The Los Angeles County Federation of Labor (LACFL) is the central labor council for unions and worker organizations in Los Angeles County, California. The organization has its roots in the late 19th century when trade unions across the Los Angeles region formed labor councils for mutual aid, eventually affiliating with the American Federation of Labor in 1901. From the 1930s to the 1950s, unions affiliated with the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) participated in their own Industrial Union Council while unions affiliated with the AFL continued to work through the city-based central labor councils. The LACFL was formed by the merger of the CIO Industrial Labor Council and six city central labor councils in 1959. [1] As of 2024, the LACFL represents over 300 unions and more than 800,000 people throughout Los Angeles County. [2]
The Los Angeles County Federation of Labor has three hundred and forty-five affiliates representing its over eight hundred thousand members. This membership has grown at a staggering rate just in 1934 membership totaled 70,000 now there are over 800,000 members. The largest of its union workers groups is the 75,000 homecare and nursing home workers they alone now comprise a larger number of workers than the entire Los Angeles County Federation of Labor of 1934. Second only the homecare and nursing works is the 45,000 county workers that belong to SEIU. LA County Federation of Labor of Labor also represents over 30,000 teachers along with 28,00 members working in the film and television industry. The Executive Board of the LA County Federation of Labor's Executive Board consists of thirty-five members that are appointed to key union leadership roles. The LA County Federation of Labor also has a committee that deals with political Education called COPE with ninety-five voting associates and more than thirteen thousand representatives that can participate in its monthly delegates meetings. [3]
“A survey published in December 2003 showed that the three largest unions in the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor were SEIU 434B (with seventy-four thousand homecare and nursing home workers), SEIU 399 with forty-five thousand health care and other employees, and the United Teachers of Los Angeles (with thirty thousand teachers from the American Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association).” [4]
The Los Angeles County Federation of Labor has an executive board that consists of thirty-five members. There is a Committee on Political Education (C.O.P.E.) that has ninety-five voting member. C.O.P.E. also has 1300 delegates to participate in its monthly delegates meetings. It is also affiliated with the labor directory Labor 411. [5]
The Los Angeles County Federation of labor played a role in the initial fight for minimum wage. Through the efforts of the Building Trades Council whose main intent is and purpose is to benefit the Building tradesmen and his dependents. Activities of the Building Trades council had a direct impact on the accomplishments of labor their movement was justified by fighting for higher wages and shorter hours. They were successful in aiding in the fight for the eight-hour day and hoped to further their accomplishments with an even lower 6-hour day and with higher wages. The Building Trade Council took a step forward in bringing a bout a prevailing wage law by Federal enactment. This law made a requirement that all Federal projects live up to local wage scales wherever the building is constructed. The usefulness of this eventually lead to the members receiving benefit during times of injury with workers compilation laws. [6]
In more recent news Los Angeles County Federation of labor has started a new campaign to raise Los Angeles’ minimum wage from nine to fifteen dollars per hour. Following the recent win of the workers of large hotels minimum wage increase to 15.37 labor groups hope for similar results from the city council. A clear plan has not been put forth for the workings of a citywide minimum wage increase but labor groups are ready to fight for it. Mayor Eric Garcetti already set forth a plan to raise the city's minimum wage to 13.25 by 2017. The Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce opposes both plans noting that it would cause companies to have to lay off a large number of workers. [7]
The beginning of 1914 unemployment rates in Los Angeles grew at a staggering rate from January to April the Central Labor Council of Los Angeles did its best to dispense free meals to up to 200 men each day. During this time of great strife groups sought to alleviate their conditions by forming labor groups of their own, one of such labor workers was “general” Morris Rose. Rose assembled a group of unemployed workers under the north Main Street Bridge, Rose chose to call his group an army and was arrested by the police but later released after exploding that his group was one of nonviolence. The police hoped that Rose and his group would leave and join a similar one in Sacramento. Rose and his army chose to stay in Los Angeles and set up an unemployment office in the riverbed. He offered to place from one to a thousand variously skilled workers to business on short notice at a rate of $2.50 an hour with a workday of eight hours. Rose was later accused of being paid by open shop supporters to cause trouble among the union members by his followers he denied all allegations. General Rose was noted for adding a humorous note to the seriousness of the unemployment situation. Rose was able to create identification buttons that had “Army Unemployed – Los Angeles” on them, eventually the police grew tired of his operations and told him to vacate the city. He threatened to have all his men register as voters, call an election and take over the government – it never happened. [8]
It was represented by the January 1915 Los Angeles Times that the membership of the Los Angeles' organized labor was decreasing, “Hard times have hit the Central Labor Council and trade unionism in this city and is at its dying gasp.” This statement was based on the presumption that the Union Temple Association having problems selling stock to pay its mortgage and that the union secretary and assistance had not been paid in weeks was a sign of decreasing support for the union. The labor temple was completed in 1910 after seven years of fund raising and construction. By 1913 only $95,000 remained unpaid on the building. Members of the local labor movement were asked to retire the debt by buying stock shares in the association. Ten months later little progress was made because issues between the Central Labor Council and the Building Trades Council.
