The Labor Network for Sustainability is honored to have Elizabeth Bunn join our staff. Elizabeth is currently working in Maryland to oversee labor and climate efforts.
Elizabeth Bunn is the former Director of the Organizing Department for the AFL-CIO having been appointed by AFL-CIO President Richard L. Trumka in February 2010, and having retired in 2017. Prior to becoming Organizing Director, she held the position of Secretary-Treasurer of the International Union, UAW, a post to which she was first elected in 2002 and re-elected in 2006. This is the highest position held by a woman in UAW history. She previously served as Vice-President of the UAW, a post to which she was elected in 1998 and served until being elected Secretary-Treasurer. As Secretary-Treasurer, in addition to her duties as the chief financial officer for the UAW, she oversaw the UAW’s non-manufacturing organizing initiatives since 1998. In that capacity, she secured bargaining rights for more than 18,000 academic student employees at both public and private universities, supervised campaigns among contingent faculty at several universities and successful representation elections for thousands of gaming employees. She was also responsible for the organizing and bargaining of thousands of public employees. She negotiated landmark provisions addressing work-family balance and extending benefits to domestic partners. As Organizing Director of the AFL-CIO, she has worked with affiliated unions to build their organizing capacity. In addition, under the leadership of President Trumka, the Organizing Department has accelerated global campaign initiatives, partnering with the global labor movement to counteract the power of multi-national corporations and to address head-on the effects of the unlimited mobility of capital. The Department has also strengthened relationships with community allies in support of organizing and has worked to assist the hundreds of thousands of workers outside the scope of traditional labor laws as they engage in self-organizing to build power in creative, non-traditional ways. Additionally, the Department has initiated innovative approaches to linking support for immigrant workers with worker organizing campaigns which has also helped create a pipeline for young Spanish speaking organizers into the labor movement. Under Ms. Bunn’s leadership, the Department has spearheaded multi-union, industry-wide organizing efforts in support of working people, including the innovative and ambitious Jobs to Move America (JMA), which uses public policy to spur investment in good-paying, high road employment in passenger rail and bus manufacturing in the United States and along the supply chain. The JMA coalition effort has resulted in the first neutrality/majority sign-up agreement between a union and a Japanese manufacturing company operating in the U.S. Coalition efforts have also resulted in the commitment by the Chinese company, China South Railway Sifang to open a new assembly facility in the south side of Chicago, the first in decades.
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