Work Sites of Public and White-Collar Workers
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Mcdowell County Comprehensive Plan
MCDOWELL COUNTY COMPREHENSIVE PLAN WVULAW Land Use and Sustainable Development Law Clinic ADOPTED _ WVULAW Land Use and Sustainable Development Law Clinic “McDowell County, West Virginia, a community on the rise, is INTRODUCTION rich in history, outdoor recreation, and friendly, hardworking, and ery few places in West Virginia have the history welcoming people. The county attracts visitors from all over the and mystique of McDowell County. The south- world to adventure, leading the way as the backbone of southern ernmost county in the Mountain State, McDow- Vell County has left an indelible mark on the region. West Virginia’s tourism industry.” With a past that often seems bigger than life, the tales of this beautiful and rugged place are now tempered by the challenges of today. Once the bustling epicenter —McDowell County’s Vision Statement of coal country, McDowell County now faces complex and longstanding issues. The vision statement serves as the foundation for Issues include high levels of substance abuse, lack future planning and decision-making in McDowell of infrastructure, a dwindling economy, lack of jobs, a County. The vision statement is forward-thinking and large number of abandoned and dilapidated structures, can help ensure that future decisions align with the and inadequate health care. While there are no easy goals and objectives set forth in the plan. Further- ways to address these issues, the community can de- more, recommendations and actions steps in the com- velop a plan that acknowledges the issues, identifies prehensive plan should be consistent with the vision methods to address the issue, and prioritizes the meth- statement. -
Calendar No. 822
Calendar No. 822 110TH CONGRESS REPORT " ! 2d Session SENATE 110–390 AMERICA’S HISTORICAL AND NATURAL LEGACY STUDY ACT JUNE 16, 2008.—Ordered to be printed Mr. BINGAMAN, from the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, submitted the following R E P O R T [To accompany H.R. 3998] The Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, to which was referred the Act (H.R. 3998) to authorize the Secretary of the Inte- rior to conduct special resources studies of certain lands and struc- tures to determine the appropriate means for preservation, use, and management of the resources associated with such lands and structures, having considered the same, reports favorably thereon with an amendment and recommends that the Act, as amended, do pass. The amendment is as follows: Strike out all after the enacting clause and insert in lieu thereof the following: SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE. This Act may be cited as ‘‘America’s Historical and Natural Legacy Study Act’’. SEC. 2. DEFINITION OF SECRETARY. In this Act, the term ‘‘Secretary’’ means the Secretary of the Interior. SEC. 3. HARRY S TRUMAN NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE SPECIAL RESOURCE STUDY. (a) IN GENERAL.—The Secretary shall conduct a special resource study of the Harry S Truman Birthplace State Historic Site (referred to in this section as the ‘‘birthplace site’’) in Lamar, Missouri, to determine— (1) the suitability and feasibility of— (A) adding the birthplace site to the Harry S Truman National Historic Site; or (B) designating the birthplace site as a separate unit of the National Park System; and (2) the methods and means for the protection and interpretation of the birth- place site by the National Park Service, other Federal, State, or local govern- ment entities, or private or nonprofit organizations. -
Class War in West Virginia Education Workers Strike and Win!
Class War in West Virginia Education Workers Strike and Win! from the pages of suggested donation $3.00 Table of Contents Articles Page Education Workers Fighting Back in West Virginia! 1 By Otis Grotewohl, February 5, 2018 Statewide education strike looms in West Virginia 3 By Otis Grotewohl, February 20, 2018 Workers shut down West Virginia schools! 5 By Otis Grotewohl, February 26, 2018 Class war in West Virginia: School workers strike and win raise 8 By Martha Grevatt and Minnie Bruce Pratt, March 7, 2018 West Virginia education workers, teaching how to fight 12 Editorial, March 5, 2018 From a teacher to West Virginia educators: An open letter 14 By a guest author, March 5, 2018 Lessons of the West Virginia strike 16 By Otis Grotewohl, March 13, 2018 Is a ‘Defiant Workers’ Spring’ coming? 21 By Otis Grotewohl, March 20, 2018 Battle of Blair Mountain still rings true 23 By John Steffin, March 7, 2018 Solidarity Statements Page Harvard TPS Coalition Solidarity Statement 25 March 4, 2018 Southern Workers Assembly 26 March 1, 2018 USW Local 8751 29 March 5, 2018 Articles copyright 2018 Workers World. Verbatim copying and distribution of entire articles is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved. ii Education Workers Fighting Back in West Virginia! By Otis Grotewohl, February 5, 2018 www.tinyurl.com/ww180205og Teachers and school support staff are currently in motion in West Virginia. On Feb. 2, roughly 2,000 teachers and service employees from Mingo, Wyoming, Logan and Raleigh counties staged a walkout and took their message to the capitol. -
