How 8 Men Took on US Steel

Discussion in 'Truckers Strike Forum' started by Lucifer, Apr 3, 2008.

  1. Lucifer

    Lucifer Light Load Member

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    Jan 1, 2008
    The Morning Star
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    One group of Teamsters that began as reformers was virtually driven to dual
    unionism and secession by the Teamster leadership. The Fraternal
    Association of Steel Haulers, or FASH, was formed in 1967 following a long
    and violent strike. Steelhaulers, most of whom were owner-operators, had
    particular problems that the Teamsters union had ignored for years.
    Although the union negotiated their wages, it refused to negotiate the fee
    the owner-operators were paid for the lease of their tractors and trailers.
    Consequently, their wages had gone up but their total income had not
    increased much or had even declined. In addition, drivers were often
    detained at the steel mills waiting to be unloaded for hours or even days,
    and they wanted to be paid detention pay for the lost time. The union had
    neglected this issue as well.

    In the late 1960s it seemed as if Teamster President Jimmy Hoffa had
    adopted what was virtually a policy of not representing owner-operators.
    Under Hoffa?s successor Frank Fitzsimmons, the situation deteriorated
    further. Union officials began to make disparaging remarks, lumping the
    working drivers together with small businessmen and referring to them all
    derisively as ?brokers?.

    Whether it was a matter of policy or negligence, the failure to represent
    the owner-operators and the tendency to disparage them was a mistake. When
    the union had represented and negotiated for the owner-operators they had
    been among the most loyal and militant union members. When they were
    neglected or unfairly treated, they were among the first to rebel.

    Long-time steelhauler George Sullivan explains, ?There were strong feelings
    of discontent throughout the steelhauling industry, but most drivers felt
    that they either had to learn to live under the present conditions or else
    go into some other line of work.? In 1967 a group of steelhaulers made up
    of Jim Leavitt of Detroit, Tom Gwilt and John Hack from East Gary, Indiana
    and William Kusley of Hobart, Indiana went to the Local 142 union hall in
    Gary to get a copy of the new contract and ask the officers what
    improvements had been made under the new agreement. At that time Don
    Sawochka was the secretary-treasurer of the local. According to Sullivan,
    ?Don Sawochka inherited his position from his father, Mike Sawochka, after
    his death in 1964. He had not been elected to his position. Instead he had
    been crowned king, almost like a feudal overlord.? Not only did the Local
    142 officers refuse to give the men a copy of their contract, but business
    agent Jacob Abshere threatened the men with a blackjack and ordered them
    out of the hall.

    Used and abused by the employers and ignored or berated by their union, the
    steelhaulers were forced to attempt to represent themselves. They decided
    to organize a picket line protest at the steelhaulers local union halls on
    21 August 1967. Jim Leavitt went back to Detroit to try to organize a
    picket line at Local 299, but the union simply ignored him and he and his
    group went home. In Gary, Tom Gwilt and twenty-five other men put up a
    picket line, and Don Sawochka came out and told them, ?You men can walk
    until you wear your legs off, and it won?t do you any good.?

    ?I was fighting mad?, says Gwilt, ?and I was determined to so something to
    make them listen to us.? Gwilt and seven other steelhaulers went to the US
    Steel Corporation in Gary and set up a picket line: eight men were
    attacking the world?s biggest steel corporation. Soon the big flat-bed
    trucks that haul the steel began to pull up at the gate. When the drivers
    saw the picket signs, they turned away with comments like ?It was about
    time something was done.? The drivers parked their trucks and began to join
    the picket line, and soon Tom Gwilt was dispatching pickets to other mills.
    By the morning of the second day, according to George Sullivan, ?Steel
    shipments in the Gary area were nearly halted.?

    The Teamsters union told the steelhaulers to take down the picket line, but
    they refused. The Lake County Sheriff?s Department started arresting
    pickets, but still more pickets showed up. Tom Gwilt and Paul Dietsch of
    Wisconsin took responsibility for the organization of the strike, which was
    still confined to Gary. They received some help from Mike Parkhurst?s
    Overdrive magazine and his organization of truck drivers, called the
    Roadmasters, which provided legal help.

