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Wisconsin Protests Led By Group Of Volunteers

JASON SMATHERS   02/26/11 04:27 PM ET   AP

Wisconsin Protests

MADISON, Wis. — Harriet Rowan was among the first to join what has become an almost two-week-long rally at the Wisconsin Capitol, and she said with the arrival of thousands of others, confusion, misinformation and rumors quickly spread.

"I came back on Tuesday night and there was absolutely no organization," Rowan said. "People needed people to go up upstairs and testify all night to keep the building open ... people were going around just waking people up ... it was chaotic."

The University of Wisconsin senior made a spur-of-the-moment decision to coordinate protest efforts, making signs with media talking points and starting a Twitter feed detailing legislative meeting times, union rally locations and details on day-to-day life in the Capitol.

Other Madison residents have opened their doors to out-of-town strangers, offering a bed to anyone friendly to unions. At the Statehouse, a spread including pizza, chili and artisanal cheeses is offered to hungry protesters. Busloads of supporters from Los Angeles and elsewhere arrive to boost the numbers.

Nearly two weeks after the start of massive protests against Gov. Scott Walker's proposal that would strip nearly all public employees of their collective bargaining rights erupted, a network of volunteers has emerged as the skeleton that keeps the daily demonstrations alive.

Widespread protests began Feb. 15, with 13,000 people attending rallies in and around the Capitol. Crowds peaked at 70,000 a week ago, a few thousand of which were tea party counter-protesters. Since then, crowds outside the Capitol have dipped significantly, although thousands of protesters packed the building and surrounding streets on Saturday, while thousands of others demonstrated in support of them in rallies planned for all 50 states.

Outside the Statehouse in St. Paul, Minn., about 1,000 people waved signs of support for the Wisconsin protesters and chanted "workers' rights are human rights." Democratic U.S. Rep. Keith Ellison addressed the rally and encouraged the protesters to keep up the fight. Similar rallies took place in Denver, New York City, Topeka, Kan., Lansing, Mich., Harrisburg, Pa., and elsewhere.

In Ohio, thousands of union members and environmentalists rallied outside the Statehouse in Columbus against proposed legislation similar to Wisconsin's that would abolish most collective bargaining rights.

Back in Madison, Carol DeGrave, 53, a middle school media coordinator in Green Bay, held a sign that read "Stay Strong, Stay Long!" She said she's protested for the last three days because she's afraid that without collective bargaining, her school district will cut her position.

"We're not going to shut up," she said, "because this is wrong. It is such an injustice."

In a third-floor room where the UW-Madison Teaching Assistants Association has based its support operations, a wood conference table is dwarfed by a mountain of bedding supplies, while posters organizing protests, rides and class coverage for absent TAs line the walls.

"I think in general having a sense of humor in all of this has been important," said Kevin Gibbons, TAA co-president. "You have some students I've been talking to reflecting on it and they say, `Everybody sort of seems happy, this is a serious protest.' But it is needed to sustain this kind of energy."

The rotunda ground floor is at the heart of the protests, with drums and a microphone attached to a megaphone. The din is deafening. Some drummers wrap their hands with blue painter's tape to avoid injury from the repetitive pounding.

Most of those in the drum circle are unaffiliated with unions or political groups. Most are Madison residents or students, like UW graduate student Tom Bird.

"Friday night, I started slowly drumming a little and talking on the microphone once or twice," Bird said. "Then it just sort of snowballed. On Saturday, Sunday I'm leading massive groups of people in cheers. ... When you see other people doing it, it sets an example and makes it a little less scary."

The Capitol's north wing became a protester service center. Donated food laid out on tables fuels the villagers.

It starts in the morning with breakfast cereals and bagels. Later in the day, tables are stocked with tortilla chips, specialty breads and vegan bakery items from a local coffee shop. Gallons of soup and chili arrived from a cafe, as well as cheese spreads from several sources and thousands of slices of pizza from a restaurant.

"We teach at the high school and work in community farms and with small businesses," said Mermaid Cafe owner David McKercher. "When the teachers are in trouble and the health profession is in trouble, those are our associates, so we jump in there. I feel like bringing the food is what our role is now."

Between the empty pizza boxes and steaming teakettles is a makeshift day care center. Kids play on the marble floor, using markers and art supplies to draw murals on butcher paper. Parents are told that volunteers can look after the kids for 15 minutes if they need to use restrooms or get supplies.