Remembering Ludlow but Forgetting the Columbine: the 1927-1928 Colorado Coal Strike
Remembering Ludlow but Forgetting the Columbine: The 1927-1928 Colorado Coal Strike By Leigh Campbell-Hale B.A., University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, 1977 M.A., University of Colorado, Boulder, 2005 A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Colorado and Committee Members: Phoebe S.K. Young Thomas G. Andrews Mark Pittenger Lee Chambers Ahmed White In partial fulfillment of the requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of History 2013 This thesis entitled: Remembering Ludlow but Forgetting the Columbine: The 1927-1928 Colorado Coal Strike written by Leigh Campbell-Hale has been approved for the Department of History Phoebe S.K. Young Thomas Andrews Date The final copy of this thesis has been examined by the signatories, and we Find that both the content and the form meet acceptable presentation standards Of scholarly work in the above mentioned discipline. ii Campbell-Hale, Leigh (Ph.D, History) Remembering Ludlow but Forgetting the Columbine: The 1927-1928 Colorado Coal Strike Dissertation directed by Associate Professor Phoebe S.K. Young This dissertation examines the causes, context, and legacies of the 1927-1928 Colorado coal strike in relationship to the history of labor organizing and coalmining in both Colorado and the United States. While historians have written prolifically about the Ludlow Massacre, which took place during the 1913- 1914 Colorado coal strike led by the United Mine Workers of America, there has been a curious lack of attention to the Columbine Massacre that occurred not far away within the 1927-1928 Colorado coal strike, led by the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW). -
Mining Wars: Corporate Expansion and Labor Violence in the Western Desert, 1876-1920
UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones 2009 Mining wars: Corporate expansion and labor violence in the Western desert, 1876-1920 Kenneth Dale Underwood University of Nevada Las Vegas Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalscholarship.unlv.edu/thesesdissertations Part of the Latin American History Commons, Social History Commons, and the United States History Commons Repository Citation Underwood, Kenneth Dale, "Mining wars: Corporate expansion and labor violence in the Western desert, 1876-1920" (2009). UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones. 106. http://dx.doi.org/10.34917/1377091 This Dissertation is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been brought to you by Digital Scholarship@UNLV with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this Dissertation in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/or on the work itself. This Dissertation has been accepted for inclusion in UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones by an authorized administrator of Digital Scholarship@UNLV. For more information, please contact [email protected]. MINING WARS: CORPORATE EXPANSION AND LABOR VIOLENCE IN THE WESTERN DESERT, 1876-1920 by Kenneth Dale Underwood Bachelor of Arts University of Southern California 1992 Master -
Curriculum Vitae Gerald E. Markowitz Distinguished Professor of History
Curriculum Vitae Gerald E. Markowitz Distinguished Professor of History John Jay College of Criminal Justice Born: 12 July 1944 524 West 59 Street, NY, NY 10019 (212) 237-8458 [email protected] Education: B.A., Earlham College, 1965 M.A., University of Wisconsin, 1967 Ph.D., University of Wisconsin, 1971 Employment: Distinguished Professor of History, John Jay College and Graduate Center, City University of New York, 2004 - present Professor of History, John Jay College, City University of New York, 1970 - present Professor of History, Graduate School and University Center, CUNY, 1990 - present Chair, Interdepartment of Thematic Studies, John Jay College, 1985-1987, 1989-1992, 1995-1999 Adjunct Professor of Sociomedical Sciences, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, 2002 - present Books: Lead Wars: The Politics of Science and the Fate of America’s Children (with David Rosner) (Berkeley: University of California Press/ Milbank Memorial Fund, 2013) The Contested Boundaries of Public Health, (co-edited with James Colgrove and David Rosner), Rutgers University Press, 2008. Are We Ready? Public Health Since 9/11 (with David Rosner) (Berkeley: University of California Press/ Milbank Memorial Fund, 2006). Deadly Dust: Silicosis and the On-Going Struggle to Protect Workers' Health (New and Expanded edition) (with David Rosner) (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2006). Deceit and Denial: The Deadly Politics of Industrial Pollution, (with David Rosner), Berkeley: University of California Press/Milbank Memorial Fund, 2002; paper, 2003; new expanded edition, 2012) Children, Race, and Power: Kenneth and Mamie Clarks' Northside Center, (with David Rosner), (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1996; Paperback: New York: Routledge, 2000) World Civilizations, Sources, Images, and Interpretations, volumes 1 and 2 (ed. -
Chapter 18 Video, “The Stockyard Jungle,” Portrays the Horrors of the Meatpacking Industry First Investigated by Upton Sinclair
