Hundreds of labor and Latino activists
converged on the State House last night despite the inclement weather
to demonstrate for greater workers' rights, including better
enforcement of state wage laws. Organizers had expected a turnout of
1,800 workers from all corners of the state, but snow and rain caused
some groups to cancel. Still, a diverse crowd of several hundred
gathered to shout slogans in Spanish and English, criticizing Gov.
Robert J. Ehrlich Jr. for a budget that would eliminate the state units
that handle unpaid-wage complaints and uphold prevailing wage laws for
state-funded public works projects. Fred D. Mason Jr., president of the
Maryland and District of Columbia AFL-CIO, and Gustavo Torres,
executive director of the Latino advocacy group CASA of Maryland,
introduced speakers who included Baltimore Mayor Martin O'Malley. "The
fight to preserve prevailing wage is every workers' fight," said Mason.
"The fight to preserve the Office of Employment Standards to make sure
that workers are paid when they're supposed to be paid is a fight for
all of us. And the fight for social justice for ... workers that were
not born in this country is one fight." Ricardo Flores, president of
the Maryland Latino Coalition for Justice, said that a state delegate
with whom some of his group's members had met was surprised at the
large turnout. "Nothing is going to stop the immigrant community, the
Latino community, from making partnerships that we need to move ...
forward," said Flores. The activists also voiced support for bills to
increase the state's minimum wage, expand health insurance to all
workers and increase funding for adult education classes. They also decried a half-dozen
bills they consider anti-immigrant, such as one that would make English
the official state language and another to deny local and state
benefits to people who are not U.S. citizens. [more]