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To: Tree of Liberty
Wade Rathke, Organizer

http://waderathke.com/index.php?id=76

Wade Rathke, the founder and Chief Organizer of ACORN International and SEIU Local 100, has close to 40 years of experience. He has worked for and founded a series of organizations dedicated to winning social justice, workers rights, and a democracy where “the people shall rule”.

Early Organizing

Wade Rathke has worked for and founded a series of organizations dedicated to winning social justice, workers rights, and a democracy over the last 40 years, where “the people shall rule”.

Rathke began his career as an organizer for the NWRO (National Welfare Rights Organization) in Springfield, Massachusetts, under the direction of George Wiley. After beginning in the NWRO, Rathke started an organization in Arkansas that would have a base in the general community, not just welfare recipients. Rathke’s initiative in Arkansas eventually grew into ACORN (Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now) the largest organization of lower income and working families in the United States. Founded in 1970, ACORN now has over 500,000 dues-paying families spread throughout more than one hundred cities. ACORN’s mission is to win “a bigger voice and fairer share for low and moderate income families”. Through the hard work of hundreds of community organizers and thousands of community leaders across the country, ACORN has won landmark victories in the areas of community reinvestment, fair lending, living wages, education reform, environmental justice, and other issues. The ACORN family of organizations includes radio stations (KNON and KABF), publications, housing development and ownership (ACORN Housing), and a variety of other supports for direct organizing and issue campaigns, such as Project Vote and the Living Wage Resource Center. Besides being ACORN’s Founder, Wade served as Chief Organizer for ACORN from 1970 to 2008: 38 years!

ACORN International has expanded rapidly as well over the last year, with operations in countries as diverse as Canada, Peru, Mexico, Argentina, Dominican Republic, and India, and emerging projects in Kenya and Ecuador and partnerships in Indonesia, Korea, and the Philippines. ACORN International’s unique style of grassroots, membership based community organizing has found traction in places from squatter communities in Latin America all the way to the diverse cities of India, including Mumbai, New Delhi, and Bangalore. ACORN International also supports direct low wage worker organizing with among waste pickers in Delhi and hawkers in Mumbai.

Wade also was the founder and is the Chief Organizer of Local 100, Service Employees International Union, working with members in Louisiana, Texas and Arkansas in 1980. Over the last several years he has directed the WARN project, a joint community-labor effort engaging Wal-Mart’s expansion in Florida, California, India and Mexico.

Through WARN and the Community Labor Organizing Center (CLOC), Wade and his team provide research, campaign, and organizing assistance through consultancies and contracts for a series of critical labor, community, and other campaigns for unions, immigrant rights, and community organizations both domestically and internationally from offices in New Orleans and St. Petersburg, Florida.

Wade is also the Chair of the Organizers’ Forum, which brings together labor and community organizers for two dialogues per year, one domestic and one international. The Organizers’ Forum is a project of the Tides Center. Wade was a founding board member of the Tides Foundation and continues to serve as a board member of the San Francisco-based Tides and for a number of their entities including the Paradox Fund and the Frontera Fund.

Wade is the Publisher and Editor-in-Chief of Social Policy, a quarterly magazine for scholars and activists. He has written regularly for the New Labor Forum as well as recent essays in There is No Such Thing as a Natural Disaster, edited by Gregory Squires and Chester Hartman about organizing in the aftermath of Katrina, Wal-Mart: The Face of 21st Century Capitalism, edited by Nelson Lichtenstein proposing a way to organize Wal-Mart workers in an association, and American Crises, Southern Solutions: From Where We Stand, Promise and Peril, edited by Antony Dunbar on the failure of labor to organize the South and what could have been done about it differently. Wade has a forthcoming essay on “Sweat and Social Change,” ACORN at 35 Years, edited by Robert Fisher for the Vanderbilt Press. Wade has two forthcoming books expected in Spring of 2009 with Verso Press on The Battle for the Lower 9th: ACORN and the Rebuilding of New Orleans, and with Berrett-Koehler on Citizen Wealth: How Community Groups are Working Themselves and the Working Poor out of Poverty.

Many keep up with Wade, his work, travels, and what’s on his mind and in front of his eyes through his daily blog at www.chieforganizer.org. He can be reached most easily at wade@chieforganizer.org.

Wade Rathke and his family live in New Orleans, Louisiana.

ACORN

Rathke’s initiative in Arkansas eventually grew into ACORN (Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now) the largest organization of lower income and working families in the United States. Founded in 1970, ACORN now has over 230,000 dues-paying families spread in 100 American cities. ACORN’s mission is to win “a bigger voice and fairer share for low and moderate income families”. Through the hard work of hundreds of community organizers and thousands of community leaders across the country, ACORN has won landmark victories in the areas of community reinvestment, fair lending, living wages, education reform, environmental justice, and other issues.

The ACORN family of organizations includes radio stations (KNON and KABF), publications, housing development and ownership (ACORN Housing), and a variety of other supports for direct organizing and issue campaigns, such as Project Vote and the Living Wage Resource Center.

ACORN International has recently begun organizing in Canada, Peru, Mexico, Argentina, India, and Nigeria.

Union Organizing

In 1980, union organizing in the U.S. was close to moribund, Rathke and other ACORN organizers started an independent union organizing effort called the United Labor Organizations, and, later, United Labor Unions. In New Orleans, Rathke organized an independent union of Hyatt employees. The New Orleans union later affiliated with the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) in 1984, founding SEIU Local 100, AFL-CIO.