A drive to increase union membership began in October 1913 at the Fresno convention of the California state Federation of Labor. Paul Sharrenberg agreed to approach the membership for campaign funds; L. W. Butler was placed in charge of the campaign. The campaign started on January 1, 1914. By March, Butler announced that 25,000 nonunion men received information about the benefit of union membership. “The Citizen called the drive the most comprehensible ever attempted in the city – But it Failed.” The failure was attributed to a multitude of unstated issues including a feud between the Central Labor Council and the Building Trade Council. The result was the stagnation of the labor movement; the open-shop forces were able to suppress Los Angeles unions. The dispute between the Central Labor Council and Building Trades council caused a large number of workers to withdraw from the Central Labor Council decreasing its revenue at a time that could not be any worse. Months later the rift between the labor councils was healed. [9]
Maria Elena Durazo was originally elected to serve for the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor as their Executive Secretary-Treasurer on May 15, 2006. [10] Durazo attended college at St Mary's in California and graduated in 1975. In 1985, she earned a law degree from the People's College of Law. After college, she became a part of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union and the Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees Union. Durazo served as the Vice Chair of the Democratic National Convention Committee in 2008. [11] Durazo recently announced that she will be leaving the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor at the end of the year to take a national union job.
James Wood was one of Los Angeles County's prevailing labor leaders of downtown Los Angeles during the building boom in the late 1970s and 80's. During his reign of over a decade Wood assisted in building the Los Angeles Community Redevelopment Agency into he most powerful mechanism of social transformation in the city, before he was elected to head the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor. Noted as a versatile man, Wood was known as proficient and well versed in the boardroom. He was seen as a peer to top businessmen as well as working the docks doing the hard work of labor. Wood was born in Lancaster, California, but was raised in Merced, California. While attending Cal State Sacramento, Wood became the leader of a statewide drive to prevent tuition increases for state schools. After Wood graduated, he eventually moved to Los Angeles and joined the staff of the County Federation of Labor in 1974. [12]
Miguel Contreras became political director of the Los Angeles County Federation of labor in 1994. After being selected by James Wood, Contreras earned his position as executive secretary-treasurer of the LA County Federation of Labor by way of election making him the first person of color to hold his position. Contreras came from a family of farm workers in Dinuba, California there he joined United Farm Workers of America and learned organizing and the movements of politics. Eventually, Contreras moved to Los Angeles for his position, assigned by the international as trustee to HERE Local 11. While working with HERE Local 11 Contreras worked closely with Maria Elena Durazo. Contreras held his position as Executive Secretary Treasurer until his death, during his tenure he focused on immigrant workers and exasperated to his union into the Los Angeles political scene. [13]
Rusty Hicks took over January 1, 2015 as head of the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor. Hicks was unanimously elected as the Executive secretary Treasurer of the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor. Before taking this position Hicks had been the Political Director for the Los Angeles Federation of Labor since 2006 before this he was the District Director for a member of the California State Assembly. Hicks graduated from Austin College in 2002 and Loyola Law School. [14]
The papers and archives of the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor are held in Special Collections and Archives at the University Library at California State University, Northridge. [15]
Patrick Henry McCarthy, nicknamed "Pinhead", was an influential labor leader in San Francisco and the 29th Mayor of the City from 1910 to 1912. Born in County Limerick, Ireland, he apprenticed as a carpenter in Ireland before emigrating to the United States in 1880. He moved to San Francisco in 1886, where he rose through the ranks to become president of Carpenters Local 22, then President of the Building Trades Council in 1896. He was one the founder of the Japanese and Korean Exclusion League that 2 years later renamed into the Asiatic Exclusion League.
