UE Local 506

UE Local 506 UE Local 506 is a rank and file union that represents the workers from
GE Transportation located in Erie, PA.

08/23/2023
Another article supporting our strike in In These Times:‘Despite their employer’s reported intransigence, ​“the resolve ...
08/09/2023

Another article supporting our strike in In These Times:

‘Despite their employer’s reported intransigence, ​“the resolve of the members has been amazing,” Slawson says. As Wabtec workers picket and rally in the blazing sun, with the support of environmental groups like ReImagine Appalachia and PennFuture, it’s hard to deny that their struggle is worthy of attention — and support.’

Pennsylvania workers represented by United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America have been on strike since late June. They're fighting for a green overhaul of the rail industry.

UE members and allies in North Carolina and California were out supporting us last weekend. UE Local 150 members and Eas...
08/01/2023

UE members and allies in North Carolina and California were out supporting us last weekend. UE Local 150 members and Eastern Region President George Waksmunski leafleted at the Wabtec plant in Maxton, NC on Friday, and members of UE Local 1011 and green locomotive volunteers leafleted at the BNSF rail yard in Barstow, California, where Wabtec has a receiving facility, on Saturday.

Fetterman stands with Wabtec workers, backs bill to ensure strikers have access to food: https://www.goerie.com/story/op...
07/27/2023

Fetterman stands with Wabtec workers, backs bill to ensure strikers have access to food: https://www.goerie.com/story/opinion/columns/2023/07/27/john-fetterman-wabtec-strike-snap-bill-ue-post-gazette-labor-wages-economy-senate-casey-sherrod/70475639007/

This week, 1,400 striking Wabtec employees with the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE) hit the 30-day mark on the picket line. These 1,400 workers are fighting for better wages, affordable health care, the right to strike, and a commitment from the company to construct more environmentally-friendly locomotives at their Erie facility.

These 1,400 Wabtec employees do critical work — and they help make Wabtec lots of money, too. Now they're fighting to share in the profit they create. It's a fight not just for better wages and benefits, but also for the dignity of their work — dignity that they deserve.

Workers don't want to strike. They want to go to work, do a good job, get paid, and go home to their families. But too many workers are pushed to strike by executives who treat them poorly and pay them low wages. That's why this week, I was proud to introduce a new bill, the Food Secure Strikers Act, that would make striking workers eligible for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).

Workers shouldn't need to choose between fighting for fair working conditions and putting food on the table. Period.

This push for better pay and better benefits isn't just happening in Erie. Across the country, working people are standing up and demanding to be treated fairly. Journalists at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette with the Newspaper Guild of Pittsburgh have been on strike for affordable health care and better working conditions since October. More than 11,000 screenwriters with the Writers Guild of America have been on strike since early May to demand their fair share of the massive profits that film and television executives rake in. And this month, more than 160,000 actors, performers, and crew members with the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists joined screenwriters on the picket line demanding better pay.

Just this week, the Teamsters negotiated a historic tentative agreement with UPS that guarantees strong wages and better working conditions.

Workers are fighting — and workers are winning.

And let's be clear: what's good for workers is good for America.

So when workers stand up and strike, I believe it's our duty to have their backs. I am proud to lead the Food Secure Strikers Act, alongside Pennsylvania U.S. Senator Bob Casey, 12 other senators, and countless U.S. House members, to make clear that we do.

The right to strike is fundamental to the right to organize and unionize — but being forced to choose between feeding your family and protecting your labor rights isn't a choice at all. We need to make sure that hunger and starvation can't be used as a weapon to break workers.

Striking workers are currently excluded from SNAP just because they're on strike. That's wrong.

I know that the union way of life is sacred — and I'm proud to be working to preserve it. To this day I live across the street from a Union Hall in Braddock. And when I was born to two young parents in Reading, my dad worked as a union grocery worker with the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union stocking shelves at a Shop-Rite. That union job helped my dad work his way through college and set my whole family up for success.

I understand the value of a union. I understand that it's thanks to unions that countless Pennsylvania families can put food on the table every night.