At the medical center, street medics and the occasional doctor or specialist – identified by their red-masking-taped-crosses – tend to minor cuts and bruises. The biggest focus is hygiene, with boxes of deodorant, mouthwash, toothpaste, tampons and hand purifier along the walls.

The attention to cleanliness was paramount for many, but odors still pervaded in certain areas. The service station's mix of teas, pizzas and hand purifier produced a scent similar to a hospital cafeteria. Pungent aromas occasionally lingered on the upper floors, especially when a few protesters removed their shoes after a long day on their feet.

Protesters who don't stay in the Capitol have plenty of options. Paul Adler, who traveled to Madison from Washington, D.C., said he didn't know exactly where he was going to stay on the bus ride from Chicago, but had such a wealth of offers that he could choose accommodations based on proximity to the Capitol and bedding options.

Capitol police have allowed protesters to stay 24 hours a day and hundreds do most nights. But police plan to end the sleepover at 4 p.m. Sunday, setting up a potential showdown in what has been a relatively incident-free protest.

"I'm pretty sure there will be people unwilling to leave the building on their own two feet," Rowan said.

The crowds have been protesting the new Republican governor's plan to strip most public employees of their collective bargaining rights and force them to pay more for their health care and retirement benefits. Unions would not be able to collect mandatory dues and would be forced to conduct annual votes of their members to stay in existence.

Walker, who has refused to budge despite the protests, contends that the legislation is necessary for the state to deal with its budget deficit. But Democratic and union leaders say it's a political move meant to weaken one of the traditional foundations of the Democratic Party base.

The legislation passed in the state Assembly but is stalled in the state Senate because its 14 Democratic members fled the state, leaving the Senate one vote short of a quorum.

___

Associated Press writers Todd Richmond and Pat Condon in Madison, Julie Carr Smith in Columbus, Ohio, and Tim Martin in Lansing, Mich., contributed to this report.

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MADISON, Wis. — Harriet Rowan was among the first to join what has become an almost two-week-long rally at the Wisconsin Capitol, and she said with the arrival of thousands of others, confusion,...
MADISON, Wis. — Harriet Rowan was among the first to join what has become an almost two-week-long rally at the Wisconsin Capitol, and she said with the arrival of thousands of others, confusion,...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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scjk67 02:29 PM on 02/26/2011
This is nothing but a political move that the Republican­s are he// bent to strip rights that they never campaigned on last year. So far we're seeing them trying stripping rights from woman, workers, and probably civil rights is next. This is a clear path to Fas cism by the Republican­s to make a one party rule only, we progressiv­es needs to get out and educate people what are the  Read More...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lw1
Jobs! Jobs! Jobs!
04:18 PM on 02/28/2011
"A unionized public employee, a member of the Tea Party, and a CEO are sitting at a table. In the middle of the table there is a plate with a dozen cookies on it. The CEO reaches across and takes 11 cookies, looks at the Tea Partier and says,"look out for that union guy, he wants a piece of your cookie." - Dylan
09:08 AM on 02/28/2011
Kansas: Female Lawmakers Sexually Degraded by AFL-CIO Union Thugs on Their Way to Vote on Union Bill…
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
begabug
it's a long story.
07:08 AM on 02/28/2011
i've sat in many parent teacher conferences and for the life of me can't see how folks wanna paint 'em as parasites and villians. every one of 'em i've met are good folks tryin' to do a good job in circumstances that are less than ideal.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mixnmatch
Live like there is no tomorrow
09:05 AM on 02/28/2011
Exactly...they are regular people just like you and me!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KDog76A
Neither political party is good for America
02:41 PM on 02/28/2011
Nobody wants to paint them as parasites or villians, people just want them to pony up a little for their healthcare and retirement.... get over it.
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Dee-Dee
A retired teacher and administrator, now doing bus
05:04 PM on 03/01/2011
Which they have agreed to, so get over it.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
begabug
it's a long story.
07:03 AM on 02/28/2011
mao didn't care much fer teachers either.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KDog76A
Neither political party is good for America
02:42 PM on 02/28/2011
And Mao was a socialist.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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04:53 AM on 02/28/2011
The Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions chose May 1, 1886 as the date for an eight-hour work day to become standard. As the date approached, unions across America prepared to strike. On May 1, national rallies were held, involving up to 500,000 workers.

http://inteldaily.com/2011/02/union-busting-in-america/
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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Eco Green-goddess
I am interested in all things green.
01:28 AM on 02/28/2011
There is a media blackout concerning the 100,000 people rallying in Madison over the weekend. They report on things that are happening in the middle east but refuse to report on the thitngs happening in this country. We pay for this media through cable and satellite we should demand to know truth about what going on in our own country.
01:47 AM on 02/28/2011
Eco Green-goddess

I am just speculating but perhaps the media is probably not reporting on it because they recognize ‘astro-turf’ propaganda and manufactured protests organized by highly-paid political activists. They just do not want to be played, and do not want to report on ‘made up’ grass roots movements.

