Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 48, Decatur, Adams County, 26 February 1958 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Union Leaders Hope To Crack Anti-Labor Acts
By SCOTT R. SCHMEDEL United Press Staff Correspondent; INDIANAPOLIS i UP’—Hoosier labor union leaders have found in the present unemployment situation a wedge they hope will crack Indiana's so-called “anti-labor legislation. They found it at the end of the first week in February, when ballooning Indiana unemployment swelled the number of compensation blaims above 100,000. The union men gained an audience with Governor Handley last week to present their views on how to combat the worst employment slump since 1946. With state CIO president Dallas. Sells as spokesman, they proposed three measures for some immediate relief: more surplus food distribution by township trustees* a prompt start of the federal-backed road-building program, and ex- ’ panded hospital construction and renovation. But their primary purpose in getting inside the governor's ' chambers was to repeat their demand for a special sessionof the Indiana General Assembly “to rectify the evils'' of the unem-1 . ployment Yienefits and “right-to-work" laws. Wants. SUB Authorised I Handley repeated he had no intention of calling legislators back ! this year. V To Sells, the first blow should be struck at the state law which forbids employers to "give supple-1 mental unemployment benefits tSUBt in excess of the maximum compensation paid by the state. ( -At -present a jobless Hoosier | covered by state unemployment insurance gets a maximum of $33 a week for a -maximum of 20! weeks during any one-year period. “If Hoosiers could draw SUB.’’; I Sells told United Press, “each laid-off worker's purchasing power would be increased by sl3 49 a 'week—the current benefit payj ment in other states." j “The basic problem is to put 'purchasing power back in the hands of the people," Sells insisted. “There just aren't enough customers to buy what s produced" The other state law' that union Headers want repealed is the i “right-to-work ‘ measure enacted by the Indiana Legislature las't vear. The law prohibits discrimination against an employe either because he is or is not a union j- member. Labor unions have dei scribed the law as “union-wreck-•ing." The current unemployment situation. Sells said, is "ntnrifh Korse than in other years. Auto, -steel, electrical, and the heavier industries are in slumps that definitely are not seasonal." 13.000 Auto Workers Off “The problem is serious enough that it is not going to right itself,” he said. “The three worsthit areas are around South Bend. Evansville, and Terre Haute, and Fort Wayne is becoming a critical one." , » Sells noted that the numbdh of unemployment compensation claims doesn’t show' how many plants are on short work weeks ! and how- many laid-off workers ! have already exhausted state benefits. , - u u tn Lake County, which has 100,000 AFL-CIO members, a midJanuary report showed 13,000 had been laid off in the previous three months, and 35,000 were on short wwk weeks.” he. said. “This didn't include 1.500 lay-offs at plants not covered by the AFLCIQ or 500 railroad workers." . “Auto workers locals," he added, "which have about 90,000 members in the state. • reported nearly 13.000 lay-offs duMng December and January.' “The auto industry has put so much in expansion that it hasn t
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1958
[beeh able to keep purchasing I power in balance with production," Sells said, “and there are many auto parts manufacturers in this state." The whole unemployment crisis will be “complicated" by automotive industry labor contracts coming up for renewal this summer. Sells added Questions Ike Optimism He also blamed higher taxes and the “unemployment cycle: i lay-offs resulting in more layoffs” for the current recession. Sells is skeptical of predictions by President Eisenhower and administration advisers that there will be an upturn in hiring next month. “There has to be a reason for a March increase." Sells said, “and they haven't told us what it I is. There's bound to be some relief because construction picks up iin the spring. But it's pretty dif- ' ficult to see how that will solve the problem of basic industry, which is not seasonal. “It won't solve the problem in South Bend and Evansville,” Sells went on. “We've got to find some • way of getting w'ork into these rcas He rediculed Handley's methods of attracting new business to the state and said advertisements and brochures touting Indiana’s low taxes and the i;ight-to-work law had little effect on industry leaders. • . I “Indiana s taxes are just as high as any other state’s.' Sells isaid, "and as many industries arc j against the right-to-work law as are for it " Then coming back to the unions fight for SUB. Sells said: “The people chuld absorb more of our Americah production potential if they had the money to spend. That's why we want to put more money—in- their hands... — (Next: Governor's side) One Driver Killed In Head-on Crash LOOGOOTEE HP — Robert J Elmer. 25. Schnellville, was killed ; today when his automobile collided head-on with another car in Ind. 45 at the edge of Loogootee. Authorities said Elmer drove up j behind a highway- motor grader i and swerved, into the other lane ' of traffic to avoid hitting the grader. His car yollided with one driven by Rex Stafford. 31. Odon 1 Stafford, Victor Ault. 45. Odon, and John Guthrie. 33. Netberry, J riding io work at the U S Gyp- ! sum plant at Shoals were injured seriously and taken to Daviess J County Hospital at Washington. No Pheasant i. SENECA FALLS. N. Y. — (W [ — The pheasant season opened I with two bangs for Policeman An- • thony Vitetta. He told fellow offii cers he was walking in a park when pelted by a shotgun. Two : minutes later, as Vitetta was heading for his car and a hospital, an- • other blast caught him. The officer was treated at the hospital for 1 wounds on the neck, forehead and " i temple. God does not give excellence to men but as the reward of labor. ’ Seek your life's nourishment in I your life's work. — Phillip Brooks— FILMS '! Devel&ped at Edwards 24-HOUR SERVICE Kuhne Drug Store
