All posts by C. J. Summers

I am a fourth-generation Peorian, married with three children.

Library building program gets off on wrong foot

Peoria Public LibraryThe Peoria City Council has a library liaison. It used to be John Morris, but since he’s left the council, there’s a new liaison: Gary Sandberg. An inspired choice, if you ask me, considering they’re planning to spend a whole bunch of taxpayer money on capital improvements.

Today’s Word on the Street gives a good example of why you want someone like Gary in there — to keep them honest, to expose back-room deals, and to make sure the public’s business is being handled properly:

…At-large Councilman Gary Sandberg, the library’s new council liaison, discovered that the library board’s building committee voted May 15 to recommend that the full board hire PSA Dewberry to program what will go in the new and expanded facilities. That vote was a full two weeks before local architects were asked to submit their programming proposals. Further, they were only given a one-day turnaround.

This is what you call “going through the motions” or complying with the letter, but not the spirit, of the law. The library board president (Mike McKenzie) defends the board’s actions because he “truly [doesn’t] believe [they] would have come to a different result.” So they sent it out to bid just as a formality. In reality, PSA Dewberry was preselected. The firms who wasted their time submitting bids were LZT Associates, APACE, and Farnsworth Group.

This is an inauspicious start to the library building program.

A discussion about “cheap labor”

China SlavesThis post is really a continuation of a conversation that started here with my post about China’s recent weaponization of space, and continued over at Knight in Dragonland’s site. Now I’m bringing it back over here because my response is essentially a new post in and of itself.

To set this up, I’m going to quote liberally from one of Knight’s recent comments because what he says is a defense of cheap overseas labor that I’ve heard many times:

Companies are going to utilize cheap labor to reduce costs, whether it’s in China or someplace else. Those workers are breaking down the doors to get those jobs because they pay many times more than they could make anywhere else in their country. Its not like those laborers will skip down the road to Shangri-La if the “evil” multinationals go away. More likely they’d end up begging on the street, picking through garbage dumps or selling their children for prostitution.

Transfers of labor save more than “a few dollars.” They save BILLIONS of dollars. A company can employ many Chinese laborers for what it would cost to employ one American, and the income for those workers often increases several-fold over what they could earn anywhere else in their own county. At the cost of one American job, 5, 10 or even 20 foreigners can vastly improve their income and the quality of life for their family. That’s what happens most often when jobs travel to cheaper labor markets … one American makes 20% less, but now ten foreigners can send their children to school and feed their entire extended family.

Do some companies take advantage of the desperation of poor foreigners and abuse them? Of course. Should those companies be held accountable? Of course. But we need to tread cautiously. Sometimes our well-meaning outrage at these “deplorable” working conditions ends up sending hundreds of workers to the streets to beg because now they have no job at all.

If I may summarize, the arguments given above basically boil down to these points: (1) We’re doing them a favor because these workers would be worse off without this labor we make possible, and (2) we must have cheap labor to keep our economy going. These arguments are not unique to Knight. I’ve heard them from many of my friends, read them in magazines, heard them propounded on TV, etc.

But I don’t buy them. I don’t accept them. I think they’re dehumanizing. I think they’re nothing more than a rationalization to help us assuage our guilt over the treatment of Chinese workers and other workers like them.

While these arguments try to paint a pretty face on Chinese labor, the truth is not so rosy. Take a look at China Labor Watch or the Congressional-Executive Commission on China report (2005) and judge for yourselves. Or read this from the 10/15/2006 San Francisco Chronicle (emphasis mine):

“The exploitation here is getting harsher”, said Han Dongfang, a union advocate with the China Labor Bulletin in Hong Kong. “On one hand we have better laws than ever. But in reality, there is no enforcement.”

Activists who try to promote change face harsh reprisals. About 35 labor activists are languishing in Chinese prisons, according to human rights groups. Pang Qing Xiang, who spent nine months in prison for organizing unpaid workers in his factory, said detainees are routinely abused.

“To them we were nothing,” said Pang, 60, who is from northeastern Liaoying province. “Certainly not people who had a right to demand anything, not even pay. When I told them work without pay is slavery, they just laughed.

On September 4, 2005, Li Qiang wrote in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer:

Last year, total U.S. trade with China reached $231.4 billion. Of this, $196.7 billion consisted of imports from China. The reality of these imports is that they arrive on the backs of millions of Chinese workers. These workers labor six days per week (seven during peak season), 13 hours per day, for as little as 35 cents per hour. They do not have pensions or Social Security; they do not have unemployment or medical insurance. By the time they reach age 40, they start having difficulty keeping up with the heavy workload. Soon, they are left with nothing….

