Covid
MASKING SAVES LIVES
Celebrate This Tomorrow, Rather Than Our Imperial Militarist State!
peoplesworld.org/louisville-orchestra-musicians-win-tough-battle/
LOUISVILLE, Ky. -- Local 11-637 of the American Federation of
Musicians, and the Louisville Orchestra Inc. (LOI - the management),
recently signed an agreement, ending a lockout of workers from their
jobs that began in May 2011.
To understand this we need to travel way back to 1697 and listen to
William Congreve: "Music has Charms to soothe a savage Breast,/ To
soften Rocks, or bend a knotted Oak." More recently, an unsoothed
savage breast, marked by malignant greed, class antagonism and lack of
common decency, descended upon the Louisville Orchestra. Management
offered an unacceptable contract, and the union said "no."
Louisville Orchestra management then began hiring "scabs,"
non-union replacements: "Openings are available for qualified symphonic
musicians looking for permanent employment to replace musicians ...."
The bosses claimed they had no money to pay the musicians a decent
wage, and then said they must also "downsize," a euphemism for throwing
employees out of their jobs.
The Louisville Orchestra and the Fund for the Arts boards of
directors are dominated by Louisville's financial elite: bankers,
stockbrokers, realtors, manufacturers, law firms, health care providers
and profiteers, and utility executives. There is big money behind these
folks.
Yet and still, orchestras are in crisis all over the country. The
League of American Orchestras reported that US orchestra paid attendance
fell 8% between 2002 and 2007. Young people don't attend orchestra
performances as much as older people. As older people move on, will
there be replacements from the younger generation? Yes, but only if
there is music appreciation in the school curricula.
Truth be told, music appreciation in the classroom is dying. In
Indiana, the Monroe County Community School Corporation voted to trim
$4.5 million.
Louisville Orchestra management filed for bankruptcy in late 2010. In
May, 2011 the union contract expired. Both the Bankruptcy Court
hearings and the negotiations between the musicians union and management
were well covered by local media and extended over more than six
months.
When the 2011-12 school year started in September 2011, the staff of
the Jefferson County School Board (JCSB), as well as its seven board
members, were well aware that the management of LOI was not going to be
able to fulfill a contract that both parties had signed long ago for a
music appreciation program, scheduled for the spring of 2012. The
contract was supposed to be the continuation of a 70-year-old joint
effort.
Regretfully, JCSB became an objective ally of Louisville Orchestra
management. The school board cancelled this 70-year-old music
appreciation program for all 14,000 4th- and 5th-grade
students this year, depriving LO musicians of a desperately needed
source of income. The JCSB, in essence, let itself be dictated to by a
vendor that could not fulfill a signed contract.
"Keep Louisville Symphonic,"' a nonprofit formed by the locked-out
orchestra musicians, was, on the other hand, indeed able to fulfill the
contract that LOI could not. But the school board scrapped the program
just the same, using the excuse that it was too late for the music
appreciation program to take place in the coming school year.
When the orchestra management began advertising for outside
musicians, so as to break the back of the union, there were reports that
the musicians recruited to replace the locked-out Louisville Orchestra
musicians would be coming from the ranks of Catholic high school music
students and from the Jewish Community Center Orchestra.
Catholic Social Justice informs us: "The economy must serve people,
not the other way around. All workers have a right to productive work,
to decent and fair wages, and to safe working conditions." What would
Thomas Merton say about scab musicians?
I spoke with a prominent member of the Louisville Jewish community,
and he called the replacement musicians by their rightful name: "scabs."
Yet the deafening silence on this issue by the mainstream Jewish
community contradicts a point made by Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel:
"Morally speaking, there is no limit to the concern one must feel for
the suffering of human beings, that indifference to evil is worse than
evil itself, that in a free society, some are guilty, but all are
responsible."
A notable exception in the Jewish community was Uriel Siegel, the
distinguished maestro who served as music director of the Louisville
Orchestra for six years, and who came back to Louisville a few months
ago to picket the Kentucky Opera alongside the locked-out musicians and
their supporters. (The lockout also had adverse consequences for the
Kentucky Opera and the Louisville Ballet.)
The union musicians and the orchestra management finally did reach an
agreement. It was a tribute to the tenacity of our brave band of
musicians; they got what they got under dire circumstances - musicians
with major illnesses who were facing big hospital bills and no health
insurance, for example.
Local government had become involved. A key role was played by
Louisville Metro Council President Jim King, no big-time friend of
working people but someone who may be positioning himself to run for
mayor next time around. He was perceptive enough to want an agreement.
Kentucky AFL-CIO President Bill Londrigan played an important role, as
well.
The musicians behaved with dignity, integrity and steadfastness in
the face of a management determined to break its back and destroy its
union. To those who knew right from wrong in this struggle of workers
versus bosses and said nothing, we quote the words of Anaïs Nin: "And
the day came when the risk to remain tight in a bud was more painful
than the risk it took to blossom."
Ira Grupper, irag@iglou.com,
is a retired labor and peace activist in Louisville. This article was
originally published by FORsooth, newspaper of the Louisville chapter of
FOR, Fellowship of Reconciliation.
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