Hearing held on Asian American workers rights
The first in a series of nationwide hearings in the United States on the  rights of Asian American workers was held here Saturday.
The  hearing, held by the Los Angeles chapter of the Asian Pacific American  Labor Alliance (APALA), unveiled groundbreaking testimony on shared  barriers that Asian Americans face in forming trade unions.
U.S.  Congresswoman Judy Chu returned from Washington, D.C. Saturday to attend  the hearing. She said that APALA is “on the front lines of protecting  workers’ rights to organize and advocating for safe and healthy  workplaces, improved benefits, and a voice at work.”
This hearing,  she said, “represents a cross-section of workers across industries,  across the country, who are fighting to protect the basic human right to  organize.”
“APALA has built strong labor and community partnerships  and continues to support workers who are building the new labor  movement,” Chu added.
The hearing was held after a dispute between  union workers and the state government of Wisconsin. While almost all  the states in the United States face budget deficit and need to cut  benefits, some have criticized that the unions have asked for too much  benefits for the taxpayers to afford.
Asked whether the influence of  trade unions has been affected by the dispute in Wisconsin and other  states, Chu told Xinhua it is true that there is an anti-union sentiment  in the country, she thinks the workers’ rights should be protected even  when the government faces financial difficulties.
As the first  Chinese American congresswoman, Chu stressed the importance to protect  the rights of Asian Americans because as an ethnic group, Asian  Americans are more vulnerable to discrimination and their rights as  workers are less likely to be protected.
Chu also said that Asian  American workers face greater difficulties in forming unions. Asian  business owners usually do not wish to see unions in their companies and  would try by every means to prevent workers from forming unions. Asian  workers themselves would be more reluctant to join the unions.
However, the benefit is obvious when it comes to wages, health insurance and workplace retirement plans.
According  to a study released in January entitled “Unions and Upward Mobility for  Asian and Pacific Islander Workers” by the Center for Economic and  Policy Research in the United States, Asian Americans are, along with  Latinos, among the fastest growing ethnic groups in the U.S. workforce.
In  2009, Asian American and Pacific Islanders (AAPIs) were one of every 20  U.S. workers, up from one-in-40 only 20 years earlier. They are also  the fastest growing ethnic group in organized labor, accounting for just  under one-in-20 unionized workers in 2009, according to the study.
After  controlling characteristics such as age, education level, industry, and  state, unionized AAPI workers earn about 14.3 percent more than  non-unionized AAPI workers with similar characteristics. This translates  into some 2.50 dollars per hour more for unionized AAPI workers, the  study says.
Unionized AAPI workers are also about 16 percent more  likely to have health insurance and about 22 percent more likely to have  a retirement plan than their non-union counterparts, says the study.
AAPI  workers also enjoy the best union benefits among the 15 lowest-paying  occupations. Low-wage workers earn about 20.1 percent more than  non-union AAPI workers in these occupations. Those in unions are also  about 23.2 percent more likely to have employer-provided health  insurance and 26.3 percent more likely to have a retirement plan through  their job, the study says.
In conclusion, authors of the study say  that AAPI workers who are able to bargain collectively earn more and are  more likely to have benefits associated with good jobs. They strongly  suggest that better protection of workers’ right to unionize would have a  substantial positive impact on the pay and benefits of AAPI workers.
According  to the www.americanrightsatwork.org website, unions are an essential  part in the United States, and have played a crucial role in America’s  public and community life. Not only do they give workers a voice on the  job and help negotiate fair benefits and wages for their members, but  they also use their political and economic resources to raise the floor  for everyone who works for a living.
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