs the affairs of LCLAA between membership meetings. It meets at least once a year, although it may meet more often than that, and may also make organizational or structural changes in the organization during the period between membership meetings.
The officers recommend, and the executive board approves, the appointment of an Advisory Board. The duties of the Advisory Board, however, are not spelled out in the LCLAA constitution.
LCLAA may establish, at its discretion, state and local councils. These councils are required to affiliate with their respective state and local AFL-CIO bodies. State and local councils do not exist in all areas, however, and the LCLAA constitution provides for at-large membership where they do not.
In 2006, the following were elected officers of LCLAA: Milton Rosado, a member of the United Auto Workers, president; Aida Garcia, a member of the Service Employees International Union, executive vice president; and Maria Portalatin, a member of the American Federation of Teachers, secretary-treasurer.
In late 2006, Gabriela Lemus became LCLAA's executive director.
[edit] Trivia
AFL-CIO executive vice president Linda Chavez-Thompson was an LCLAA vice president from 1986 to 1996.
[edit] References
- "Black Unionists Warn: 'Don't "Restructure" Us Out." Black Commentator. February 3, 2005.
- "Campaign to Stop Killer Coke Gains Support from International Labor." Political Affairs. December 6, 2004.
- Greene, Lester Muata. "Black Unionists Need Independent Voice in Debate." Labor Notes. July 2005.
- "Labor's Outreach Efforts Fill a Need." The American Federationist. January 17, 1987.
- LCLAA Constitution, as amended through the 13th National Membership Meeting, July 31-August 4, 2002
- Weissman, Robert and Mokhiber, Russell. "Fronting for Big Coal: Halting Global Warming Would Be Racist, PR Insists." FAIR Extra! September/October 2000.