Service Employees International Union (SEIU) is a labor union in the United States, representing 1.8 million workers in about 100 occupations in the United States and Canada. The main divisions are health care (around 50% of the union's membership, including hospital, home care and nursing home workers), public services (government employees), and property services (including janitors and security officers). With over 300 local branches, SEIU is affiliated with the Change to Win Federation and the Canadian Labour Congress. It is based in Washington, D.C., and is structured into seven internal departments: Communications, Education, Human Rights, International Affairs, Organization, Political, and Research.
SEIU is sometimes referred to as the "purple army," easily recognized at political events thanks to the union's purple shirts. The union is also known for its Justice for Janitors campaigns.
The SEIU was founded in 1921 in Chicago; its first members were janitors, elevator operators, and window washers. Membership skyrocketed with a strike in New York City's Garment District in 1934. Formerly known as the Building Service Employees' International Union, it absorbed the International Jewelry Workers Union in 1980 and later the Drug, Hospital, and Health Care Employees Union and Local 1199, Health & Human Services Workers.
In 1997, SEIU formed the Exotic Dancers Union and organized the workers of the Lusty Lady peep show in San Francisco into SEIU Local 790. This was the first (and as of 2005 only) successful union drive at a peep show or strip club in the United States.
In 1995, SEIU President John Sweeney was elected president of the AFL-CIO, the labor federation that serves as an umbrella organization for unions. After Sweeney's departure, former social worker Andrew Stern was elected president of SEIU. In the first ten years of Stern's administration, the union's membership grew rapidly, making SEIU the largest union in the AFL-CIO by 2000.
In 2003, SEIU was a founding member of the New Unity Partnership, an organization of unions which pushed for reforms at the national level, and most importantly, a greater commitment to organizing unorganized workers into unions. In 2005, SEIU was a founding member of the Change to Win Coalition, which furthered the reformist agenda, criticizing the AFL-CIO for focusing its attention on election politics, instead of taking sufficient action to encourage organizing in the face of decreasing union membership.
In June of 2004, SEIU launched a non-union-member affiliate group called Purple Ocean to stand with workers in the fight for economic justice - the first organization of its kind.
On the eve of the 2005 AFL-CIO convention, SEIU, along with its Change to Win partners, the Teamsters union, and the United Food and Commercial Workers Union, announced that it was disaffiliating from the AFL-CIO after the 50-year-old labor federation refused to pass the Coalition's reforms. The Change to Win Federation held its founding convention in September 2005, where SEIU Secretary-Treasurer Anna Burger was announced as the organizations' Chair. As with other Change to Win unions, most individual SEIU locals remain affiliated to regional AFL-CIO bodies through "solidarity charters" (which are now in dispute.)
Service Employees International Union | Change_to_Win_Federation | 1921_establishments | Canadian_Labour_Congress
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