🔭We’re Looking for Artists and Trainers!🔭

As we build our movement and fight for justice, skills of all kinds are in high demand. The causes and issues we organize around are as diverse as the communities who call LI home, but there are common tasks, responsibilities, and talents needed across the board. The list includes administration, design, writing, promotion, fundraising, knowing your rights, nurturing community connection, and everything in between!

We Are Long Island is a community centered organizing hub, so we’re looking to our local communities for trainers to empower others with new skills! If you have something to teach that would help others build community power, head to WeAreLongIsland.org‘s training page and submit a description. A hub organizer will review the submission and follow up with you with questions and/or to start scheduling.

Your time and talents are valuable, and in recognition of this stipends are available for community trainers.  

Help build our local movement! Sign up to be a trainer today and share your skills!


Call for Artists – The Unsung Voices Art Exhibit

Unsung Voices is a traveling art exhibit organized by members of the LI Fund Excluded Workers (FEW) Coalition, an assemblage of local worker and community organizations. The exhibit is designed to shed light on the experiences, struggles, and triumphs of workers who have been marginalized or overlooked due to inequalities that transcend all aspects of their lives. In 2023 the exhibit was displayed at multiple locations, and we are looking to take it on the road again with some new artwork added!

If you are a worker-artist or ally with art to contribute head to this link and complete the submission form!  

The LI FEW Coalition advocates for state legislation to support workers like the Unemployment Bridge Program (UBP).  UBP would create a permanent unemployment safety net for workers ineligible for traditional unemployment because of the work they do. These workers include freelancers, self-employed workers, cash workers, people in re-entry, and immigrants without work authorization.


Starbucks Workers’ Rights Board

Join LIJWJ and Starbucks Workers United on Thursday February 22 at 6PM for a Workers’ Rights Board hearing to witness the testimonies of organizing baristas as they fight to get their employer to the negotiating table!

Starbucks Coffee is a corporate giant that brings in tens of billions of dollars in business each year. The company markets itself as a progressive company that offers its employees “transparency, dignity and respect.” This contradicts the realities of Starbucks’ culture behind the cafe counter, where workers instead experience an environment of harassment, abuse, and retaliation.

When workers seek accountability through internal channels, toxic managers are protected in exchange for their blind loyalty to the company. Despite the risks involved, baristas have spent years fighting through a gauntlet of toxicity and union busting to seek justice.

LIJWJ’s Workers’ Rights Board will bring these organizing workers and community together to give a clear accounting of how Starbucks treats their employees. In addition to hearing directly from workers, community members are also invited to speak and have their testimony entered into the record. Testimonies and board recommendations to Starbucks will be issued in a report LIJWJ will publish following the hearing.

The testimonies will be overseen and recorded by a board of commissioners including Nassau County Legislator Siela Bynoe; Suffolk County Legislator Sam Gonzalez; Rashida Tyler, Dep. Dir. NYS Council of Churches; Mary Anne Trasciatti, Director Hofstra Labor Studies; and Juana Torres, Esq.

To register follow this link!


Updates from our Friends at NYSNA

Peconic Bay Medical Center and Long Island Jewish Valley Stream

Citing unsafe staffing and low wages, NYSNA announced the results of a strike vote at these two facilities at a rally last Thursday. 99.5 % of the union members voted to strike, meaning unless the hospitals agree to bargain the nurses will hit the picket line and need community support! Please stay tuned for updates and asks from the nurses!

St. Catherine of Siena’s Maternity Ward

“As of midnight on Feb. 1, St. Catherine’s administrators suspended services in the maternal child health unit. Unless they find new doctors to replace the ones who left, labor and delivery, neo-natal intensive care, and perinatal healthcare services will no longer be available to Smithtown and the surrounding communities.

It seems that St. Catherine administrators want to make this closure permanent. They are working with the New York State Department of Health on a permanent closure plan and have circulated a health equity impact survey, which is required by law. The deadline to complete the survey is Feb. 8. Make your voice heard today!

We know you have a lot to say about this closure. Our petition to keep St. Catherine of Siena maternal child health unit open for care has now reached 1,400 signers! So many community members have weighed in and commented about how important these services have been to their families. So many people have shown support for the St. Catherine nurses who serve this community.”


Unemployment Bridge Program Phonebanking

Did you know that the legislators who have the power to pass the Unemployment Bridge Campaign have phones? They do! And it so happens that phones are a great way to let these folks know you support this legislation. It’s especially important to call since it seems many of them are unaware how vital money is for excluded workers to buy food, shelter, and medical care when they’re out of work through no fault of their own!


Help educate these legislators by filling them in on how some of our most vulnerable community members can benefit from this easily implementable program by joining a phonebank!

