Rev. Martin Luther King
(1929-1968), one of our country’s foremost leaders in race relations, is less
remembered for his advocacy of the dignity of work.
The City of Memphis is sending a tax-free grant of
$50,000 each to 13 retired sanitation workers, plus one more still on the job.
This gesture, N.Y. Times (7/26/17)
reports, is “an improvised fix to one of the most bitter legacies of Memphis’s
labor history.”
In
February 1968 two Memphis garbage workers died, crushed in a compactor. Their
fellow workers caucused; lamented their low pay; detailed their unsafe work
conditions; discussed joining AFSCME, a union; and called for a strike.
As the
days passed, threats and confusion dominated the Memphis scene. King went there
on March 18th to support the workers. He returned on March 28th
for the same purpose. This time violent young adults roamed the streets. A
curfew was imposed. King retreated to Atlanta and then to Washington.
King’s advisors
discouraged further involvement in the Memphis situation, but he returned there.
It is the lesson of the Good Samaritan parable, he said. “If I do not stop to
help the sanitation workers,” I am like those who passed by. Aware of threats
against him, he preached: “But it doesn’t matter to me now… I may not get there
with you… [But] we as a people will get to the promised land.” On April 4, 1968
King was murdered in Memphis.
The city reached a settlement with the workers
on April 16th. Some details were hastily left incomplete,
specifically about retirement. Thus, the 14 living workers who participated in
the 1968 strike get $50,000 toward retirement.
Back
during the 2001 New York City mayoral campaign, candidate Michael Bloomberg
made what the press treated as a major gaffe: “Being a sanitation worker in
this day and age is more dangerous than being a policeman or fireman.” His
point could have been better made, but Bloomberg was correct—more injuries,
more deaths. Garbage collectors fall from trucks, get hit by traffic, get cut
by objects in bags, get injured or killed as they repair or clean equipment.
Robin
Nagle was a driver for a 35-ton New York City garbage truck that she nicknamed Mona. Pedestrians obliviously walk in
front of and behind Mona, she writes
in Picking Up (Farrar, Straus, 2013).
Residents think nothing of throwing out all manner of hazardous material. Plus
the complaints.
In
December 2010 New York City was paralyzed by snow. Sanitation workers were on
the front line of storm clearance. Frustrated residents said that workers
intentionally went slow during the recovery, as a passive-aggressive protest about
work conditions. Nonsense, Nagle details. “Sanitation pride wraps around many
things, but snow fighting is one of the biggest.” To punctuate her retort,
Nagle tells about Mona in a
five-truck caravan clearing an expressway. After an arduous push down a lane,
the foreman led the trucks off a ramp. He gathered the drivers for a very
profane pep talk—maybe unaware that one was a woman. The determined convoy
quickly went up the opposite ramp and, says Nagle, “we did indeed bust the [vulgar noun that the foreman used for highway], just as we had on the
northbound.”
These
days health care delivery is a major
topic. What two occupations most contribute to the delivery of our health?
Plumber and garbage collector.
Droel edits
INITIATIVES (PO Box 291102, Chicago, IL 60629), a newsletter about faith and
work.
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