Kai
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bassface49
If everybody VOTES we win
01:50 AM on 02/28/2011
Said the 'Koch' tool.....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
IR0N TIGER
Who benefits from our inability to communicate?
02:22 AM on 02/28/2011
you are either paid to post or stubbornly ignorant.

there are 100k AMERICANS very upset and here you are dismissive about it

The only made up movement was the tea party. Yet they showed up in very small numbers in paid for transportation etc and EVERY news station was all over it

Yet real Americans get no air time.

I'm sure you'll disagree with that without looking it up.

Disgusting.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
IR0N TIGER
Who benefits from our inability to communicate?
02:23 AM on 02/28/2011
fanned goddess. I know, these are turning into really dark times.
01:27 AM on 02/28/2011
It's time for all the hard working people whose tax dollars pay for the Public Sector Union thugs to go on strike and let these idiots see who really pays their salaries. Gov. Walker better get the lead out and start firing or his done. The longer he doesn't show these idiots he's the boss, he appears weak and the stronger they become.
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bassface49
If everybody VOTES we win
01:52 AM on 02/28/2011
You 'daddy party' guys are a hoot!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Laurella Desborough
LivingInTheRealWorld
02:19 PM on 02/28/2011
So, "readyfornov2012" what planet did you arrive from? Do you have an idea of WHY this country has decent paychecks and decent working hours? It is because of the unions! The hard work of the unions has raised the level of pay, medical coverage and retirement for ALL US citizens. Read some history. Go back to the pre-union days when workers were FIRED instantly if they were hurt on the job...fired with no pay for their injury. Workers had ten hour days. Children worked alongside adults. There was no retirement. There was no medical care. There were no decent wages. Go back to 1900 and read and learn. Those were dark days for the working people, whether they worked in the coal mines, on the assembly lines or at a desk keeping records! Unions have made our middle class decent life in the US possible! Corporate interests would like to destroy collective bargaining...and go back to those dark days. WAKE UP or your kids will be working for a pittance in the future.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KDog76A
Neither political party is good for America
02:47 PM on 02/28/2011
We don't have decent paychecks or working hours because of public unions, thats a fallacy.

We aren't talking about the coalminers here, we are talking about tax funded jobs. Don't go overboard. Private Unions are safe... even if they are responsible for the destruction of places like Detroit... yes they have a place in America, just not a place in government funded jobs.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jumpinjezebel
I'll show U mine if U'll show me urs
01:14 AM on 02/28/2011
Too bad someone has not published a list of sites/businesses that one can send $$ to to support this effort. A local grocery store for example, I heard about a pizza joint sending hundreds of pizzas. Next time have a list ready so we can all donate to support the effort where ever it is.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KDog76A
Neither political party is good for America
02:48 PM on 02/28/2011
Organizing for America... haven't you been reading?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Retrofuturistic
see things as they really are
11:42 PM on 02/27/2011
In Ohio, there is anti-gay marriage stuff in the bill that is taking away collective bargaining for public employees. Also, the right to decline union membership on religious grounds. And a council with a faith-based member that puts volunteers in the schools (so they can proselytize?).
11:02 PM on 02/27/2011
Get a Job.
Public employees do not need a union.
11:15 PM on 02/27/2011
When the federal government stops Multinationals from colluding and dominating the market place by enforcing the Sherman Anti-trust Act and ridding this nation and economy of monopoly and its deleterious effects, then I will think about the rights of workers to unionize. Unions and organized labor built this nation. You have the labor movement to thank for your weekends, eight hour day, vacation, child labor, workers comp, unemployment, and a whole host of other progressive and basic human rights.

As a teacher, I have skills, education, training and expertise to market and sell, just as any business owner, artisan, or corporate hedge fund manager. Just as copy write laws and court action protects personal and intellectual property and ideas, so should collective bargaining protect mine. I have the right to negotiate fair compensation for my talents. What if President Reagan had said the same thing to Solidarity and its union workers in Poland?
02:18 AM on 02/28/2011
Geoduck
(You didn’t go to Evergreen, did you?)

