'Scared' and angry: Here's why workers unionized at Yosemite, Sequoia national parks
For two years, labor organizers tried to unionize employees at a trio of celebrated California national parks, but they couldnt reach critical mass.
Then came mass firings of National Park Service employees in February under the Trump administration. Many employees were reinstated, but litigation concerning the legality of the firings winds on. The park service has lost about a quarter of its staff since Trump reclaimed the White House, and thats on top of a proposed $1-billion budget cut to the agency.
This summer the scales tipped. More than 97% of employees at Yosemite and Sequoia and Kings Canyon national parks who cast ballots voted to unionize, with results certified last week. More than 600 staffers including interpretive park rangers, biologists, firefighters and fee collectors are now represented by the National Federation of Federal Employees.
"Culture is hard to change," said Steven Gutierrez, a national business representative for the union. "It takes something like this administration firing people to wake people up, to say, 'Hey, I'm vulnerable here and I need to invest in my career.'"
https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/reeling-trump-cuts-staffers-unionize-100000333.html