organization:public service

  • What is Uber up to in Africa?
    https://africasacountry.com/2018/04/what-is-uber-up-to-in-africa

    Uber’s usual tricks — to provoke price wars in an attempt to increase their share of markets, evade taxes, and undermine workers’ rights — are alive and well in Africa.

    Technophiles and liberals across the African continent are embracing the ride sharing application Uber. Their services are especially popular with the young urban middle classes. In most African cities, public transport is limited, unpredictable and often dangerous, especially after dark. Uber is also cheaper than meter-taxis. Uber’s mobile application makes taxi rides efficient and easy, and women feel safer since rides are registered and passengers rate their drivers.

    Since 2013, Uber has registered drivers in 15 cities in nine African countries: from Cape to Cairo; from Nairobi to Accra. In October last year, Uber said they had nearly two million active users on the continent. The plans are to expand. While media continues to talk about how Uber creates jobs in African cities suffering from enormous unemployment, the company prefers to couch what they do as partnership: They have registered 29,000 “driver-partners.” However, through my research and work with trade unions in Ghana and Nigeria, and a review of Uber’s practices in the rest of Africa, I found that there are many, including Uber’s own “driver partners,” who have mixed feelings about the company.

    Established taxi drivers rage and mobilize resistance to the company across the continent. While Uber claims to create jobs and opportunities, taxi drivers accuse the company of undermining their already-precarious jobs and their abilities to earn a living wage while having to cope with Uber’s price wars, tax evasion and undermining of labor rights.

    Take Ghana, for example. Uber defines its own prices, but regular taxis in Accra are bound by prices negotiated every six months between the Ghanaian Federation for Private Road Transport (GPRTU) and the government. The negotiated prices are supposed to take into account inflation, but currently negotiations are delayed as fuel prices continues rising. The week before I met Issah Khaleepha, Secretary General of the GRPRTU in February, the union held strikes against fuel price increases. Uber’s ability to set its own price gives it a distinct advantage in this environment.

    Like in most African countries the taxi industry in Ghana is part of the informal economy. Informality, however, is not straightforward. Accra’s taxis are licensed, registered commercial cars, marked by yellow license plates and painted in the same colors. Drivers pay taxes. Uber cars are registered as private vehicles, marked by white license plates, which gives them access to areas that are closed to commercial vehicles, such as certain hotels.

    Uber is informalizing through the backdoor and pushing a race to the bottom, says Yaaw Baah, the Secretary General of the Ghana Trade Union Congress (Ghana TUC). The Ghana TUC, the Ghanaian Employers Association (GEA) and the government all support the International Labor Organization’s formalization agenda, which says that the formalization of informal economy will ensure workers’ rights and taxes owed to governments.

    The fault lines in Uber’s business model have been exposed in other parts of the continent as well. In Lagos, Uber cut prices by 40% in 2017, prompting drivers to go on strike. Drivers have to give up 25 percent of their income to Uber, and most drivers have to pay rent to the car owners. Many drivers left Uber for the Estonian competitor, Taxify, which takes 15 percent of revenues. In February 2017, an informal union of Nairobi drivers forced Uber to raise their fares from 200 Kenyan Shillings to 300 (from 33 to 39 cents) per kilometer; yet still a far cry from a foundation for a living wage.

    In Kenya, South Africa and Nigeria, the fragmented and self-regulated taxi industry is associated with violence, conflicts and criminal networks. There are reports of frequent violence and threats to Uber drivers. So-called taxi wars in South Africa, which began in the 1980s, have turned into “Uber wars.” In South African, xenophobia adds fuel to the fire sine many Uber drivers are immigrants from Zimbabwe or other African countries. In Johannesburg two Uber cars were burned. Uber drivers have been attacked and killed in Johannesburg and Nairobi.

    The fragmentation and informality of the transport industry makes workers vulnerable and difficult to organize. However, examples of successes in transportation labor organizing in the past in some African countries, show that it is necessary in order to confront the challenges of the transportation sectors on the continent.

    A decade ago, CESTRAR, the Rwandan trade union confederation, organized Kigali motorcycle taxis (motos) in cooperatives that are platforms from where to organize during price negotiations, and to enable tax payment systems.

    For Uganda’s informal transport workers, unionization has had a dramatic impact. In 2006, the Amalgamated Transport and General Workers Union in Uganda, ATGWU, counted only 2000 members. By incorporating informal taxi and motorcycle taxes’ (boda-boda) associations, ATGWU now has over 80,000 members. For the informal drivers, union membership has ensured freedom of assembly and given them negotiating power. The airport taxis bargained for a collective agreement that standardized branding for the taxis, gave them an office and sales counter in the arrivals hall, a properly organized parking and rest area, uniforms and identity cards. A coordinated strike brought Kampala to a standstill and forced political support from President Yoweri Museveni against police harassment and political interference.

    South Africa is currently the only country in Africa with a lawsuit against Uber. There, 4,000 Uber drivers joined the South African Transport and Allied Workers Union, SATAWU, who supported them in a court case to claim status as employees with rights and protection against unfair termination. They won the first round, but lost the appeal in January 2018. The judge stressed that the case was lost on a technicality. The drivers have since jumped from SATAWU to National Union of Public Service and Allied Workers (Nupsaw), and they will probably go to court again.