What corporate monopolies are you talking about? The only monopoly that is deleterious to Americans, are public unions. They have a monopoly on the labor that state governments MUST buy. The citizens of these states have no choice and must pay for this service whether the service is good, is reasonably priced, etc. They are a hostage to this monopoly. So, if you want to get rid of monopolies, let’s start with the unions.

I agree with you that as a teacher you have a skill. However, I would go further, as with the artisan, the corporate hedge fund manager, business owner, etc. your skills be subject to the same market forces they are. If the artisan is bad he does sell paintings, sculpture, whatever, and if the business owner is bad, customers go elsewhere and he does not make money. So too should your skills be subject to the same market forces that those people are. They get no such government protection to engage in price collusion and/or provide monopolistic services. So I am glad you want the same as they have.

Solidarity and Poland was more about a people’s right to self-determination than protection of monopolistic labor practices. The American taxpayer also wants self-determination and respite from an expensive monopolistic rent-seeking administrative class. Reagan would agree.

Kai
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Dani09
Protecting rights my grandma marched for
08:25 AM on 02/28/2011
# 4 !
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
POpgrssve
Birthers are nasty little creatures.
07:53 AM on 02/28/2011
And you don't need a job EVER. Because when they come for one, they come for ALL. That includes low-information lackeys who don't know the difference between manufactured history and real facts.
10:03 PM on 02/27/2011
Justin Ruben, executive director of MоveOn-"You cant trample our dreams"

Justin-what dreams are you talking about? Is it the creation of union nobility and wealth where the rest of Americans are relegated to serfdom all in the service of your needs endlessly
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unwashedmasses
RECALL WALKER
12:58 AM on 02/28/2011
You have it exactly backwards.
02:10 AM on 02/28/2011
When have you ever met a wealthy teacher.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KDog76A
Neither political party is good for America
02:50 PM on 02/28/2011
Whenever I go to Milwaukee, when the average salary plus benefits for a public school teacher is $100k+
09:53 PM on 02/27/2011
True story: circa 1987; NJ Shering-Plough Plant:

Union Employee to 19 year old working summer job: "You're killing us"

Teenager: "What do you mean?"

Boss: "You're working too hard, making the guys look bad."

Teenager: No response, thinks in head: "I'll never work for the union, I'll work for myself." And he never did.
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OneTop
Uh, is that a beer hall?
10:35 PM on 02/27/2011
Must be true.

Or at least I thought so the first 1,500 times I heard it.
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seeksthetruth
Why is my tax rate higher than Romney's?
11:00 PM on 02/27/2011
Many trollies have posted the same thing. Must be in today's playbook at Freedom Works.
02:21 AM on 02/28/2011
I woudl think that 1,500 is on the low side. I am sure that this has happened a lot more than that.

Kai
11:20 PM on 02/27/2011
Why this vitriol for organized labor? Shouldn't you be more upset with American Corporations who pay little or no taxes, shelter income, export jobs without regard to how it effects this nation, and who feed at the trough of the federal budget and special subsidies? Why should we give oil companies tax subsidies? That's what you should be angry about. Not people who make little more or not as much as you do, who are simply fighting for the right to earn a family wage. Get real!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KDog76A
Neither political party is good for America
03:03 PM on 02/28/2011
The companies that pay little or no taxes are so often big Democratic lobbyists and donors...
Bank of America, Google, Microsoft, BP...

"export jobs"
Even Government Motors exported jobs to China, despite the bailout.

"Why should we give oil companies tax subsidies?"
Because that's what Democrats want to do with Cap and Trade... the biggest lobby in fave of this Democratic initiative are the oil companies.

"That's what you should be angry about. Not people who make little more or not as much as you do, who are simply fighting for the right to earn a family wage."
THey are guarnteed their wage increases despite the loss of bargaining power, they are being asked to contribute to their benefits in similar ways as Federal Employees do... thats all.

Yeah, it sucks, nobody wants a paycut... but the Obama/Pelosi/Reid stimulus plan rewarded corporations and not state governments. Now the states are either going to have to cut Medicare/Medicaid or force govt employees to kick in for their bennies... or thousands lose their jobs.

Frankly I'm angry at everybody for letting this situation get out of control for such a long time.