That's why I always have and always will go the mat to fight for unions and the workers they represent.

I've walked countless picket lines. And I've visited union halls across the commonwealth. In fact, I visited the UE Local 506 Labor Hall in Lawrence Park with Senator Casey and Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio back in October. I've also spoken out repeatedly about the need for Washington to fight for working families and for the union way of life.

I've even raised funds for striking workers using my campaign's email list. But here's the thing: workers shouldn't need to rely on political candidates or GoFundMes just to put food on the table when they strike. I'm proud to be leading the Food Secure Strikers Act to make sure that workers striking for basic rights and protections don't go hungry.

And that's not the only piece of pro-union and pro-worker legislation I'm fighting for.

I'm fighting to protect and expand the union way of life through the Richard L. Trumka PRO Act.

And I'm working to raise the minimum wage to at least $17 per hour, with the Raise the Wage Act of 2023 that was introduced this week.

Working Pennsylvanians keep our commonwealth and our country running. And our unions help make sure they can put food on the table. So when workers strike, it's on us here in Washington to stand behind them.

This push for better pay and benefits isn't just happening in Erie. Across the country, working people are standing up and demanding fair treatment.

“We’re very moved by their struggle. We know there is a human cost to what they’re doing. If our presence here can bring...
07/14/2023

“We’re very moved by their struggle. We know there is a human cost to what they’re doing. If our presence here can bring any sort of comfort, we’re very happy to be able to provide that,” Sister Sanchez-Small said.

Thank you to Robbie York/Lopaka Rootz for playing for us and the Benedictine Sisters for showing up in solidarity last night:

After 21 days on the picket line, Wabtec union workers had some visitors and extra support Thursday night.  After weeks of picketing, UE Local 506 and 618 workers on strike got a taste of the …

Passed unanimously at the County Council meeting last night. TV coverage: https://www.erienewsnow.com/clip/15407887/erie...
07/12/2023

Passed unanimously at the County Council meeting last night. TV coverage: https://www.erienewsnow.com/clip/15407887/erie-county-council-unanimously-passes-resolution-supporting-union-workers

“Workers from UE Locals 506 and 618 are now officially being backed not only by Democrats, but Republicans as well. Erie County officials are now supporting them, by a bi-partisan resolution. Erie County Council Chairman Brian Schank said this was an issue that wasn’t decided by D versus R, it was just simply the right thing to do.”

“Instead of [Wabtec] using its $8.3 billion in annual sales and 13% increase in profits last year to create good union j...
07/07/2023

“Instead of [Wabtec] using its $8.3 billion in annual sales and 13% increase in profits last year to create good union jobs for people making green locomotives, the board of directors authorized $750 million on stock buybacks to increase shareholder dividends.

“That's an insult — not just to the workers who make the company run, but to the rest of us who stand to benefit if the company followed the union's lead.”

The workers striking for green jobs are showing us a way out. We can combat climate change by creating good jobs and taking control of production.

Hundreds of people came out to support us at Wabtec corporate HQ in Pittsburgh this afternoon, including Congresswoman S...
07/07/2023

Hundreds of people came out to support us at Wabtec corporate HQ in Pittsburgh this afternoon, including Congresswoman Summer Lee.

Thank you to the Benedictine Sisters of Erie for supporting us!“As Benedictine Sisters, we stand with workers. Catholic ...
06/29/2023

Thank you to the Benedictine Sisters of Erie for supporting us!

“As Benedictine Sisters, we stand with workers. Catholic social teaching is clear that workers “should be assured the right to strike” (Laborem Exercens, Pope John Paul II, section 20) especially in cases when the common good is at stake. [ ... ]

“The Benedictine Sisters of Erie pray for a swift and just end to the dispute between Wabtec and the union workers and are grateful for the courage and good zeal of those who are on strike over these critical concerns.”

Benedictine, workers, Catholic

Address

3923 Main Street
Lawrence Park, PA
16511

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 4pm
Tuesday 8am - 4pm
Wednesday 8am - 4pm
Thursday 8am - 4pm
Friday 8am - 4pm

Telephone

+18148993108

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