In Hurricane Ruins, North Carolina Food Workers Organize and Fight
Restaurant workers threw themselves into cooking meals for thousands of displaced people with the local Mutual Aid Disaster Relief group. AFBU members helped workers apply for relief funds, while another crew drove water tubs around to help isolated seniors flush their toilets. Photo: AFBU
https://labornotes.org/2024/12/hurricane-ruins-north-carolina-food-workers-organize-and-fight
December 05, 2024 / Keith Brower Brown
Twenty-one days without running water. A week before any cell service or internet. Hospitals closed, and thousands of houses swept away.
Not long after developers started trumpeting the city of Asheville, North Carolina, as a climate haven from coastal storms, the area experienced catastrophic flooding. Upland Tennessee and North Carolina were the hardest hit by Hurricane Helene on September 27.
For restaurant workers, the crisis is still getting worse, says Miranda Escalante, a hotel bartender and co-chair of Asheville Food & Beverage United, an organization of restaurant workers. At least three-quarters have been laid off since the storm, she said, in what would have been peak season. But their landlords are still demanding rent.
When a climate disaster hits, what can unions do? North Carolinas service workers are demanding that recovery and rebuilding happen on their terms.
FULL story at link above.