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Public Workers -- A Visual Reality
Check
By David Bacon
In California cities like San Jose and San
Francisco, voters this election will decide on ballot measures to
weaken the retirement system for public workers. These are the
same kind of measures that have brought workers into the streets of
France for weeks in protest.
Beyond the ballot initiativves, the
election season of 2010 has been filled with rhetoric blaming public
workers for the economic woes of cities and states. It's hard to
understand, in an era of foreclosures by banks that pay their
executives bonuses of millions of dollars, while getting bailouts from
the Federal government, why public workers should be held responsible
for the current economic crisis. Who contributes more to the
welfare of our communities - a teacher or a hedge fund
manager?
But perhaps the most important thing to
remember is what these workers do. These photographs are meant
to inspire some obvious questions. Can people do this work, if
they're then cast adrift once they're too old? What would happen
to all of us if they didn't do these jobs?
Sam Johnson, a worker for the City of Burlingame, prepares to tap a
water main to provide water service to a home.
Nick Hackleman takes a water sample from a
Burlingame hydrant, to test water purity.
Pamela Swim and Misael Apostol sweep up
leaves at the maintenance yard for the Elk Grove
schools.
Yesenia Galegos helps children of migrant farm workers learn social
skills in a nursery school program run by Migrant Head
Start.

A school bus driver in Colusa helps children get safely off the bus,
and makes sure they don't get lost.

Carmelita Reyes teaches math at the Life Academy, a small public high
school in one of the poorest areas of east Oakland.

Gabriela works on the line in the Food and Nutrition Services
Production Center, which prepares school lunches for the Elk Grove
schools.

A printer in the school district print shop in Anaheim,
CA.

Judy Leyva runs the control panel for the sewage treatment plant for
the City of Lodi.

Markus Brown is an intern at the San Mateo County Hospital.
See also Illegal People -- How Globalization Creates Migration
and Criminalizes Immigrants (Beacon Press, 2008)
Recipient: C.L.R. James Award, best book of 2007-2008
See also the photodocumentary on indigenous migration to the
US
Communities Without Borders (Cornell University/ILR Press,
2006)
See also The Children of NAFTA, Labor Wars on the U.S./Mexico
Border (University of California, 2004)
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David Bacon, Photographs and Stories
http://dbacon.igc.org
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