Rapid economic development has greatly increased demand for the consumption of energy, which has led to overexploitation in small coal mines and oil fields. To reduce the production cost, such exploitation often takes place with cheap labor and without safety measures. This condition has caused frequent safety incidents. Many lives of mining workers were lost. The cheap energies produced in this way are consumed in industrial production, particularly in export-oriented manufacture industry, which is another reason why products made in China are so cheap in the international market.

The Telegraph reported just a few days ago on 548 slave laborers — 38 of them kidnapped children — who were rescued in the Henan and Shanxi provinces of China. The article concludes, “But workers’ rights and safety continue to take second place to the need for increased economic output. China’s labour laws stipulate a 40-hour working week and that no one under the age of 16 can work in a factory, but local officials habitually turn a blind eye to poor working conditions. Fifteen-hour days are commonplace for the workers in the factories of Guangdong that turn out everything from clothes and toys to MP3 players. At the same time, China’s mines are the deadliest in the world. Last year, 4,746 miners died in accidents.”

How can anyone read these reports and not have compassion on these people? These are people we’re talking about. People with flesh and blood. Can we really, honestly sweep this away by stating “oh, yes, that would be a horrible human rights violation here, but there, well, that’s good over there.” Is human suffering somehow different if it happens in China than if it occurs in the U.S.? Does the value of human rights change with the cost of living? That’s essentially what these arguments suggest.

I think the arguments given in support of Chinese labor are weak for another reason, and that is because they’ve been made and debunked before. There was a time when the “cheap labor” that Americans sought to justify was slave labor. I don’t say this flippantly, nor am I trying to be carelessly incendiary — I’ve thought long and hard about this, and I see a very serious, clear parallel. Pro-slavery arguments from the time of the Civil War often talked about how slaves benefited from the benevolence of their masters, and how this was superior to the working conditions in the northern factories. They also talked about how slaves were content with their servitude, and used this as a defense for continuing the institution.

Ever read the Declaration of Causes of Seceding States? It’s interesting that Texas used the “we’re doing them a favor” argument. Take a look at this quote (emphasis mine):

…the servitude of the African race, as existing in these States, is mutually beneficial to both bond and free, and is abundantly authorized and justified by the experience of mankind…

And the Mississippi declaration explained how this labor was the underpinning of their economic system:

Our position is thoroughly identified with the institution of slavery — the greatest material interest of the world. Its labor supplies the product which constitutes by far the largest and most important portions of commerce of the earth. …These products have become necessities of the world, and a blow at slavery is a blow at commerce and civilization.

I would contend that the arguments made in 1861 to defend slavery are the same arguments being made today in 2007 to defend cheap overseas labor, and that the arguments are no less morally repugnant now than they were then.

Rev. John G. Fee had this retort in 1851 in response to those who claimed they bought their slaves as “an act of mercy” that kept the slaves from enduring “cruel treatment”:

Carry your mercy a little further, as the primitive Christians used to do, and let him or her have their entire liberty—their “inalienable rights.” Though you may have rescued him or her from the robber’s bands, that does not justify you in continuing to be a robber, a withholder of the “inalienable rights” of man. You are doing the same thing, in quality, that the former master was doing; the quantity of suffering is a little diminished.

I think this is directly analogous to the situation in China. If you think that the labor we provide is somehow helping them, consider that they still are being robbed of their inalienable rights. The quality of what we’re doing is the same as what they would experience without our trade, but the quantity of suffering may be “a little diminished.”

Perhaps a former slave can teach us a little something about “cheap labor” and put those words into proper perspective for us. His name is Frederick Douglass (1818-1895), and he bore the scars of slavery, both physically and symbolically. He was “cheap labor,” as we so callously call it, and he had this to say about it:

Cheap Labor, is a phrase that has no cheering music for the masses. Those who demand it, and seek to acquire it, have but little symapthy with common humanity. It is the cry of the few against the many. When we inquire who are the men that are continually vociferating for cheap labor, we find not the poor, the simple, and the lowly; not the class who dig and toil for their daily bread; not the landless, feeble, and defenseless portion of society, but the rich and powerful, the crafty and scheming, those who live by the sweat of other men’s faces, and who have no intention of cheapening labor by adding themselves to the laboring forces of society. It is the deceitful cry of the fortunate against the unfortunate, of the idle against the industrious, of the taper-fingered dandy against the hard-handed working man. Labor is a noble word, and expresses a noble idea. Cheap labor, too, seems harmless enough, sounds well to hear, and looks well upon paper.

