AFL-CIO RESOLVED TO GROW.Byline: Steven Greenhouse N.Y. Times News Service Having roused the torpid tor·pid adj. 1. Deprived of power of motion or feeling. 2. Lethargic; apathetic. tor·pid i·ty n. AFL-CIO AFL-CIO: see American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations. AFL-CIO in full American Federation of Labor-Congress of Industrial Organizations U.S. in his first year as president, John Sweeney will announce today the federation's ambitious all-out gamble to save the labor movement from further decline by shifting its focus to recruiting new members. In moving the federation's emphasis toward organizing and away from politics, its thrust of last year, Sweeney hopes to reverse a 20-year slide in union membership, a trend that labor leaders see as a cancer that has sapped their strength in politics and at the bargaining table. With the goal of attracting new members, Sweeney will propose at the AFL-CIO's winter meeting this week a $60 million advertising effort to burnish labor's image and a campaign to reach out to working women. He also will pledge to spend more than $2 million on labor's two biggest recruiting drives: organizing 20,000 strawberry workers in California and tens of thousands of construction, hotel and health care workers in Las Vegas. In the four-day meeting, the labor leaders, meeting in an urban center instead of their traditional locale, a beach resort, will hear Vice President Al Gore discuss the labor standoff at American Airlines and refine their legislative agenda. Sweeney undertakes his new organizing effort after his relatively successful first year as president. Under him, the federation raised its slouching slouch v. slouched, slouch·ing, slouch·es v.intr. 1. To sit, stand, or walk with an awkward, drooping, excessively relaxed posture. 2. To droop or hang carelessly, as a hat. v. public profile, pushed Congress into raising the minimum wage and excited college students about labor by enlisting more than 1,000 of them as summer interns. In addition, the federation spent $35 million to make itself a force to reckon with to settle accounts or claims with; - used literally or figuratively. to include as a factor in one's plans or calculations; to anticipate. to deal with; to handle; as, I have to reckon with raising three children as well as doing my job s>. See also: Reckon Reckon Reckon in politics, although its campaign efforts failed to achieve labor's big goal of returning the House to Democratic control. Some labor experts caution that Sweeney's success at reawakening reawakening n → despertar m reawakening n → réveil m reawakening n → Wiedererwachen nt the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO), a federation of autonomous labor unions in the United States, Canada, Mexico, Panama, and U.S. , an umbrella group that has 13 million members, was child's play compared with the task of recruiting millions more workers to unions. ``It will be 100 times harder,'' said Gregory Tarpinian, president of the Labor Research Association, a consulting group in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of . ``It will be the basis by which Sweeney is judged.'' The number of union members nationwide dropped by 92,000 last year and by 388,000 the year before; the percentage of American workers in unions has sunk to 14.5 percent, compared with 35 percent in the 1950s. With the work force growing by about 2 million people a year, unions will have to add almost 400,000 new members a year to keep from falling further behind - a tall order considering labor's recent slump and the crusade by many companies to keep out unions. As part of Sweeney's effort to remake labor's flaccid flaccid /flac·cid/ (flak´sid) (flas´id) 1. weak, lax, and soft. 2. atonic. flac·cid adj. Lacking firmness, resilience, or muscle tone. image and show that union leaders care more about organizing workers than sunning themselves, the federation has moved its winter meeting out of the plush resort of Bal Harbour, Fla., for the first time in seven decades. Instead, AFL-CIO leaders will convene in downtown Los Angeles Downtown Los Angeles is the central business district of Los Angeles, California, located close to the geographic center of the metropolitan area. The sprawling, multi-centered megacity is such that its downtown core is often considered just another district like Hollywood or . |
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