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It will help support family members in retirement, boost local economies, and strengthen this country's commitment to a dignified retirement system for all--which has been under fire for years as conservative politicians have attacked Social Security. (Photo: Shutterstock)
President Joe Biden's $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan is more than just a response to the coronavirus. It's also one of the largest anti-poverty measures in U.S. history.
Provisions in the package, like expanding the Child Tax Credit alone, will bring nearly 4 million kids out of poverty, cutting child poverty nearly in half. Combined with $1,400 relief payments, $300 in extra unemployment insurance, and other provisions, the Urban Institute estimates the package will reduce poverty in this country by over a third.
And, of course, the package will speed vaccine distribution, hopefully bringing this pandemic to an end. All of this is good news after a year of devastation.
When unions are strong, we all benefit.
Some of the package's most impactful changes barely even made headlines.
One of the more under-the-radar victories is that more than a million union workers and retirees can expect to see their troubled pensions rescued. The relief package sets aside $86 billion in direct aid for approximately 200 pension programs that are at risk of running out of funds.
This investment would provide swift, targeted relief to national multiemployer pension plans like the Teamsters Central States plan, which represents 400,000 participants in Ohio, Michigan, and other Midwestern states. With a current deficit of more than $20 billion, the fund is projected to go broke in 2025, leaving current and future retirees without benefits.
"For more than two decades, Teamster members, retirees, and officials have worked tirelessly to make sure the hard-earned retirements of its members are protected," International Brotherhood of Teamsters President Jim Hoffa said in a statement.
"Now, as part of this bill," he said, "more than 50 Teamster pension plans--including its largest, the Central States Pension Fund--will be eligible for assistance at the outset of the bill's enactment, with more of the union's plans becoming eligible in 2022."
Multiemployer pension plans are negotiated between unions and employers in fields where there is a lot of turnover among workers, like construction and mining. Other industries including retail, transportation, food processing, and trucking also negotiate multiemployer pension plans, meaning the impact of this $86 billion in aid will have a wide-ranging impact on workers across multiple sectors.
As industries change and Republicans in Congress and state legislatures have pushed deregulation and right-to-work laws, union membership has been on a steady decline, starving pension plans. Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, union workers, businesses, and retirees faced a crisis and were in dire need of support.
Midwest Democrats like Senator Sherrod Brown (D-OH) have been working to save union retirement funds ever since 2008, when Wall Street received a bailout while union pensions took a massive hit, leaving millions of workers out to dry.
But this is good news even for non-union members. It will help support family members in retirement, boost local economies, and strengthen this country's commitment to a dignified retirement system for all--which has been under fire for years as conservative politicians have attacked Social Security.
Not everything workers and their advocates were pushing for made it into this bill. The popular $15 minimum wage hike failed, with Republicans unanimously opposed and a few Democrats joining them. That fight won't go away, but there's still a lot to celebrate for now.
With Democrats in the majority and millions of people struggling to make ends meet, now is the perfect time for the government to take a strong pro-worker stance and provide relief to those at risk of losing benefits. This COVID-19 relief package, as well as the recently-passed Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act in the House, are great first steps.
When unions are strong, we all benefit.
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
President Joe Biden's $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan is more than just a response to the coronavirus. It's also one of the largest anti-poverty measures in U.S. history.
Provisions in the package, like expanding the Child Tax Credit alone, will bring nearly 4 million kids out of poverty, cutting child poverty nearly in half. Combined with $1,400 relief payments, $300 in extra unemployment insurance, and other provisions, the Urban Institute estimates the package will reduce poverty in this country by over a third.
And, of course, the package will speed vaccine distribution, hopefully bringing this pandemic to an end. All of this is good news after a year of devastation.
When unions are strong, we all benefit.
Some of the package's most impactful changes barely even made headlines.
One of the more under-the-radar victories is that more than a million union workers and retirees can expect to see their troubled pensions rescued. The relief package sets aside $86 billion in direct aid for approximately 200 pension programs that are at risk of running out of funds.
This investment would provide swift, targeted relief to national multiemployer pension plans like the Teamsters Central States plan, which represents 400,000 participants in Ohio, Michigan, and other Midwestern states. With a current deficit of more than $20 billion, the fund is projected to go broke in 2025, leaving current and future retirees without benefits.
"For more than two decades, Teamster members, retirees, and officials have worked tirelessly to make sure the hard-earned retirements of its members are protected," International Brotherhood of Teamsters President Jim Hoffa said in a statement.