This event will be hosted on Zoom on Friday March 8 at 10AM. The beginning of the phonebank will be a ‘huddle’ where participants will be provided with talking points to use during calls, get oriented, and go over any questions to make sure everyone feels informed when they call. We’ll then all go off mic, make our calls, and reconvene to debrief our experiences calling. Not only is making calls like this more effective in a group, but also deepens our organizing community as we work together!

Head to this form to register!


Lastly, please consider making a DONATION to our Solidarity Fund. Every day workers struggle in poor conditions or lose work so that bosses and shareholders can stack their piles of money even higher. Wealth buys power and influence, meaning that workers are at a huge disadvantage in trying to reach the public’s ears. The Solidarity Fund is meant to enable workers to have their voices heard, and without support they will continue to be omitted from the dialogue.

Please donate!!

In solidarity,

Long Island Jobs with Justice

💞Rekindle Your Relationship With the Workers’ Movement this February💞

Starbucks Workers’ Rights Board

📢New Event Announcement!📢 Join LIJWJ and Starbucks Workers United on Thursday February 22 at 6PM for a Workers’ Rights Board hearing to witness the testimonies of organizing baristas as they fight to get their employer to the negotiating table!

Starbucks Coffee is a corporate giant that brings in tens of billions of dollars in business each year. The company markets itself as a progressive company that offers its employees “transparency, dignity and respect.” This contradicts the realities of Starbucks’ culture behind the cafe counter, where workers instead experience an environment of harassment, abuse, and retaliation.

When workers seek accountability through internal channels, toxic managers are protected in exchange for their blind loyalty to the company. Despite the risks involved, baristas have spent years fighting through a gauntlet of toxicity and union busting to seek justice.

LIJWJ’s Workers’ Rights Board will bring these organizing workers and community together to give a clear accounting of how Starbucks treats their employees. In addition to hearing directly from workers, community members are also invited to speak and have their testimony entered into the record. Testimonies and board recommendations to Starbucks will be issued in a report LIJWJ will publish following the hearing.

The testimonies will be overseen and recorded by a board of commissioners including Nassau County Legislator Siela Bynoe; Suffolk County Legislator Sam Gonzalez; Rashida Tyler, Dep. Dir. NYS Council of Churches; Mary Anne Trasciatti, Director Hofstra Labor Studies; and Juana Torres, Esq.

To register follow this link!


NYSNA Strike Vote Announcement

NYSNA nurses have been in negotiations with Northwell LIJ-Valley Stream Hospital and Peconic Bay Medical Center since October. The nurses spent months negotiating for safe staffing and fighting to get patients prioritized over profit, only to have their contracts expire at end of December. There is currently an impasse and the nurses have announced a strike authorization vote for these two facilities.

From NYSNA:

“Nurses and healthcare professionals at Northwell Long Island Jewish Valley Stream (LIJ Valley Stream) and Peconic Bay Medical Center (Peconic) are voting to authorize a strike. Voting concludes at 3 p.m. on Feb. 1 and the results will be announced directly after the vote at 3:30 p.m. in front of both LIJ Valley Stream and Peconic facilities.

Nurses and healthcare professionals at both Northwell facilities will speak out about current conditions and why they voted to authorize a strike. Workers will be available to speak to the media.”

As this situation develops please stay tuned for any calls for community support from the nurses!


Unemployment Bridge Program Phonebanking

Did you know that the legislators who have the power to pass the Unemployment Bridge Campaign have phones? They do! And it so happens that phones are a great way to let these folks know you support this legislation. It’s especially important to call since it seems many of them are unaware how vital money is for excluded workers to buy food, shelter, and medical care when they’re out of work through no fault of their own!


Help educate these legislators by filling them in on how some of our most vulnerable community members can benefit from this easily implementable program by joining a phonebank!

This event will be hosted on Zoom on Friday March 8 at 10AM. The beginning of the phonebank will be a ‘huddle’ where participants will be provided with talking points to use during calls, get oriented, and go over any questions to make sure everyone feels informed when they call. We’ll then all go off mic, make our calls, and reconvene to debrief our experiences calling. Not only is making calls like this more effective in a group, but also deepens our organizing community as we work together!

Head to this form to register!


Lastly, please consider making a DONATION to our Solidarity Fund. Every day workers struggle in poor conditions or lose work so that bosses and shareholders can stack their piles of money even higher. Wealth buys power and influence, meaning that workers are at a huge disadvantage in trying to reach the public’s ears. The Solidarity Fund is meant to enable workers to have their voices heard, and without support they will continue to be omitted from the dialogue.

Please donate!!

Starbucks Workers United and Unemployment Bridge Program Virtual Events!

Join LIJWJ and Starbucks Workers United for a Virtual Community Town Hall

New event announcement! Join Starbucks Workers United and LI Jobs With Justice for a virtual community town hall on November 8th! Hear directly from local Long Island Starbucks workers on their experiences working at and organizing their stores, and learn about the different ways you can get involved improving conditions for Long Island workers.