But what does it mean? Who does it bless or benefit? The answer is already more than indicated. A moment’s thought will show that cheap labor in the mouths of those who seek it, means not cheap labor, but the opposite. It means not cheap labor, but dear labor. Not abundant labor, but scarce labor; not more work, but more workmen. It means that condition of things in which the laborers shall be so largely in excess of the work needed to be done, that the capitalist shall be able to command all the laborers he wants, at prices only enough to keep the laborer above the point of starvation. It means ease and luxury to the rich, wretchedness and misery to the poor.

Cheap labor is, in a word, exploitation. No matter how you want to try to justify it or rationalize it, it’s nothing but a euphemism for exploitation. And its acquisition is nothing of which we should be proud. The U.S. should not have normal trade relations with China until they comply with international labor standards and improve their human rights record.

HOPC meeting rescheduled

The Heart of Peoria Commission meeting scheduled for tomorrow has been canceled and we are in the process of rescheduling. It will most likely be either next Friday (6/29) or the following Friday (7/6), or possibly both. As soon as we get everyone’s schedules coordinated, I’ll post the new meeting date(s) here.

Peoria County Board vindicated in PDC expansion denial

From the Journal Star’s breaking news feed:

With no discussion, the Illinois Pollution Control Board voted 4-0 today to reject an appeal filed by Peoria Disposal Co.

Congratulations to the County Board and all the activists who worked to oppose this landfill expansion. Here’s a press release from Peoria Families Against Toxic Waste: Continue reading Peoria County Board vindicated in PDC expansion denial

Taking the bus not as easy as it looks

CityLink LogoI had to take my car in for service today at the Honda dealership. I decided to take the bus to work from there just to see how well our mass transit works out on the north end.

According to the CityLink map, the route goes north on Knoxville, then makes a loop: west on Pioneer Parkway, north on Hale, east on Detweiller, and south on Knoxville. Since I was on Pioneer Parkway and there was a bus stop right across the street, I figured I’d catch the bus there. There was a nice CityLink bench there at the stop (which happens to be right in front of the Social Security Administration office), so it was a pleasant wait.

Well, even though the bus stop on Pioneer Parkway was the most convenient for me, the bus wouldn’t pick me up there. The bus stopped, but the driver explained that, if I wanted to go south on Knoxville, I had to walk over to the bus stop on Knoxville by Green Chevrolet and catch the bus there, there are also other options of Ottawa Party Bus Services for people that want to use the buses for more than transportation.”

There were no sidewalks where I was, so I had to walk over the grassy knoll and through a couple of parking lots to get to the other bus stop. This one had no bench — just a patch of dirt by a light pole with a bus stop sign on it and lots of traffic whizzing by at 45-50 miles per hour. I waited another ten minutes to catch the same bus that wouldn’t pick me up three blocks away.

Customer-focused?

I would suggest that this is not the “progressive, customer-focused transportation service” the CityLink Rider’s Guide described. It really wasn’t a big deal for me, being an able-bodied person, but this bus stop is right next to the Social Security Administration office. What if someone on Social Security takes the bus out here? Since it’s at the end of the line, how are they supposed to get back home? They want the elderly and disabled to traverse the grassy knoll and parking lots to get to the southbound bus stop, and then, if/when they get there, provide them no place to sit and wait?

Not surprisingly, there were few people riding the bus during my trip; no more than five people. This isn’t all the bus company’s fault. Part of the problem is sprawl and lack of pedestrian infrastructure (e.g., sidewalks), which is a city planning problem. Just like sprawl puts a strain on police, fire, and snow removal service, it puts a huge strain on bus service. Another part of the problem is places like the Social Security Administration office deciding to locate themselves in a place that has such limited accessibility.

Need for improvement

I’ve tried riding the bus several times, and here’s what I’ve observed:

First, bus travel is very slow. Part of the reason is that buses are pretty infrequent. They come only once every half hour during peak times, and once an hour during non-peak times. Plus, nine times out of ten you have to ride to the bus station first and transfer buses. Although the bus lines intersect elsewhere in town, there’s no easy way to transfer buses at these intersections. So unless you live on the same route as your destination, you have to ride to the transfer center first, which can add considerable time to your trip.

