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Public
Employee Press Book review Tony
Mazzocchi: visionary union leader, peace activist and environmentalist
Tony
Mazzocchi grew up in the 1930s and 40s, when labor and left politics enjoyed
mass support. He was raised in a family circle where the highest principles were
militant unionism and unswerving opposition to racism. Mazzocchi was young enough
to escape the Red Scare purges, which in the late 40s and 50s silenced
many who had contributed mightily to the vitality of the labor movement.
The
young organizer helped build a militant, democratic local of the Oil, Chemical
and Atomic Workers in a Helena Rubenstein cosmetics plant. As constant organizing
built the union in Nassau County, Mazzocchi mobilized members to help other Long
Island unions and revitalize a moribund Democratic Party.
In addition to
wages, he took on the health and safety concerns of the members, who were constantly
handling chemicals. He expanded into wider environmental issues, laying the groundwork
for todays labor-environmental alliances.
As OCAWs national
legislative director, Mazzocchi battled toxic exposures that affected tens of
thousands of workers in chemical, oil and nuclear plants and played a key role
in passing the Occupational Safety and Health Act in 1970.
In the 1960s
Mazzocchi went beyond the bread and butter unionism that was then
the norm and pressed for unions to get involved with broader issues such as civil
rights, nuclear testing, the war in Vietnam and the environment. He sought allies
in these movements to expand the reach and influence of the labor movement, which
had begun its long decline.
In the 1990s Mazzocchi searched for ways to
create a movement that would transcend the stagnant, conservative leadership of
labor and the Democratic Party and began his efforts to organize a Labor Party.
His
death in 2002 left a void in progressive activism and thought, but a rich and
inspiring legacy. Theres no better way to learn about this hero and visionary
of the labor, environmental, peace and freedom movements than to read Les Leopolds
new biography, The Man Who Hated Work and Loved Labor: The Life and Times
of Tony Mazzocchi. The Chelsea Green paperback is $24.95 in bookstores and
available at the DC 37 Education Fund Library in Room 211.
Ken Nash | |