It’s clear Starbucks’ PR on their company culture isn’t worth a hill of beans. In stark contrast to the progressive image Starbucks projects, the reality for workers is that they work in hostile, union-busting, and unsafe environments. In the face of this, SBWU is organizing against the corporate giant and gaining ground for workers. Don’t take our word for it though – be there to hear it from the workers themselves Wednesday November 8th at 7PM on zoom.

👉RSVP using this link!👈


And also take a second to make sure you’re following @sbworkersunited and 3 (out of 5) local unionized stores @sbwufarmingville@sbwu_massapequa, and @sbwu_wantagh on Instagram!


Unemployment Bridge Program Virtual Events

NOVEMBER 16, 2023 (2-3pm)

Excluded No More: State Efforts to Support Undocumented Workers Webinar

Please join us for a webinar, Excluded No More: State Efforts to Support Undocumented Workers on Thursday, November 16th from 2:00-3:30 p.m. ET.

During this webinar we will share new materials in NELP’s UI Policy Hub, including a new policy brief on excluded worker programs. We will then host a panel of advocates working to launch excluded worker campaigns programs in their states. We will be joined by:

Nishat Tabassum of New York’s Unemployment Bridge Program
Daniela Alvarenga of California’s Safety Net For All
Soumyo Lahiri-Gupta of Washington’s Unemployment for Undocumented Workers
Kathy White from Colorado’s Benefit Recovery Fund (the first permanent program in the nation)

Please visit the Zoom link to register and for the opportunity to submit questions for the panelists and request language interpretation. After you register, you will receive a confirmation email about joining the webinar. Registration Link: nelp.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_iEfLDUaDQ0-BokXl3DO2vQ#/…

NOVEMBER 17, 2023 (10am-12pm)Unemployment Insurance Reform: Challenges and Opportunities for New York State’s Labor Movement

This webinar will discuss the importance of Unemployment Insurance Reform to the labor movement. Unions are a powerful voice for their members and all working people in New York State. Access to Unemployment Insurance allows workers, including union members, to feel more comfortable in fighting unfair workplace practices and increases the ability of workers to organize. Register here!

Become a LIJWJ Sustainer!

Among the many ways you can support LIJWJ and the workers we fight for is by becoming a monthly sustainer! This is a surefire way to help us continue doing the work we do. We don’t get big checks from ultrawealthy donors or corporations (they’re not too fond of us for some reason 😉). Instead, funding for LIJWJ’s work comes from community funders, partners and individuals like you.  Donating on a monthly basis can be the most sustainable way for both LIJWJ and you.

If you are able to give $5 – 100 a month to become an LIJWJ sustainer, please head to this link right away and sign up! At the $20/month level we’ll send a special thank you in the form of an LIJWJ t-shirt!  

Again, if you are able, please go and sign up now to be a sustainer today!

September 13, 2023: Long Island Jobs With Justice Awards Dinner

PURCHASE YOUR TICKETS & SPONSORSHIPS ONLINE HERE

Our awards dinner is the one night out of the year where our network of labor, community and faith allies come together to celebrate and honor the tireless commitment and work of our partners in the fight for workers’ rights and economic justice. This year’s honorees will be:

  • New York State Nurses Association (NYSNA) who have harnessed the power to strike to protect the health and safety of their members and the patients they care for each day.
  • Haitian American Family of Long Island (HAFALI), an inspiring community organization dedicated to serving LI’s Haitian community.
  • The Workplace Project, a Hempstead-based worker organization that fights to improve the lives of day laborers. Most recently, they supported the workers of Nick’s Pizza in their struggle to recover hundreds of thousands of dollars in wages stolen by their employer.
  • The Reverend Canon Marie A. Tatro, Canon for Community Justice Ministry of the Episcopal Diocese of Long Island, a dedicated organizer and advocate on LIJWJ’s AMOS faith justice committee.
  • Center for Civic Engagement at Hofstra University, which serves as one of the few places where labor, community, and worker struggles are centered and uplifted for public education.

Contact Ani Halasz at ahalasz.lijwj@gmail.com or 718-216-1085 with inquiries. 

If you are unable to attend but would like to make a one-time donation, you can do that here: https://longislandjwj.org/donate/

Thank you for your ongoing support and solidarity! Looking forward to celebrating together 9/13!

September 27, 2022: Long Island Jobs with Justice Awards Dinner

Long Island Jobs with Justice would like to invite you to spend an evening with us on Tuesday, September 27th as we honor and celebrate our partners in the fight for workers’ rights and economic justice!