The Progressive Movement 1890–1919 Why It Matters Industrialization changed American society. Cities were crowded with new immigrants, working conditions were often bad, and the old political system was breaking down. These conditions gave rise to the Progressive movement. Progressives campaigned for both political and social reforms for more than two decades and enjoyed significant successes at the local, state, and national levels. The Impact Today Many Progressive-era changes are still alive in the United States today. • Political parties hold direct primaries to nominate candidates for office. • The Seventeenth Amendment calls for the direct election of senators. • Federal regulation of food and drugs began in this period. The American Vision Video The Chapter 18 video, “The Stockyard Jungle,” portrays the horrors of the meatpacking industry first investigated by Upton Sinclair. 1889 • Hull House 1902 • Maryland workers’ 1904 opens in 1890 • Ida Tarbell’s History of Chicago compensation laws • Jacob Riis’s How passed the Standard Oil the Other Half Company published ▲ Lives published B. Harrison Cleveland McKinley T. Roosevelt 1889–1893 ▲ 1893–1897 1897–1901 1901–1909 ▲ ▲ 1890 1900 ▼ ▼ ▼▼ 1884 1900 • Toynbee Hall, first settlement • Freud’s Interpretation 1902 house, established in London of Dreams published • Anglo-Japanese alliance formed 1903 • Russian Bolshevik Party established by Lenin 544 Women marching for the vote in New York City, 1912 1905 • Industrial Workers of the World founded 1913 1906 1910 • Seventeenth 1920 • Pure Food and • Mann-Elkins Amendment • Nineteenth Amendment Drug Act passed Act passed ratified ratified, guaranteeing women’s voting rights ▲ HISTORY Taft Wilson ▲ ▲ 1909–1913 ▲▲1913–1921 Chapter Overview Visit the American Vision 1910 1920 Web site at tav.glencoe.com and click on Chapter ▼ ▼ ▼ Overviews—Chapter 18 to preview chapter information. -
A Don West Reader West End Press
Lincoln Memorial University LMU Digital Commons Copyright-Free Books Collection Special Collections 1985 In a Land of Plenty: A Don West Reader West End Press Don West Constance Adams West Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lmunet.edu/csbc Part of the Appalachian Studies Commons, and the Poetry Commons Recommended Citation End Press, West; West, Don; and West, Constance Adams, "In a Land of Plenty: A Don West Reader" (1985). Copyright-Free Books Collection. 1. https://digitalcommons.lmunet.edu/csbc/1 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Special Collections at LMU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Copyright-Free Books Collection by an authorized administrator of LMU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. With sketches Constance Adams West No Grants This book is not supported any grant, governmental, corporate or PS 3545 .E8279 16 1985 private. It is paid for, directly or indirectly, by the people who support and In a land of plenty have Don West's vision, and it both reflects and proves their best - The publisher No Purposely this book is not copyrighted. Poetry and other creative efforts should be levers, weapons to be used in the people's struggle for understanding, human rights, and decency. "Art for Art's Sake" is a misnomer. The poet can never be neutral. In a hungry world the struggle between oppressor and oppressed is unending. There is the inevitable question: "Which side are you on?" To be content with as they are, to be "neutral," is to take sides with the oppressor who also wants to keep the status quo. -
Endangered Properties List
PRESERVATION Preservation Alliance MATTERS for greater philadelphia THE NEWSLETTER OF THE PRESERVATION ALLIANCE FOR GREATER PHILADELPHIA FALL 2004 Region’s Most Endangered Historic Properties he Alliance’s second Associated Press annual Endangered Properties List is 2004 based on nomina- ENDANGERED PROPERTIES LIST Ttions received from P H I LADE LPH IA community organizations, historic Independence Square preservation organizations, mem- ■ bers of the Alliance and the general Nugent Home for Baptists public. We thank all those who sub- ■ Presser Home for mitted nominations for their inter- Retired Music Teachers est and concern for the historic ■ properties in their communities. Dilworth House ■ Historic School Buildings Independence Square ■ Upper Roxborough 5th and Chestnut Streets, Philadelphia National Historic Distric ■ SIGNIFICANCE Independence Square is Provident Mutual the location of Independence Hall and one Life Insurance Building of the most significant park spaces in ■ Philadelphia. It was here that the Chester Avenue Street Paving Declaration of Independence had its first ■ public reading. The square was purchased Madison Square by the Provincial government in 1730 to provide the site for new municipal buildings R E G I O NAL and has been a public park ever since. Over the years many organizations in Philadel- Dolington Village phia have worked to preserve the square as Bucks County an important public place and previously ■ raised funds to remove buildings that once Heidelberg (Kerlin Farm) occupied portions of the square. impact on historic sites, and should be resolved. No plan should be adopted with- Montgomery County capable of being removed easily once the out full public disclosure and opportunity ■ THREAT At the request of the Department current security concerns have been for debate. -
Faculty Manual