"Now, as part of this bill," he said, "more than 50 Teamster pension plans--including its largest, the Central States Pension Fund--will be eligible for assistance at the outset of the bill's enactment, with more of the union's plans becoming eligible in 2022."
Multiemployer pension plans are negotiated between unions and employers in fields where there is a lot of turnover among workers, like construction and mining. Other industries including retail, transportation, food processing, and trucking also negotiate multiemployer pension plans, meaning the impact of this $86 billion in aid will have a wide-ranging impact on workers across multiple sectors.
As industries change and Republicans in Congress and state legislatures have pushed deregulation and right-to-work laws, union membership has been on a steady decline, starving pension plans. Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, union workers, businesses, and retirees faced a crisis and were in dire need of support.
Midwest Democrats like Senator Sherrod Brown (D-OH) have been working to save union retirement funds ever since 2008, when Wall Street received a bailout while union pensions took a massive hit, leaving millions of workers out to dry.
But this is good news even for non-union members. It will help support family members in retirement, boost local economies, and strengthen this country's commitment to a dignified retirement system for all--which has been under fire for years as conservative politicians have attacked Social Security.
Not everything workers and their advocates were pushing for made it into this bill. The popular $15 minimum wage hike failed, with Republicans unanimously opposed and a few Democrats joining them. That fight won't go away, but there's still a lot to celebrate for now.
With Democrats in the majority and millions of people struggling to make ends meet, now is the perfect time for the government to take a strong pro-worker stance and provide relief to those at risk of losing benefits. This COVID-19 relief package, as well as the recently-passed Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act in the House, are great first steps.
When unions are strong, we all benefit.
President Joe Biden's $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan is more than just a response to the coronavirus. It's also one of the largest anti-poverty measures in U.S. history.
Provisions in the package, like expanding the Child Tax Credit alone, will bring nearly 4 million kids out of poverty, cutting child poverty nearly in half. Combined with $1,400 relief payments, $300 in extra unemployment insurance, and other provisions, the Urban Institute estimates the package will reduce poverty in this country by over a third.
And, of course, the package will speed vaccine distribution, hopefully bringing this pandemic to an end. All of this is good news after a year of devastation.
When unions are strong, we all benefit.
Some of the package's most impactful changes barely even made headlines.
One of the more under-the-radar victories is that more than a million union workers and retirees can expect to see their troubled pensions rescued. The relief package sets aside $86 billion in direct aid for approximately 200 pension programs that are at risk of running out of funds.
This investment would provide swift, targeted relief to national multiemployer pension plans like the Teamsters Central States plan, which represents 400,000 participants in Ohio, Michigan, and other Midwestern states. With a current deficit of more than $20 billion, the fund is projected to go broke in 2025, leaving current and future retirees without benefits.
"For more than two decades, Teamster members, retirees, and officials have worked tirelessly to make sure the hard-earned retirements of its members are protected," International Brotherhood of Teamsters President Jim Hoffa said in a statement.
"Now, as part of this bill," he said, "more than 50 Teamster pension plans--including its largest, the Central States Pension Fund--will be eligible for assistance at the outset of the bill's enactment, with more of the union's plans becoming eligible in 2022."
Multiemployer pension plans are negotiated between unions and employers in fields where there is a lot of turnover among workers, like construction and mining. Other industries including retail, transportation, food processing, and trucking also negotiate multiemployer pension plans, meaning the impact of this $86 billion in aid will have a wide-ranging impact on workers across multiple sectors.
As industries change and Republicans in Congress and state legislatures have pushed deregulation and right-to-work laws, union membership has been on a steady decline, starving pension plans. Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, union workers, businesses, and retirees faced a crisis and were in dire need of support.
Midwest Democrats like Senator Sherrod Brown (D-OH) have been working to save union retirement funds ever since 2008, when Wall Street received a bailout while union pensions took a massive hit, leaving millions of workers out to dry.
But this is good news even for non-union members. It will help support family members in retirement, boost local economies, and strengthen this country's commitment to a dignified retirement system for all--which has been under fire for years as conservative politicians have attacked Social Security.
Not everything workers and their advocates were pushing for made it into this bill. The popular $15 minimum wage hike failed, with Republicans unanimously opposed and a few Democrats joining them. That fight won't go away, but there's still a lot to celebrate for now.
With Democrats in the majority and millions of people struggling to make ends meet, now is the perfect time for the government to take a strong pro-worker stance and provide relief to those at risk of losing benefits. This COVID-19 relief package, as well as the recently-passed Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act in the House, are great first steps.
When unions are strong, we all benefit.