Our honorees:

Lifetime Achievement Award
Roger Clayman
former Executive Director of The Long Island Federation of Labor​

Workers United

Maria del Mar Piedrabuena

Long Island Farmworker Cooperative – a project of Rural and Migrant Ministry

Long Island Immigration Clinic – a project of The Sisters of St. Joseph

You can purchase tickets and sponsorships online for the event here (preferred): https://bit.ly/3PEI9vg

If you are unable to attend but would like to make a one-time donation, you can do that here: https://longislandjwj.org/donate/

You can also download and print the invitation and RSVP form and mail to: Long Island Jobs with Justice, 390 Rabro Drive, Hauppauge, NY 11788

We are honored to be able to celebrate our partners and all of the work they’ve done to support workers across Long Island.

We look forward to seeing YOU!

POSTPONED – January 9, 2022 – Human Rights Luncheon 

Due to rising infection rates and an abundance of caution for everyone’s health and safety, we’ve will postponing our Human Rights Luncheon. We apologize for the unfortunate news, but look forward to sharing a new date with you all in the upcoming weeks. Please continue to check back here for a new date.

If you purchased a ticket and would like us to issue you a refund, please contact Ani Halasz at ahalasz.lijwj@gmail.com. Otherwise we will hold your spot for the new date.

Celebrating an historic victory for worker justice – the unionization of farm workers at the Pindar Vineyards in Peconic, Long Island

The fight to unionize farmworkers — who are often excluded from labor laws that apply to other workers — goes back to the National Labor Relations Act of 1935, signed into law by President Franklin Roosevelt. This law, also called the Wagner Act, allowed workers to unionize and prevented employers from retaliating against workers who joined a union — with the exception of agricultural or domestic workers. At the time, many of these workers were Black and Roosevelt had compromised on the law with the Southern Democrats, who wanted to continue discriminating against and oppressing people of color. 

On July 19th, 2019, after nearly 2 decades of political advocacy and organizing, and over 8 decades of racist and exclusionary laws, agricultural workers in New York won the right to organize a union, a mandatory day of rest and the right to overtime pay through the passage of the Farm Laborers Fair Labor Practices Act!

On September 27th, 2021, Local 338 of the Retail, Wholesale, Department Store Union/United Food and Commercial Workers Union was certified by the state as the first union to represent more than a dozen farm workers at Pindar Vineyards in Peconic!

Join us on Sunday, January 9th from 1pm-2:30pm as we celebrate this historic victory for farm workers, unions and Long Island, and honor Senator Jessica Ramos, sponsor of the 2019 Farm Laborers Fair Labor Practices Act, and the remarkable and inspiring partnership between Rural and Migrant Ministry and RWDSU/UFCW Local 338.

RWDSU/UFCW Local 338 members with NYS Senator Jessica Ramos, union President John Durso, union Organizer Noemi Barrera and Noemi Sanchez from Rural and Migrant Ministry

SPACE IS LIMITED TO 85 ATTENDEES!

Download event flyer and mail-in registration form

If you would like to become an event sponsor or take out an ad in our program, you can find sponsorship package options on the registration form above

REGISTER ONLINE

If you take an extra step today by becoming a monthly sustainer of Long Island Jobs with Justice, you can get FREE admission to the event and a bottle of union-made Pindar wine. Give what you comfortably can – current monthly donors range from $5-100/month. A little bit every month adds up to a very meaningful impact on our work to protect working people. Simply click “recurring” when you donate. Become a sustainer today!

August 4, 2021: Long Island Jobs with Justice Awards Dinner (in-person)

As we continue to go about our everyday lives in this environment of uncertainty, one certainty is that the work for justice continues.

Long Island Jobs with Justice would like to invite you to spend an evening with us at our awards dinner, where we will return in person to reconnect after nearly 1.5 years! 

For better or for worse, this year has been unforgettable. Living through the pandemic has exposed some uncomfortable truths about our society, and while we are grateful for Zoom and the ability to continue our advocacy, there is no replacement for connecting with everyone in person. 

We hope you can join us on Wednesday, August 4th at Captain Bill’s in Bay Shore as we honor the remarkable work and courage of essential workers and the advocates that have stood shoulder to shoulder with them! 

Our honorees for the evening include: 

Frontline essential workers and the unions that represent them
National Day Laborer Organizing Network
Rural and Migrant Ministry
Centro Corazon de Maria

We are honored to be able to celebrate our partners and all of the work they’ve done to support workers across Long Island!

You can purchase tickets and sponsorships online for the event here (preferred): https://www.eventbrite.com/e/long-island-jobs-with-justice-awards-dinner-tickets-161644806969

You can also download and print this invitation and RSVP form and mail to: Long Island Jobs with Justice, 390 Rabro Drive, Hauppauge, NY 11788

If you are unable to attent but would like to make a one-time donation, you can do that here: https://longislandjwj.org/donate/

We look forward to seeing YOU!