On this West Virginia Morning, postal unions across the U.S. rallied against job cuts and the possibility of a privatized postal service last week and a vaccine exemption bill fails in the House of Delegates.
On this West Virginia Morning, postal unions across the U.S. rallied against job cuts and the possibility of a privatized postal service last week. Reporter Jack Walker stopped by a rally in Charleston and tells us about workers’ concerns.
And as part of our daily broadcast The Legislature Today, News Director Eric Douglas sat down with Dr. Cathy Slemp – former state health officer for the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources – and Del. Sean Hornbuckle, the House minority leader to discuss the defeat of the much-debated vaccine bill in the House of Delegates Monday.
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Maria Young produced this episode.
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Dozens of union workers and community members gathered outside Charleston’s main post office to voice opposition to federal job cuts Thursday afternoon.
Dozens of union workers and community members gathered outside Charleston’s main post office to voice opposition to federal job cuts Thursday afternoon.
President Donald Trump has set reducing government spending as an early administrative priority for his second term, approving controversial cuts across the federal workforce. Tim Holstein, vice president of the Charleston-based American Postal Workers Union Local 133, worries that could come with a move toward privatizing the nation’s postal service.
Tim Holstein serves as vice president of American Postal Workers Union Local 133, a chapter based in Charleston. Pictured in the center, he addresses attendees at a March 20 rally.
Photo Credit: Jack Walker/West Virginia Public Broadcasting
“Privatization would really be detrimental to the rural West Virginians in the state,” Holstein told West Virginia Public Broadcasting at the Thursday rally. “Do you really think that they’re going to want to deliver one piece of mail to you all the way up in a holler in West Virginia, versus concentrate on the inner city and corporations here inside the city?”
Trump has previously floated ideas of privatizing or restructuring the United States Postal Service (USPS), citing long-running financial concerns. USPS has also agreed to cut 10,000 workers as part of the federal spending cuts being led by the Elon Musk-backed Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).
Holstein said privatization and job cuts would come at the expense of members of the public who rely on the postal service, especially those in harder-to-reach areas.
Jeannie Meyers and Alison Meyers, from left, are workers at the United States Postal Services mail processing center in South Charleston.
Photo Credit: Jack Walker/West Virginia Public Broadcasting
“It’s just a no-win for union workers,” Holstein said. “It’s a no-win for West Virginia, being a rural state.”
Charleston is one of more than 150 cities across the country to host a rally over privatization and workforce concerns. Holstein urged residents to reach out to their members of the United States Congress to discourage privatization, adding that union workers and their supporters will continue to hold rallies on the issue.
“We’re here to fight, and we fight to win,” Holstein said. “We’ll continue to do what we have to do to sustain the work here for our union members and to sustain the facility and the mail here in West Virginia.”
On this West Virginia Morning, We’ll bring you information on a large pro-union rally that took place over the weekend at the capital, and Catherine Moore…
On this West Virginia Morning, We’ll bring you information on a large pro-union rally that took place over the weekend at the capital, and Catherine Moore brings us the story of a community organization from Clay County that is fighting for a better future.