Business Manager and I.E.C. Chairman Christopher Erikson (front row center)
pictured with the Local 3 delegation. Also pictured is EWMC President Emeritus Robbie Sparks.
IBEW members participate in the EWMC Day of Service.
The 27th Annual Electrical  Workers Minority Caucus (EWMC) Leadership Convention began on January 11, 2017. The five-day event, themed “Building a  Better World Together,” was hosted by IBEW Local 47 and Local 11 in Anaheim,  CA. The five hundred attendees hailed from all over the United States and  Canada. A total of forty-three delegates from Local 3 attended, led by our  Business Manager and Chairman of the IEC Christopher Erikson. 
  The  Electrical Workers Minority Caucus (EWMC) New York City Chapter is comprised of  four Local 3-sanctioned clubs: Amber Light Society, Asian-American Cultural  Society, Lewis Howard Latimer Progressive Association and the Santiago Iglesias  Educational Society.
  The  Electrical Workers Minority Caucus (EWMC) conducts its yearly gathering over  the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. holiday weekend. As a fervent advocate of  community building and activism, Dr. King once stated, “The time is always  right to do what’s right.” The EWMC embodied Dr. King’s spirit by allocating a  full day of service to giving back to those who are in need and those who have  sacrificed so much.
  Three  groups, totaling three hundred eighty delegates participated in servicing  various organizations including two local food banks and a veterans housing  facility. Over six thousand pounds of food were sorted, boxed and ready for  distribution to those in need. Volunteers also performed electrical work and  painted housing units, home to those who have made the ultimate sacrifice,  serving our country faithfully in the armed services. President of the EWMC Keith  Edwards stated, “Everything that we have in America is because of the veterans  and things would be truly different if it weren’t for their service.” As work  was being performed, veterans showed their appreciation by thanking the  volunteers, one saying “It’s great to know we are not forgotten.” 
  The EWMC  Day of Service did not go unnoticed. CBS Los Angeles visited the volunteer  locations and featured the great work taking place on the local news broadcast.  A video of the story can be seen at losangeles.cbslocal.com by typing in the  search box “Hundreds of union workers put their skills together to help those  in need.”
  Following  the Day of Service, attendees engaged in a myriad of plenary sessions and  discussions. Bill Fletcher, trade unionist and former president of the  TransAfrica Forum gave a rousing and motivating speech on the necessity of  staying true to one’s å_values when negotiating with politicians. The Harvard  alum encouraged leadership to not be swayed by fancy dinners or invitations to  the White House but implored leadership to be audacious and have the  membership’s best interest at heart. Guest speakers at the conference also  included Congresswoman Linda Sanchez of California’s 38th District,  California’s State Treasurer John Chiang, Environmental Justice State  Coordinator of the Sierra Club Sharonda Williams-Tack, Esq., National Labor  Organizer of the Sierra Club Larry Williams, Jr. and President of the UCLA  Labor Center Kent Wong, Esq. 
  The  plenary sessions aimed to address many vital issues that affect not only those  in the trade union movement but also those who exist in low to middle income  America. The topics discussed were: Mass Incarceration ‰ÛÓ Why prison sentences  feel like life sentences and what IBEW/EWMC can do to help; How to talk politics  when there is a new sheriff in town; Understanding parliamentary procedures;  race, inclusion and labor; The faces of immigration reform and movement  building; Achieving livable wages on a livable planet. These courses provided a  platform for open discussion and debate. Many ideas were born and new knowledge  obtained. Participants will take home their newly acquired skills to further  pro-worker agendas in their home locals.
  The EWMC  conference also allowed time out for fun and entertainment. Local 47 and Local  11 coordinated efforts to hold a special reception for all conference  delegates. Attendees descended upon downtown Disney and had two restaurants to  choose from, Tortilla Jo’s and Brennan’s Jazz Kitchen. Participants were  treated to a variety of entertainment acts including a Brazilian Samba band and  dancers, comedians and a breakdancing crew. Guests also took pleasure in  attending an evening of å_dining and dancing. Both events provided an atmosphere  of fellowship and helped foster long-standing friendships formed in this year’s  conference and in years prior. 
  The yearly  EWMC Leadership Convention satisfied its shared mission of promoting activism,  workplace excellence, foster leadership development, reinforcing education  and building coalitions across spectrums.
EWMC delegates gather for a photo before the Day of Service.
 Left to right: Michael Felipe, Vice President S.I.E.S., Robert Martin, Recording
Sectretary S.I.E.S., EWMC delegate Donald Pryce, Business Representative and 3rd District Youth Chairman Christopher Erikson Jr., Angel Corchado, President 419
Spartan Club and Gil Medina, President S.I.E.S.
Left to right: Michael Felipe, Vice President S.I.E.S., Robert Martin, Recording
Sectretary S.I.E.S., EWMC delegate Donald Pryce, Business Representative and 3rd District Youth Chairman Christopher Erikson Jr., Angel Corchado, President 419
Spartan Club and Gil Medina, President S.I.E.S.
 
 
