The New Domestic Order
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September 9, 2009--- "The New Domestic Order", The Nation Magazine
The New Domestic Order
---By Lizzy Ratner
Deloris Wright has been a nanny for twenty-one years. In the strange
class warp of Manhattan's Upper East and West Sides, this places her
squarely among the ranks of the invisible, a ministering ghost who is
rarely seen and never heard. And yet, there she was on a startling
spring Saturday, a 54-year-old Jamaican domestic worker standing at the
edge of Central Park, demanding her rights.
"We take care of your children. We take them to school, to French
classes, we clean your homes, do your laundry, and we care for your
aging parents, right here in this neighborhood," she shouted into a
microphone. "Now, with the economic crisis, we are thrown out into the
street with no notice and no severance pay, no unemployment, no safety
net, no nothing.... Some of our employers treat their pets with more
humanity than they would treat us."
Before her, a crowd of several hundred supporters whooped and hollered.
They were union leaders, young activists, sympathetic employers and, of
course, domestic workers--women from a UN's worth of countries who
understood Wright all too well. Patricia Francois, 50, a Trinidadian
nanny, had recently been forced to leave her job after her male
employer--a documentary filmmaker who lives opposite Carnegie
Hall--allegedly punched, slapped and verbally abused her. Mona Lunot, a
Filipina domestic worker, had spent her first nine months in the United
States all but indentured to an employer who took her passport and
denied her a single day off--a situation she endured until she finally
escaped in the middle of the night.
Like many domestic workers, these women toiled in underpaid drudgery
even during the best of times, members of a profession so devalued it is
still excluded from many of the nation's labor laws. But as the economy
collapsed, their lot grew even harder. So they headed to the Upper East
Side--epicenter of the domestic trade, playground of Wall Street's
bailout chiefs--to press their case for their own government rescue
plan: the first ever Domestic Workers' Bill of Rights.
This bill, which has been battling its way through the New York State
legislature for five years, aims to provide basic protections to many of
the estimated 200,000 nannies, housekeepers and eldercare-givers who
labor in New York State. Backed by a diverse coalition of labor and
religious groups and even employers, it calls for severance and overtime
pay, advance notice of termination, one day off a week, holidays,
healthcare and annual cost of living increases, among other fundamental
rights. By most accounts, it should have passed in June, but an epic
power struggle in the State Senate halted all business for a month. Now
domestic workers are hoping their bill will pass in September.
"We are fighting for the Domestic Workers' Bill of Rights, for respect,
for recognition, for justice," declared Wright, rousing the crowd before
sending it marching past the pre-war palaces of Wall Street honchos like
Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein, Morgan Stanley co-president Walid
Chammah and former Treasury Secretary and ex-Citigroup director Robert
Rubin. On normal days some of these women might have turned in to one of
these buildings, unseen and uncounted, the real invisible hands of the
market. But on this day they sang and chanted: "We're fired up! We won't
take it no more!"
Throughout the long history of American domestic work, women have come
together to demand rights, respect, a livable wage and, literally, a
room of their own (domestic workers have all too frequently been
banished to basements, laundry rooms and couches). In 1881, for
instance, members of an Atlanta group called the Washing Society
successfully organized washerwomen to strike for higher wages. The
twentieth century saw at least two extended organizing episodes--one in
the '30s and one led by the Household Technicians of America in the
'70s--as Eileen Boris and Premilla Nadasen explained in the December
2008 issue of WorkingUSA.
As the fight for the Domestic Workers' Bill of Rights suggests, a new
movement is rising, with ambitions to take a mortal thwack at the
industry's injustices. "We are looking to change the law, we are looking
to make history, we are looking to get fair labor standards," says
Francois, now a movement leader.
This latest domestic-worker uprising extends well beyond New York,
though the Bill of Rights campaign is its most visible expression. In
fact, throughout the past decade, nannies, housekeepers and
eldercare-givers have been coming together in Florida, Texas, California
and beyond--first a few women, then a few more in a rare kind of
political parthenogenesis. Together, these women forged a movement that
spans ten cities, several thousand members, dozens of nationalities and
ever more groups. In 2007 thirteen of these formed the National Domestic
Workers Alliance, a multiethnic, multilingual coalition; now it has
eighteen member groups. Though they are all still evolving, their
efforts have already garnered ecstatic praise.
"It is really a multiracial, multiethnic form of feminism that we
haven't seen very often in US history," says Nadasen, a professor of
history at Queens College. "Through their activism they are expanding
our notion of what feminism means." Ed Ott, former director of the New
York City Central Labor Council, adds that the campaign represents "a
model project for people who are working under the most brutal
conditions."
