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Local workers remember the past, look toward future

H. Paul Johnson participates in the annual Labor Day picnic on Monday afternoon in Casper. Johnson has been a union member for over 55 years and is the past Vice President of the International Carpenters Union. Photo by DAN CEPEDA, Star-Tribune.

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Wyoming's economy is strong, but not everyone at Monday's Labor Day picnic was resting easy with the November election looming.

"I'd like to see decisions and policies that are made with working people in mind," said Craig Thomas, of Iron Workers Local 454 and president of the Casper Building and Trades Council.

Casper and Wyoming haven't felt the national recession the way other states have, he said, and with a change in leadership, he hopes that the state won't ever have to suffer to the same degree.

He became an iron worker as a young man because he thought it would be a way to live self-sufficiently and "retire with dignity." At 53 years old, he thinks he will be able to retire with the dignity he hoped for and credits the unions for that security.

It's because of union workers that hundreds were able to gather at the Iron Workers Local 454 office on Monday, said Mary Ellen Renz, a representative for the Pacific Northwest Regional Council of Carpenters. The picnic, sponsored by the Casper Area Trades and Labor Assembly and the Casper Building and Trades Council, was supposed to be in City Park but moved to the Iron Workers building because of rain.

Waiving her arms around a room full of retired, current and future workers, Renz said, "We forget these are the people that are collecting the pensions and that did the right thing so long ago."

It's people like H. Paul Johnson, she said.

Johnson joined the local carpenters union in Anchorage in 1952 and moved to Casper in 1955.

He started work on the Glendo Dam and in 1956 worked on the Dave Johnston Power Plant.

During the next several decades he oversaw dozens of strikes, moved to Portland, Ore., to be vice president of the International Carpenters Union and was president of the Wyoming AFL-CIO.

He worries, after 56 years as a member of the Carpenters Union, that while there's plenty of work in Wyoming, not enough of it is going to union workers.

"I'd like to go back to what we had," he said. "But what I can say is, what the unions did for us and what we did for the unions, I wouldn't have it any other way."

Casper's picnic was Gary Trauner's third Labor Day event of the day and scores of people mingled in the banquet room waiting to talk with him about his policies and his candidacy.

It's the working people that matter in a state like Wyoming, and in the country, said the Democratic candidate for Wyoming's loan seat in the U.S. House of Representatives.

"My wife's father is a 57-year member of the Iron Workers," he said. "I've seen what it's done for his family."

What's important, Trauner said, is for people to be able to earn equal pay for equal work, have access to quality health care and be assured they will have the financial ability to retire.

Wearing a green Trauner campaign sticker, Thomas said it's that kind of change that he and other workers are hoping to see in the upcoming election.

Contact city reporter Christine Robinson at (307) 266-0639 or christine.robinson@trib.com.


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Comments to this story.

Inky wrote on Sep 2, 2008 6:49 AM:

" Republicants are freaked by the following scenario, come November:
An Obama win, coupled with congressional gains by Democrats, could pave the way for passage of so-called “card check” legislation that could vastly increase union membership among workers across the nation.
Ever since Reagan, the GOP has declared war on labor and have successfully weakened unions in recent decades.
Conservatives fulminate that the card check is undemocratic and subjects workers to union pressure, never addressing the illegal pressure tactics that management uses to resist and block unionization. "

Dana wrote on Sep 2, 2008 1:01 PM:

" Want a job and not to be taxed into the 3rd world?

Vote McCain-Palin.

The GOP understands business and freedom.

The Democrats' sworn goal is the destruction of both. "

Dell wrote on Sep 2, 2008 1:20 PM:

" I find it funny that the very political party that claims to represent the working union man's needs is also that same political party that supports an endless stream of undocumented illegal alien labor.

Those illegal alien workers are now taking those once good union jobs and at bargain basement prices that business cannot ignor if they want to turn a profit and remain competative.

This endless stream of illegal alien labor is what is destroying the middle class in America. Wake up and smell that last paycheck, and kiss good bye your kids' chances at good union jobs if you vote for Obama.

The democrats are pandering to every group possible for votes and making promises that will ruin your chances and those of your kids. This is not the democrat party of a few decades ago. Don't be fooled by these liars and shysters.

What's good for American business is also good for American unions! If you want a job there have got to be businesses left in this country that can turn a profit competing against foreign companies. "

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