Today, SEIU Local 100, which is headquartered in New Orleans with operations in Arkansas, Texas, and Louisiana.. Local 100 has organized public sector public workers, including school employees, Head Start, and health care workers, as well as lower wage private sector workers in the hospitality, janitorial, and other service industries.

Rathke served three terms as Secretary-Treasurer of the Greater New Orleans AFL-CIO. He was the president and co- founder of the SEIU Southern Conference, and served for eight years as member of the International Executive Board of SEIU.

Rathke is currently engaged in driving the multinational and community project WARN (Wal-Mart Alliance for Reform Now) in Florida, California, and elswhere to prove that Wal-Mart expansion can be stopped in addition to the Wal-Mart Workers Association in Florida that has established that other Wal-Mart workers will join and organize their own association on the job.

Promoting Organizing

Seeking to create a sense of community among organizing traditions and networks, Rathke founded the Organizers’ Forum in 2000. The Organizers Forum brings together senior organizers in labor and community organizations in dialogues about challenges faced by constituency-based organizations, such as tactical development, organizing new immigrants, using technology, utilizing capital strategies and corporate campaign techniques, or understanding the impacts and organizing challenges of globalization.

Rathke is a longtime member of the Tides Foundation Board of Directors, and Board Chair of the Tides Center, which provides core management services to new and existing nonprofit organizations promoting social change.

Publications

Rathke has published articles and commentaries on organizing, direct action tactics, revitalizing the union movement, and other topics in publications like Social Policy, Boston Review of Books, the Nation, Clamor, and others. He now serves as publisher and Editor in Chief for Social Policy, and maintains a blog at www.chieforganizer.org.

In 2006, Rathke contributed chapters to two books. The first, There is No Such Thing as a Natural Disaster, covers the response to the Hurricane Katrina and offers a critical and comprehensive social portrait of the disaster's catastrophic effects on New Orleans. Wade Rathke contributes with his chapter on “The Role of Local Organizing” in which he discusses the importance of grassroots organizations in attempting to help low- to moderate-income families recover after Hurricane Katrina. The second, Wal-Mart: The Face of Twenty-First-Century Capitalism, examines the largest employer outside the U.S. government with regards to both its negative and positive effects on a range of topics, from discrimination to economics and renders an assessment of the corporation from a scholarly perspective. Wade Rathke contributes with his chapter on “A Wal-Mart Workers Association? An Organizing Plan” in which he discusses the limitations of unionization in the US and what is needed to respond proactively to meet the demands of American workers and serve as a model for other unions both domestically and internationally.

Wade Rathke lives in New Orleans, Louisiana.

16 posted on 10/16/2008 4:29:04 PM PDT by Lockbox
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To: Lockbox; goodnesswins

ooooooh, do you spose Rathke knows James Carville who is predicting riots if Barack Obama loses????? Is James Carville a silent partner in ACORN? Carville lives in New Orleans like Rathke does.


22 posted on 10/16/2008 4:34:35 PM PDT by floriduh voter (ODINGA, YOU HAVE MAIL FROM YOUR AMERICAN COUNTERPART!)
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To: Lockbox

Wonder if there is any RICO violation that his activities would fall under?


23 posted on 10/16/2008 4:34:39 PM PDT by hoosiermama (Acorn, Africa,Alinsky, Ayers,....BroadwayBank,Bastard child,Birthcert......now to the "C"s ;-))
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To: Lockbox; kcvl; ravingnutter; ETL; Grampa Dave; Jeff Head; All
"Wade is the Publisher and Editor-in-Chief of Social Policy, a quarterly magazine for scholars and activists."

"SOCIAL POLICY"???!!!??

That publication was discussed on other threads in the past few days -- anyone remember?? I think it was to do with the socialist "New Party" stuff in the 1990s, and material that had been in "Social Policy" about the New Party had been quickly deep-sixed from their own website but was found in the Internet Archive/Wayback Machine??

Anyone remember? IIRC the pub "Social Policy" definitely did something nefarious to protect Obamba, trying to purge its own website of embarrasing material.....

I'll check out those "New Party" threads and do some searching.....

28 posted on 10/16/2008 4:41:41 PM PDT by Enchante (America: has Obama told you about his "New Party" that sought to spread SOCIALISM??)
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To: Lockbox
ACORN International has expanded rapidly as well over the last year, with operations in countries as diverse as Canada, Peru, Mexico, Argentina, Dominican Republic, and India, and emerging projects in Kenya
54 posted on 10/16/2008 5:09:43 PM PDT by Madame Dufarge
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To: Lockbox
ACORN International has expanded rapidly as well over the last year, with operations in countries as diverse as Canada, Peru, Mexico, Argentina, Dominican Republic, and India, and emerging projects in

Kenya

and Ecuador and partnerships in Indonesia, Korea, and the Philippines.

Look how the trail of footprints becomes longer by the day.

90 posted on 10/16/2008 6:43:19 PM PDT by 1-Eagle (Yeah that Ayers guy just lives down the street. Don't know why I wrote a review of his book.)
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To: Lockbox

Bookmark


116 posted on 10/16/2008 7:56:09 PM PDT by Seattle Conservative (God Bless and protect our troops and their CIC)
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To: Lockbox

“...Rathke began his career as an organizer for the NWRO (National Welfare Rights Organization) in Springfield, Massachusetts, under the direction of George Wiley....”

I wonder if this group has any connectin to the Wiley college textbook publishers. www.wiley.com


173 posted on 10/17/2008 3:56:07 PM PDT by April Lexington (I'm voting for McCain in 2008 and Jefferson Davis in 2012)
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