History and Activities
The Solidarity Committee of the Capital
District is an all-volunteer organization committed to building a just,
peaceful, and cooperative society. Composed of activists from
local labor unions and the community, it has struggled for more than
two decades to defend workers' rights, promote social and economic
equality, foster peace, and protect the environment.
The Solidarity Committee began in November 1983,
when, in the midst of a bitter strike by members of the Amalgamated
Transit Union against the Greyhound corporation, union members in the
capital district organized a Strikers Support Committee. Led by
John Funiciello, the committee staged large, pro-labor demonstrations
at the Greyhound bus terminal in Albany and helped turn the tide in
labor's favor. After the settlement of the strike, Albany union
activists, determined to continue this kind of successful mobilizing
effort, renamed the strike support committee the Solidarity Committee
of the Capital District.
In the years since then, the Solidarity Committee
has held monthly meetings open to all, reported regularly on workers'
struggles to the Albany County Central Federaton of Labor, and
published a monthly newsletter (Solidarity Notes, mailed free of charge
to a thousand activists). It has participated in nearly every
union organizing drive, strike, or contract struggle in the capital
district--leafleting, swelling picket lines and leading chants, raising
support funds, and sometimes working with the union leadership to plan
strike strategy. In addition, it has held public forums on the
harmful effects of NAFTA, worked with unions and environmental groups
to defeat the devastating James Bay hydroelectric project, exposed
corporate exploitation and criminality, co-sponsored annual May Day
celebrations of workers’ rights, helped build opposition to the Bush
administration's reckless foreign policy, and opposed agribusiness by
opposing dangerous pesticides and rallying support for family farms.
The Solidarity Committee initiated the annual Martin
Luther King, Jr. and the Labor Movement celebrations in Albany, and has
continued to co-sponsor them along with an ever-widening group of
racial justice and labor organizations. It has also sponsored
film series, in which movies focusing on social justice are shown free
of charge in the local community. In addition, the Solidarity
Committee sponsors an annual Labor Day picnic, featuring speeches by
union and political leaders, awards to local activists, and labor
songs. At these and other events, the Solidarity Committee has
sold or distributed thousands of activist buttons and stickers, among
them a bumper sticker of its own design, "Tax the Rich."
The Solidarity Committee also makes financial
contributions to (and is sometimes a member of) other organizations,
including the Capital District Worker Center, the Citizens
Environmental Coalition, the Coalition for Justice in the Maquiladoras,
the Labor-Religion Coalition, the National Labor Committee, and the
Rural Coalition.
Funding for most of the Solidarity Committee's
activities comes from annual, voluntary dues payments made by several
dozen unions and labor councils and from many local union and community
activists. To help cover the costs of particularly expensive
events, such as the Labor Day picnic, funds for them are sometimes
solicited separately.
The executive committee of the Solidarity Committee
is composed of John Funiciello (Newspaper Guild, chair), Doug Bullock
(Public Employees Federation), Susan DuBois (Public Employees
Federation), Jeff Levitt (American Postal Workers Union, secretary),
and Larry Wittner (United University Professions, treasurer). The
Solidarity Committee maintains an office and holds its monthly business
meetings at the Social Justice Center, 33 Central Ave,
Albany, New York.
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