A Labor Day Message from National President William R. Dougan
Friday, September 3, 2010(National Federation of Federal Employees)
Labor
Day was first proclaimed a federal holiday by
President Grover Cleveland in 1894. Coming off
the heels of the Pullman Strike and others
before it, in which hundreds of striking
workers were killed by federal law enforcement
and private union-busters, the first Labor Day
was a somber occasion.
It was a
day where the sacrifices of hundreds of
American workers were to be honored, and the
aspirations of millions more to be celebrated.
As president and founder of the American
Federation of Labor Samuel Gompers described
it, it was "the day for which the toilers in
past centuries looked forward, when their
rights and their wrongs would be
discussed...that the workers of our day may not
only lay down their tools of labor for a
holiday, but upon which they may touch
shoulders in marching phalanx and feel the
stronger for it." Gompers saw it not only as a
time for remembrance, but a call to action.
More
than 100 Labor Days since, the determination
and rugged idealism of organized workers
throughout the nation have fundamentally
changed the life of every working American.
Because of the labor movement, we now enjoy a
40-hour and 5-day workweek, overtime pay, paid
holidays, and the accrual of sick and vacation
leave. We enjoy the right to organize and
bargain collectively for our health, safety,
and financial wellbeing. Most importantly, we
are entitled to the dignity that comes with
having fundamental rights in the workplace.
We stand
on the shoulders of those who came before us.
With solemn reverence, and with fierce
optimism, we honor them on this
day.
This Labor Day, I ask that you also keep in mind the millions of Americans who are out of a job right now; victims of an economic storm that has ravaged our nation for nearly 3 years. Please send your thoughts, prayers, and support to these men and women and do all that you can to help put them, and America, back to work.
