August 2015 Overture Online: ORGANIZE! Together We Win

August 2015 overture
Overture Online: 
August 2015

The Organizing Issue

AFM Local 47 has revved up our organizing efforts, and the results are in: TOGETHER WE WIN. Throughout this issue you’ll find stories of recent organizing successes, meet our new organizer, and learn more about the power of unity.


AB 1199:  Together We Can Bring More Music Jobs to CA
Musicians begin making the rounds to local state Senate offices; bill gains co-sponsor & another union endorsement

Let’s Get Organized!
Meet our new organizer, Merideth Cleary

LA County Fed Strike Sanctions
Strike sanctions filed against Cinema Scoring, Collective Media Guild, & Peter Rotter Music Services

The Truth About Fi-core
Facing fi-core coercion? Learn what you and your union can do about it

and more!

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#TBT: A Great Day in L.A.

In this #TBT Throwback Thursday post, we take a look back to A Great Day in L.A.!

A GREAT DAY IN JAZZ HISTORY

Hundreds of Los Angeles jazz musicians create a contemporary version of the historic 1958 photo “A Great Day in Harlem”

It was “A Great Day in L.A.” indeed Oct. 12, 2008, when over 250 musicians gathered together to take part in a historic photo shoot for the world of jazz. Continue reading

Musicians visit Sen. Connie Leyva to bring more jobs to CA

leyva tweet

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On Monday morning, musicians in Los Angeles visited the office of state Senator Connie Leyva (D-Chino) in support of AB 1199, a bill aimed at creating more film & TV music jobs in California.

AB 1199 is now in the Senate Governance & Finance Committee and will be picked up again in January. Musicians are utilizing this time to gear up for visits to local state senate offices to voice their support of this important bill.

Several more visits in other districts are in the works up and down the state. Many Los Angeles Local 47 members have already heard from Local 47 Organizer Merideth Cleary – and if you haven’t yet, you will soon!


Show your support – sign the petition!

To learn more about this important work, visit our AB 1199 blog. If you’d like to get involved, sign up for Local 47 Action Alerts or call Merideth at 323.993.3143 to stay posted to future developments on this and other news that affects California musicians.

 

NABET/CWA Local 53 supports AB 1199

nabet-logoSupport for AB 1199 keeps rolling in!

The National Association of Broadcast Employees & Technicians/CWA Local 53 joins a growing list of supporters for legislation to improve the CA Film/Tax Program for musicians. Authored by Assemblymember Adrin Nazarian, AB 1199 has the potential to bring thousands of music scoring jobs back to California.

To date, the bill is officially supported by:

  • National Association of Broadcast Employees & Technicians/CWA Local 53
  • American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees
  • United Teachers of Los Angeles
  • United Food & Commercial Workers Local 770
  • The Recording Academy Los Angeles and San Francisco chapters
  • Society of Composers & Lyricists
  • American Society of Music Arrangers and Composers
  • Professional Musicians of California (AFM Locals CA Conference)
  • American Federation of Musicians Local 47
  • More than 420 petition signers

 

Show your support – sign our petition!
moveonab1199

 

Learn more about AB 1199 here, and sign up for Local 47 Action Alerts to stay posted to future developments on this and other news that affects California musicians.

Sen. Jerry Hill signs on as AB 1199 co-author

sen jerry hill

Senator Jerry Hill (D-San Mateo) has signed on as co-author with Assemblymember Adrin Nazarin (D-Sherman Oaks) to AB 1199, a bill with the potential to bring thousands of music scoring jobs back to California.

Musicians have been busy pushing to add language to the legislation that will secure a revenue-neutral allocation for music scoring from the existing Film & TV Tax Credit Program. Because no new money is being asked for, this effort has been gaining fast support.

 


Show your support – sign the petition!

Get involved! Sign up for Local 47 Action Alerts or call 323.993.3143 to stay posted to future developments on this and other news that affects California musicians.

The Truth About Fi-core: Facing Fi-core Coercion (part 3)

Part 3 of an informational series about financial core

You’ve been hearing some chatter about fi-core. Maybe you’ve felt pressure from a colleague — or perhaps even an employer — to quit your Union and go fi-core. While it is your right to take financial-core status, it is also your right to know the truth and the long-term consequences of this decision.

The Fi-core Coercer says it’s “the Union” that’s preventing you from working as much as you could. They say it’s your right to stand up to the “tyranny” of “the Union,” which doesn’t really care about you anyway.

It’s easy to point the finger and turn “the Union” into the bad guy. It’s the oldest union-busting tactic in the book — to third-party our collective bargaining power, to morph it into an alien entity, separate from you and me.

The reason our union exists is because we musicians decide to band together and make sure we are treated fairly in the workplace, and don’t get screwed over by those who’d happily see us work for less than our worth. We decided standing together, in unity, is the best way to make this happen. We decided the most effective way to change contracts and policies is to share in a democratic process, have a voice, and be active participants in crafting and maintaining the terms of our employment.

By going fi-core, you drop all our collaborative work by the wayside. You choose to silence your voice, eliminate your ability to create change, and give up your chance to improve things for the better for us all. In the short run, going fi-core allows you to overcome the obstacle of having to turn down that non-union job today while maintaining the ability to take that union job tomorrow. But if more and more of us choose fi-core, how long do you think it will take before those AFM jobs of tomorrow disappear?

Ask an employer their idea of a utopia, and they can’t ask for a better scenario than having workers quit their own union. In the long run, the only way to overcome our biggest obstacle – union-busting forces pitting workers against each other so they can undercut and underpay us all – is to take a stand and prove you believe our work is worth the fight. It’s not enough to be a passive observer. No war is won on the sidelines. We must take unified action and compel others to join our actions. Our Union is only as strong as our unity. When we get involved and take action, we win.

 

REPORT DARK DATES
Please report the date, time and location of non-union recording sessions to the Local 47 EMD Department. If you know the contractor’s name, include it as well. All reports are, of course, strictly anonymous.

Phone: (323) 993-3130
Anonymous online form: bit.ly/darkdate

It’s your livelihood. Help protect it.