E. M. K.

Tonight I am going with my wife to the opening of the Edward M. Kennedy Institute in Dorchester. When I was thinking about writing something I thought back to when the Senator passed away and some of the impressions I had of the time.

As a guy who grew up in a politically involved family Ted Kennedy was already at the top as the Senator from MA. As a matter of fact the Senator was elected the year I was born in 1962. But it was what came out about the Senator after he died that reaffirmed to me what Congress should be about.

All of the members of Congress that spoke about the Senator said a lot of the same things. That outside of being on one side of an issue he genuinely cared about his colleagues and their staff. I remember hearing from Senator Hatch that as much as they fought for position he was always a friend. Shouldn’t that be at least some of the way in Washington. Wouldn’t all Americans be better of if it wasn’t a game of kill or be killed.

I know that he at times frustrated a lot of his own side hear in MA on occasion but maybe it was the cost of compromise for something better for the country as a whole. To really see him in action just you tube “Ted Kennedy Minimum Wage” it is one of the funniest, passionate,and caring clips of him.

I had the chance to be seated with him at a business lunch and he came back to his seat after his remark and asked us “well what do think” about his remarks. I said to him it was great. He promptly looked and replied “Well I could have used some applause with the unemployment comments”. He then laughed and talked to us plumbers and electricians like he was from the neighborhood.

One thing is for sure about him and his family. They probably never had to work but they spent their careers trying to empower many who had none and quite frankly it lives on today. I guess caring is what comes to mind and thats what I will be thinking about tonight at the event.

In my position over the last 15 years I have come to appreciate the man who knew how to work the art of the game.

The Last March and Funeral of Cesar Chavez

Great story on so many fronts, Thanks

johnharte's avatarYou can't have my job, but I'll tell you a story

In this photo which has never been published until now, Dolores Huerta steps out of her dress shoes and into tennis shoes to participate in "The Last March" at the funeral of her United Farm Workers co-founder Cesar Chavez. In this photo which has never been published until now, Dolores Huerta steps out of her dress shoes and into tennis shoes to participate in “The Last March” at the funeral of her United Farm Workers co-founder Cesar Chavez in Delano, California.

The bulletin from the Associated Press flashed across the computer in The Bakersfield Californian’s photo department a few minutes after 9 am on Friday, April 23, 1993. I was alone and raced down the stairs to the third floor newsroom, where a group of editors and reporters were chatting. The day was just getting started, coffee was brewing, receptionists were handling what seemed to be a never-ending stream of phone calls that poured in all day long in those pre-email and social media days. Nobody else had yet seen the bulletin. “Cesar Chavez has died in Arizona,” I blurted out. “The AP just moved a bulletin.” And with…

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Hello All!

Good Morning, My name is Harry Brett and I am from the Plumbers Union in Boston. Known as Local 12 we have over 1700 members and its my goal to be able to share with you the many great things about the local, its members, and the plumbing industry in general.

I really look forward to writing my (many) thoughts about this great industry and expose to any plumbers that have chosen plumbing as a career that to have it truly fulfilling, you belong here.

Thanks, and as I get beyond this first post (hopefully i can find it somewhere) i will post pics and make it as interesting as i can.

Thanks for reading,

Harry

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