The United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, often simply the United Brotherhood of Carpenters (UBC), was formed in 1881 by Peter J. McGuire and Gustav Luebkert. It has become one of the largest trade unions in the United States, and through chapters, and locals, there is international cooperation that poises the brotherhood for a global role. For example, the North American Chapter has over 520,000 members throughout the continent.
Eric Michael Garcetti is an American politician and diplomat who has been the United States ambassador to India since May 11, 2023. He was the 42nd mayor of Los Angeles from 2013 until 2022. A member of the Democratic Party, he was first elected in the 2013 election, and re-elected in 2017. A former member of the Los Angeles City Council, Garcetti served as City Council president from 2006 to 2012. He was the city's first elected Jewish mayor, and its second consecutive Mexican-American mayor. He was elected as the youngest mayor in over 100 years, having been 42 at the time of his inauguration. Upon nomination by President Joe Biden after a previously failed nomination the year before, Garcetti was finally confirmed as Ambassador to India by the Senate on a 52–42 vote on March 15, 2023.
The SEIU United Healthcare Workers West (SEIU-UHW) is a statewide local union of the Service Employees International Union in California in the United States. In 2020, it had 97,000 members, down from nearly 150,000 in 2013.
The Fund for the Public Interest is a 501(c)(4) non-profit organization that runs the public fundraising and canvassing operations for politically liberal nonprofit organizations that advocate for issues such as environmental protection, consumer safeguards and public health in the United States. FFPI was set up in 1982 as the fundraising arm of the Public Interest Research Group (PIRGs). The Fund has faced lawsuits and complaints over its labor practices.
Miguel Contreras was an American labor union leader. He "was known as a king-maker for both local and state politicians." Contreras was born in Dinuba, a city in California's agricultural Central Valley, to farmworker parents who had immigrated from Mexico during the 1920s under the Bracero Program.
María Elena Durazo is an American politician serving in the California State Senate. A Democrat, from 2018 to 2022 she represented the 24th State Senatorial district and has been representing the 26th district since 2022 which encompasses Central Los Angeles, East Los Angeles, and Vernon.
The Union Labor Party was a San Francisco, California working class political party of the first decade of the 20th century. The organization, which endorsed the doctrine of nativism, rose to prominence in both the labor movement and urban politics in the years after 1901, electing its nominee as Mayor of San Francisco in 1901, 1903, 1905, and 1909.
Art Pulaski is an organized labor leader in California. Since 1996, Pulaski has served as Executive-Secretary Treasurer and Chief Officer of the California Labor Federation, which represents 2.3 million workers of 1,200 manufacturing, service, construction and public sector unions. He also served as the Executive Secretary of the San Mateo Labor Council in California from 1984 to 1996.
The Trades Union Congress (TUC) is a national trade union centre, a federation of trade unions that collectively represent most unionised workers in England and Wales. There are 48 affiliated unions with a total of about 5.5 million members. Paul Nowak is the TUC's current General Secretary, serving from January 2023.
Michael Bonin is an American politician, who served as a member of the Los Angeles City Council for the 11th district from 2013 to 2022. A progressive member of the Democratic Party, he was previously a reporter and a council staffer.