    The strike went on two weeks, and neither side budged. ?Men who found
    picket duty too boring?, says Sullivan, ?took to the highways and started
    shooting at steelhaulers who were trying to take advantage of the situation
    to make some extra money.? They were out on the picket lines for three
    weeks before the strike began to spread. In Middletown, Ohio the wife of a
    steelhauler organized a picket line at ARMCO Steel. In Youngstown, a fellow
    named Mike Boanao organized a picket line that stopped steel shipments. The
    strike became increasingly violent, with the strikers not only shooting at
    the scab steelhaulers, but also at the police who were escorting them. One
    driver in Detroit was badly burned when a fire bomb was thrown into his
    cab. But as Sullivan explained, ?The Teamster attempts to negotiate with
    strikers were unsuccessful, as the Teamsters wanted them to return to work
    without any gains.?

    In the eighth week of the strike, Governor Raymond Shafer of Pennsylvania
    called a conference of governor?s representatives from eight states,
    shippers, carriers, Teamster officials, and the strike leaders. Still
    nothing came out of the meeting, and that night the Pennsylvania lieutenant
    governor?s summer home was destroyed by an explosion. The strike resumed,
    and finally the Teamsters agreed to negotiate the strikers? demands with
    the carriers and shippers. In the end the strikers won pay increases of 11
    percent over the next three years and, most important, pay for detention time.

    Immediately after the strike the Fraternal Association of Steel Haulers was
    organized. Tom Gwilt was elected president of the Indiana chapter, Paul
    Dietsch president of the Wisconsin chapter, and William J. Hill chairman of
    the National Committee. The steelhaulers? deep distrust of the Teamsters
    union was evident in a resolution adopted at the founding meeting; it
    stated that FASH would stay in the Teamsters only as long as that union
    served their needs.5

    The steelhaulers had won a real victory in the form of detention pay. And
    in response to the strike, the Teamsters union created steelworker local
    unions or craft sections in local unions in Pittsburgh, Youngstown, Canton,
    Detroit and Gary. The Teamsters even offered Gwilt, Dietsch and Hill jobs
    with the union in an attempt to coopt and end the steelhaulers movement,
    but the FASH leaders refused the offer. Only Mike Boanao went over to the
    other side, first provoking a split in FASH and then accepting a job with
    the Teamsters ? a demoralizing blow to the steelhaulers movement.

    In 1969 a second FASH strike occurred, and this time the Teamsters union
    decided to try to destroy it rather than ignore it. According to one
    source, John Angelo, president of Teamster Local 337 in Youngstown, put
    together an army of 120 union officials and hired thugs and sent them out
    in a fleet of fifty cars to attack a group of FASH strikers. Both sides
    were armed, there was some shooting, and when the smoke cleared eight men
    were wounded and one had been killed.6 In Gary, Tom Gwilt?s home was bombed
    and badly damaged.7

    ?We knew then?, says FASH leader Bill Hill, ?that there was absolutely no
    reason for us to stay in the Teamsters any longer. Three months later we
    announced that we were going to form our own union.?8 FASH had not started
    out with a dual union strategy. As unhappy with the Teamsters as they were
    back in 1967, the steelhaulers had not necessarily intended to leave the
    union. It was the Teamster leadership that made FASH a dual union and then
    drove it to secede.

    Whether chosen by the dissidents, as in Philadelphia, or forced on them, as
    in the case of FASH, secession was not a viable strategy for union reform,
    at least for most Teamsters, as the rank and file soon realized. The
    Teamsters union could be counted on to use all its power to stop any local
    that attempted to secede, and any group that left the Teamsters would be in
    a much weaker position in dealing with the employers. And finally,
    secession was a selfish strategy, not a solidarity strategy. One local
    union, such as the Chicago taxicab drivers, might solve its problems by
    leaving ? but what about all the other Teamsters?

    Reform could not be achieved by each of the local unions simply going its
    own way: it would take cooperation. But to bring that cooperation about
    would take a national event to bring the local activists from different
    parts of the country into contact with each other. That development was not
    long in coming.
     
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  3. I-key2

    I-key2 Bobtail Member

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    Feb 29, 2020
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    Awesome. My father was part of FASH. He was one of those that took to the roads and not the picket lines.
     
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  4. I-key2

    I-key2 Bobtail Member

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    Feb 29, 2020
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  5. I-key2

    I-key2 Bobtail Member

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    Feb 29, 2020
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    More video of FASH meeting 1971
     
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  6. Crude Truckin'

    Crude Truckin' Alien Spacecraft

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    Oct 22, 2016
    North Dakota, Eh?
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    Wow, talk about reviving a thread!
     
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