Others, meanwhile, praise the women for weaving three of our era's most
important movements into one: a women's movement, striking out at the
stigma against household labor as women's labor and therefore not really
labor at all; a workers' movement, defying notions about what kinds of
workers can and should be organized; and an immigrants' movement,
melding the struggle for rights here with the struggle for rights
abroad.
This new movement began stirring in immigrant enclaves during the
Clinton years, as the country's rising appetite for domestic labor began
increasingly to be satisfied by poor women from far-flung lands. "This
generation of domestic-worker organizing really started in the mid-'90s
out of the changes in the political economy," explains Ai-jen Poo, 35,
the whip-smart lead organizer of New York's Domestic Workers United
(DWU). "On the one hand," Poo says, "you had globalization pushing
people out of their home countries in search of a means to support their
families. And then you had global cities like New York that needed a
workforce of low-wage service workers who would meet the day-to-day
needs of the sort of white-collar workers who were operating the global
economy."
If this sounds theoretical, it has nonetheless had very real
implications for the country's growing domestic labor force (estimated
at around 2 million). The ranks of domestic-worker activists are filled
with globalization's refugees--with women like DWU member Barbara Young,
61, who lost her job as a bus conductor in Barbados in 1992 after the
IMF pushed the government to downsize its transit force; and Linda Abad,
57, a Filipina domestic worker and organizer who opted to "join the
global surplus labor" supply, as she put it, because the structurally
adjusted Filipino economy made survival (and her kids' education)
increasingly difficult.
Abad is a taut, quick woman whose story is instructive. When she left
her family to find work in this country, she didn't expect a rosy
transition, but she didn't expect the "discrimination" and "alienation"
either: the New Jersey employer who refused to help with medical
treatment after she injured her back on the job; the Park Avenue beauty
magazine editor (married to a Goldman Sachs executive) whose building
required Abad to ride the service elevator; the editor's frequent
screaming episodes, which inspired one of the kids to do the same while
hitting her and pulling her hair. "Because they have the economic
power," she says, "they think they can do anything with their workers
inside their homes." So she joined with other domestic workers to found
the Damayan Migrant Workers Association.
Certainly there are instances of benevolence, but the women interviewed
for this article cited a breathtaking range of abuses, from denial of
minimum wage, days off, holidays and overtime pay to wage theft, verbal
and physical abuse, sexual harassment, even slavery. Poo still gets
teary when she remembers one of the first women who sought her help, a
Jamaican housekeeper and nanny who was brought to this country by an
electronics executive and his family at age 15 and held in latter-day
servitude. For fifteen years, she raised their three kids and never
received a salary because she was told that her mother was getting her
checks. But the checks were never sent, and her employers gradually cut
off her communication with her family. "Ultimately the way she escaped
was that the kids she took care of saved their piggy bank money and gave
it to her to run away," recalls Poo. "And she didn't want to press
criminal charges because she didn't want to take the parents away from
the kids."
Poo and her colleagues managed to win the woman a $125,000 settlement.
For several years after that, DWU and other groups focused on the plight
of individuals. But before long, domestic-worker activists recognized
that if they really wanted to change the industry, they had to
organize--an awareness that seems to have happened almost simultaneously
across the movement. The members realized that "for every single case
that our legal department might be able to resolve, there's always going
to be another one or another ten coming through," recalls Alexis de
Simone, 27, the former women's organizer at CASA de Maryland, a Latin
American immigrants' rights group.
Put differently, they realized that they had to begin attacking the
roots of domestic-worker exploitation, which extend at least as far back
as slavery--in many ways the structural antecedent of modern domestic
work--and touch on everything from the devaluation of women's work to
the ravages of neocolonialism to the very institution that's supposed to
protect people's rights. "The government is in this, very much so," says
Abad.
The government has been an active player in the exploitation of domestic
workers for years, but the cardinal example belongs to the 1930s: that's
when the architects of the New Deal, when doling out labor rights,
explicitly excluded domestic and agricultural workers (both
predominantly African-American) from such landmark laws as the National
Labor Relations Act. Arguments around the government's right to regulate
the private sphere played a role in the decision, but skin color was
clearly the defining factor. "It was an exclusion premised primarily
around the issue of race, that Southerners would continue to have
control over the labor force of the South," explains Nadasen.
Seventy years later, some of these wrongs have been partially
righted--thanks largely to the last great domestic-worker movement,
which managed to win federal minimum wage and other protections in 1974.