APRIL 2013 Cynthia Anne Connolly PhD RN FAAN BUSINESS ADDRESS Office 2017 Claire M. Fagin Hall University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing 418 Curie Boulevard Philadelphia, PA 19104 215-746-5478 [email protected] EDUCATION PhD 1999 University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA. Nursing; Area of study: Nursing, Health Care History MSN 1987 University of Rochester, Rochester, NY. Primary Care and School Health BSN 1980 University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA. Nursing POSTGRADUATE TRAINING & FELLOWSHIP APPOINTMENTS 2001-2003 Postdoctoral Fellow, Columbia University, Joseph L. Mailman School of Public Health. Center for the History and Ethics of Public Health and Medicine. Sponsor: David Rosner, PhD, MPH 2001-2002 Legislative Fellow, United States Senate, Paul Wellstone [D- Minnesota], Washington, DC 2000-2001 University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA. Post-Master’s Certificate, Nurse Practitioner Program in Pediatric Acute/Chronic Care Nursing 1 PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE ACADEMIC POSITIONS 2013- Associate Professor with Tenure, University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing Philadelphia, PA 2011- Co-Faculty Director, Field Center for Children’s Policy, Practice, and Research, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 2011- Fellow, Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies Program and The Alice Paul Center for Research on Gender, Sexuality, and Women, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 2010- Member, Graduate Group in the History and Sociology of Science, University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences, Philadelphia, -
Response to Philip Scranton's Report on Deceit and Denial
Response to Philip Scranton’s Report On Deceit and Denial: The Deadly Politics of Industrial Pollution by David Rosner and Gerald Markowitz Until I read Deceit and Denial I certainly believed that I had been an insider, had been well- informed about what had happened in the struggle to regulate vinyl chloride. How little I knew! How little I understood about industry efforts to manipulate the debate and influence the regulatory outcomes. For these classic cases, lead and vinyl chloride, this book tells much more than I knew, perhaps close to the whole story.” Anthony Robbins, former Director of NIOSH, 1978-1981.1 “The preeminent value of all intellectual communities is reasoned discourse – the continuous colloquy among historians of diverse points of view. A commitment to such discourse makes possible the fruitful exchange of views, opinion, and knowledge.” “Statement on Standards of Professional Conduct,” American Historical Association2 In Fall, 2002, our book, Deceit and Denial: The Deadly Politics of Industrial Pollution, was published jointly by the University of California Press and the Milbank Fund as one in a series that addressed a variety of aspects of health policy. Briefly, the book looked at questions regarding how two industries, the lead industry and the chemical industry, reacted when faced with information regarding the potential dangers of their products to human health during the twentieth century. The book was unusual in a number of respects, including the fact that much of the chapters on the two primary cases were based on documents historians rarely if ever use in critical evaluations of corporate behavior. -
Labor History Theme Study: Phase Ill
. .. · wl 1 zo D ~JJ.'1S F;Je.:. · /'/PS Genera I . ':'!>7 . · 1 '·,. : .... ' . ·. ,· ••• • /·'. ·,,];. .. .· ··~ji;:;;::::::;;:.~·;:~.. - ::::--:;:3=~ . ·.. • . • .· . .,,...--,;:;:.~.::.;'£/"-::-/ ,?'.:' . Labor.H1storyTheme·Stu.dy:_·Phase Ill· · . Department of the lnte~i~r • National Park Se.rvice •·Denver Ser:'ice Center .•. ; •• . PLEASE RETURN :ro: TECHNICAL INFORMATION CENTER ~ DENVER SERVICE CENTER ON MICROFILM . C@Il®rr §~ffiIID~. NATIONAL P'ARK. SERVICE 1/31/~3 • Labor History Theme Study: Phase Ill .. August 1997 • I Department of the Interior • National Park Service • Denver Service Center • • This document is dedicated to the memory of Dr. Stuart Kaufman, labor historian, 1942-1997. • • Executive Summary The National Historic Landmark (NHL) Theme Study on American Labor History, Phase Ill, prepared by the Denver Service Center of the National Park Service (NPS), evaluated the following 11 sites associated with the diverse labor history of the United States: • Audiffred Building - San Francisco, California • Butte-Anaconda Mining and Smelting Complex - Butte and Anaconda, Montana • Ford Motor I River Rouge Complex - Dearborn, Michigan • Harmony Mills Historic District- Cohoes, New York1 • Kate Mullany House -Troy, New York1 • Kingsley Plantation - Jacksonville, Florida • Matewan Historic District - Matewan, West Virginia • Puckett Family Farm - Granville County, North Carolina • Pullman Historic District - Chicago, Illinois • Sloss Furnaces - Birmingham, Alabama • Tredegar Iron Works - Richmond, Virginia The National Park Service did not undertake a comprehensive Special Resource Study pro cess, but instead it has provided preliminary findings concerning the suitability and feasibility of the 11 sites. Prior to any legislation enacted by Congress regarding one or more of the 11 sites, it is recommended that the National Park Service program special resource studies for these sites.