Second, many of the bus stops have no bench or shelter. If buses are going to be as infrequent as they are, every bus stop should at least have a bench. I doubt there are many elderly who would or could stand for half an hour to an hour waiting for a bus. Maybe that’s why I’ve never seen any elderly riding the bus. Ideally, each bus stop would also offer a shelter and a map of the various routes so the uninitiated can figure out what route they’re on and how to get to where they’re going.

Not everything is bad; the drivers are usually nice and the transfer center is a good facility. If you have enough time, you can get almost anywhere in the city you want to go; that is, there are a sufficient number of routes to meet most destination needs. And the price is right at $1 per ride. But as with anything, there’s room for improvement.

Homicide #11

With all due respect to those who think the media is too negative, I believe every homicide belongs on the front page of the paper, above the fold. The only time they should stop being on the front page is when they stop happening.

Homicide number 11 was just reported today. Here’s the list of all homicides for 2007:

  1. DeAndre Allen, 18 (1/1)
  2. Virginia K. Mallow, 72 (1/13)
  3. Domonique Alexander, 16 (1/25)
  4. David L. McCreary, 35 (1/26)
  5. Tamara Gregory, 42 (4/7)
  6. Anthony D. Hart, 32 (4/16)
  7. Dequarrius Sims, 17 (4/22)
  8. Carlyts Bovan, 22 (4/27)
  9. Montral Fleming, 29 (6/6)
  10. Ronald J. Lewis Jr., 17 (6/16)
  11. James M. Vaughn II, 51 (6/20)

I had the opportunity to talk to a lady who lives in Harrison Homes yesterday. She lives each day in fear for her safety and the safety of her children. Peoria’s seventh homicide victim, Dequarrius Sims, was shot at her back doorstep (you may recall he was shot in a case of mistaken identity).

I point this out simply to remind us all that these horrible crimes have more than just one victim. The victim’s family, friends, and neighbors are also affected. Ultimately, the whole city suffers.

(Updated: 6/21/07)

Worth reading

A couple of blog entries that caught my attention recently are interesting reads:

Heart of Peoria Commission given another month to live

The City Council tonight deferred action on the fate of the Heart of Peoria Commission (HOPC) until July 24. There was a meeting tonight at 4:30 that included Councilwoman Barbara Van Auken (2nd Dist.), HOPC Chairman Bill Washkuhn, Councilman Patrick Nichting (5th Dist.), and Mayor Jim Ardis. Although an effort was made to resolve the issue in time for tonight’s meeting, they did not reach a consensus, hence the item was deferred.

Van Auken said that several ideas were discussed, but didn’t elaborate on them. I imagine the HOPC will hear about them at our next meeting which is currently scheduled for this Friday, June 22, at 8 a.m., City Hall, fourth floor.

Councilman Gary Sandberg was the lone vote against the deferral. He wants to see the Heart of Peoria Commissioners appointed to other commissions — especially the Planning Commission, which is working on the Comprehensive Plan right now — regardless of whether HOPC is retained. This deferral delays that possible action another month.

In other Heart of Peoria Plan news, I had the opportunity to talk to Nichting briefly after the council meeting tonight. I asked him what he thought of the HOP Plan. He mentioned that he had voted for it and thought it had some good ideas. But he feels that ultimately the market decides which ideas will and won’t work — that there are certain market realities we have to acknowledge. He didn’t elaborate on that idea much further.

Of course one has to take the market into consideration. Just because a city comes up with good ideas does not guarantee that entrepreneurs will flock to fulfill them. However, on the flip side, it should be pointed out that Euclidean zoning did not come about by free market forces. It was imposed by cities upon developers to give us the kind of cities we see today. So, if anyone were to argue that segregated land use and automobile-dependent city planning were the result of popular demand by developers, they’re sorely mistaken. Zoning is all about cities deciding what they want their cities to look like rather than developers having free rein. New Urbanism is, among other things, a new and improved zoning plan that’s rooted in the tried and true principles of strong city planning.

Journal Star says homicides total 10 now

A while back I criticized the paper for labeling a police action a “homicide.” Today, it appears they have seen the light:

Lewis’ slaying is the city’s tenth. Not included in the list of deaths is the fatal shooting by police of 26-year-old James E. Lee. Lee was killed after he reportedly refused to drop a handgun when police responded to his Peoria home on a domestic disturbance call on April 26.

That’s more like it. Thanks to alert reader PeoriaIllinoisan for bringing this to my attention.