But enormous gaps remain. "Casual" workers like baby sitters and
"companions" for the elderly are still barred from minimum wage
protections, and all domestic workers remain excluded from the National
Labor Relations Act, which guarantees the right to organize, as well as
the Occupational Safety and Health Act. And because most domestic
workers labor in environments with fewer than fifteen employees, they
are also excluded from such key civil rights legislation as the
Americans With Disabilities Act, the Age Discrimination in Employment
Act and Title VII, which bars most kinds of employment discrimination.
Add to this the difficulty of enforcing even the few protections that do
exist--particularly for undocumented workers--and for many domestic
workers it's still 1934.
All of which raises some weighty questions. How do you begin to undo all
these decades of exploitation, particularly without the right to
organize? How do you build power where there's been none before?
One increasingly popular answer has been to push for legislation
creating rights for household workers. In 2003 New York City domestic
workers persuaded the City Council to pass a bill requiring placement
agencies to obtain signed promises from employers to respect minimum
wage, overtime and Social Security obligations. Five years later, the
women of CASA de Maryland led a successful campaign for a bill requiring
employers in Montgomery County to provide workers with written wage and
benefits contracts. More recently, a number of the groups have gone
international, working with domestic-worker unions in South Africa,
Trinidad, Hong Kong and elsewhere. Their current goal is to persuade the
International Labor Organization to pass a convention protecting the
rights of domestic workers by 2011.
Still, by far the biggest effort has been the battle for the Bill of
Rights in New York--a campaign that is being closely watched by domestic
workers across the country, though particularly in California, where
groups have already begun plotting their own 2010 push for a bill. (In
2006 they nearly passed similar, if more modest, legislation, but it was
vetoed by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger.) "We know that if it gets
passed in New York, it's going to help legislative efforts across the
country," said Beatriz Hererra, an organizer with People Organized to
Win Employment Rights (POWER) in San Francisco.
On a sparkling afternoon, four domestic workers sat in the basement
offices of Adhikaar, a women-led Nepali rights group in Queens,
discussing the Bill of Rights. Escapees of Nepal's civil strife, they
were mostly middle-aged and older, and their tales ranged from nasty,
name-calling employers, to seventeen-hour workdays for $4 an hour, to
one woman's four-year nightmare toiling for a family that refused to pay
her or let her leave. These women know that the Bill of Rights won't
solve all their problems; for that they'll need even greater
transformations in women's rights, immigrants' rights and global
economic policy. But when asked what the bill could mean, they shouted
enthusiastically.
"We have to work seventeen hours a day, and hopefully with this we'll
have to work less," declared a woman named Basanta. "It will be better
than now!" added another named Brinda. "We can get our leave!"
"Christmas Day, New Year!" "Minimum wage!" shouted others.
By most accounts, the quest for the Bill of Rights began out of
discussions like this--specifically, out of the dreams of some 250
domestic workers who gathered in 2003 to discuss what it would take for
them "to feel respect and recognition on the job," according to Poo. The
resulting legislative odyssey hasn't always been easy. Even in the
absence of any vocal opposition, some legislators (in particular, those
whose constituents tend to be employers) have balked at some of the
bill's most basic demands, like health benefits and severance pay.
Nonetheless, this past spring, the legislative gears finally began to
turn, and after years of lobbying and forging alliances with labor
unions, religious leaders and sympathetic employers, a Bill of Rights is
close to becoming reality. Governor David Paterson supports the bill and
has promised to sign it. On June 23 the State Assembly passed a modified
version, a so-called Inclusion Bill that guarantees important rights
like overtime, a day of rest per week and inclusion in state human
rights and collective bargaining laws (though it leaves out important
others). Now all that remains is for the State Senate to pass its
version, which organizers hope will strengthen the Assembly version.
"At the end we're going to have what we all hope is protection for
domestic workers, with some dignity in their work life, a real degree of
enforcement for them, and a change in the discussion of how domestic
workers should be treated," says State Senator Diane Savino, the Senate
bill's lead sponsor, who has been pushing for a stronger version.
Will it be the dream Bill of Rights? Certainly it will be a powerful
initial step, the first time a state has guaranteed domestic workers
some of the rights and respect they have been denied for so long. But
don't expect domestic worker activists to stop there. "The work has just
begun," says Christine Lewis, a Trinidadian nanny and DWU activist. "To
say that when the Bill of Rights comes through, that it's going to be a
walk in the park--the work will just begin."