The Los Angeles Garment Workers strike of 1933 is considered to be one of the most influential strikes in Los Angeles after the passing of the New Deal. The strike is known for being one of the first strikes where Mexican immigrant workers played a prominent role. The garment workers strike occurred in the fall of 1933 in the downtown Garment District in Los Angeles, California. Leaders of the strike, including Rose Pesotta and other members of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union (ILGWU), organized the strike to be culturally orientated in order to include Mexican immigrant workers to fight for union recognition in the garment industry.
David Rolf is an American labor leader, writer, and speaker. He was the Founding President of Seattle-based Local 775 of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), which represents health care workers, and formerly served as international vice president of SEIU. He is the author of The Fight for Fifteen: The Right Wage for a Working America about the movement by low-wage workers to earn a higher minimum wage, and A Roadmap to Rebuilding Worker Power. Rolf was a founder of the Fair Work Center in Seattle, Working Washington, The Workers Lab in Oakland, and the SEIU 775 Benefits Group.
Olaf Anders Tveitmoe was a Norwegian-born American teacher, newspaper editor, and labor leader. Tveitmoe was a leading trade union functionary for the construction industry in the state of California for the first two decades of the 20th century. He was the founding editor of the weekly newspaper Organized Labor, which he edited for 20 years. He is best remembered for tangential trade union activity as the founder and president from 1904 to 1912 of the Asiatic Exclusion League, a political organization which sought to bolster American domestic wage levels by restricting immigration from Japan, China, and Korea.
The Labor Center is a research and extension department at the University of California Los Angeles focused on organized labor and labor rights. It was created in 1964 as the Center for Labor Research and Education and is a unit of the UCLA Institute for Research on Labor and Employment.
The UCLA Institute for Research on Labor and Employment (IRLE) is an interdisciplinary research unit within the College of Letters & Science, Division of Social Science, dedicated to research, teaching, and discussion of labor and employment issues. It was founded in 1945 as the UCLA Institute of Industrial Relations. It is one of the two research programs in the University of California system along with the UC Berkeley Institute for Research on Labor and Employment. The IRLE consists of four bodies: the IRLE Academic Unit, UCLA Labor Center, Human Resources Round Table, and the Labor Occupational Safety and Health Program.
Frances Nacke Noel was a women's labor activist and suffragette, and was known as "the most eloquent female orator of Southern California" in the early 20th century. Nacke acted as one of the primary female labor and suffrage leaders in the Los Angeles labor movement. She was one of the first "progressive activists" to tie to the suffragette movement to the labor movement, thereby achieving mutual goals of emancipation of both women and workers. Through her oration and organization, Nacke was a key contributor to the passing of the suffrage movement in Los Angeles. A large part of Nacke's platform throughout her life was compromising the differences between class divisions in the labor movement.
California's Assembly Bill 1066, Phase-In Overtime for Agricultural Workers Act of 2016, was authored by Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher and was signed by Governor Jerry Brown on September 12, 2016. This bill allows farmworkers in California to qualify for overtime pay after working 8 hours in a single day or 40 hours in a workweek. Prior to the passage of AB 1066, farmworkers were only eligible for overtime pay after working 10 hours.
Timothy Dale Paulson is a California labor leader, who currently serves as the Secretary-Treasurer of the San Francisco Building and Construction Trades Council after being unanimously elected in July 2018, and sworn in by San Francisco Mayor London Breed.
The 2022 Los Angeles elections were held on June 7, 2022. Voters elected candidates in a nonpartisan primary, with runoff elections scheduled for November 8, 2022. Eight of the fifteen seats in the City Council were up for election while three of the seven seats in the LAUSD Board of Education were up for election. The seat of Mayor of Los Angeles was up for election due to incumbent Eric Garcetti's term limit. The seats of the Los Angeles City Controller and the Los Angeles City Attorney were also up for election, as their incumbents, Mike Feuer and Ron Galperin, were running for mayor and California State Controller respectively.