    Taxi operators don’t need to join Uber or to abandon labor rights in order get the efficiency and safety advantages of the technology. In some countries, local companies have developed technology adapted to local conditions. In Kigali in 2015, SafeMotos launched an application described as a mix of Uber and a traffic safety application. In Kenya, Maramoja believes their application provides better security than Uber. Through linking to social media like Facebook, Twitter and Google+, you can see who of your contacts have used and recommend drivers. In Ethiopia, which doesn’t allow Uber, companies have developed technology for slow or no internet, and for people without smartphones.

    Still, even though the transport sector in Ethiopia has been “walled off” from foreign competition, and Uber has been kept out of the local market, it is done so in the name of national economic sovereignty rather than protection of workers’ rights. By contrast, the South African Scoop-A-Cab is developed to ensure “that traditional metered taxi owners are not left out in the cold and basically get with the times.” Essentially, customers get the technological benefits, taxis companies continues to be registered, drivers pay taxes and can be protected by labor rights. It is such a mix of benefits that may point in the direction of a more positive transportation future on the continent.

    #Uber #Disruption #Afrika

  • AP Explore: Seafood from slaves | Associated Press
    http://www.ap.org/explore/seafood-from-slaves

    An AP investigation helps free slaves in the 21st century

    Over the course of 18 months, Associated Press journalists located men held in cages, tracked ships and stalked refrigerated trucks to expose the abusive practices of the fishing industry in Southeast Asia. The reporters’ dogged effort led to the release of more than 2,000 slaves and traced the seafood they caught to supermarkets and pet food providers across the U.S. For this investigation, AP has won the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service. The articles are presented here in their entirety.

    See Freedom

    http://explore.digitalglobe.com/see-freedom.html?mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiWTJJNU56ZzNNMlUzTXpnMiIsInQiO

    See Freedom

    With resolution no other commercial satellite can provide, WorldView-3 solved the problem of locating and identifying fishing vessels -engaged in illegal activity by delivering indisputable evidence of human trafficking in action. This critical, eye-in-the-sky proof gave the Indonesian Navy the confidence to seize the tainted cargo and succeed in freeing more than 2,000 slaves.

    #esclavage #droits_humains

  • Segregation Now, Segregation Tomorrow, Segregation Forever? - The Atlantic
    http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2016/02/segregation-tomorrow/459942

    Even if white people no longer openly promote having neighborhoods and schools to themselves, many of them continue to help make that happen.
    A map of Brooklyn, with each dot representing a resident, color-coded by race. Blue stands for white, green for black, red for Asian, orange for Hispanic, and brown for other Dustin A. Cable / Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service, Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia

    Progress has undoubtedly been made since the days of explicit segregation, and most white people no longer openly advocate for segregation in neighborhoods, schools, and offices. When speaking to researchers, many even argue that integration is important and necessary. At the same time, old racial stereotypes die hard, and perceptions that black people are lazy, criminal, and dim-witted contribute to the maintenance of segregation and the inequalities that result from it. Despite laws prohibiting segregation—most notably the Civil Rights Act of 1964—it persists on several fronts today.

    Some of the most striking studies done on present-day segregation have to do with how it’s connected to the ways families share money and other resources among themselves. The sociologist Thomas Shapiro, for instance, argues that the greater wealth that white parents are likely to have allows them to help out their children with down payments, college tuition, and other significant expenses that would otherwise create debt. As a result, white families often use these “transformative assets” to purchase homes in predominantly white neighborhoods, based on the belief that sending their children to mostly white schools in these areas will offer them a competitive advantage. (These schools are usually evaluated in racial and economic terms, not by class size, teacher quality, or other measures shown to have an impact on student success.) Shapiro’s research shows that while whites no longer explicitly say that they will not live around blacks, existing wealth disparities enable them to make well-meaning decisions that, unfortunately, still serve to reproduce racial segregation in residential and educational settings.

  • Here to stay: #Water remunicipalisation as a global trend
    http://multinationales.org/Here-to-stay-Water

    In the last 15 years there have been at least 180 cases of #water remunicipalisation in 35 countries, both in the global North and South, including high profile cases in Europe, the Americas, Asia and Africa. Report published by Public Services International Research Unit (PSIRU), Multinational Observatory and Transnational Institute (TNI). Cities, regions and countries worldwide are increasingly choosing to close the book on water #Privatisation and to “remunicipalise” services by taking back (...)

    #Investigations

    / Water, #privatisation, #Veolia_environnement, #Suez_environnement, #Water_and_Sanitation, #local_communities, privatisation, #public-private_partnership, #collective_services, water, A la (...)

    http://www.tni.org/pressrelease/180-cities-take-back-public-control-water-showing-remunicipalisation-here-stay
    http://www.remunicipalisation.org
    http://multinationales.org/IMG/pdf/heretostay-en.pdf

  • Drupal Core - Highly Critical - Public Service announcement - PSA-2014-003 | Drupal.org
    https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003

    If you find that your site is already patched but you didn’t do it, that can be a symptom that the site was compromised - some attacks have applied the patch as a way to guarantee they are the only attacker in control of the site.

    BBC News - Millions of websites hit by Drupal hack attack
    http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-29846539

    Drupal should no longer rely on users to apply patches, said Mr Stockley.

    “Many site owners will never have received the announcement and many that did will have been asleep,” he said. “What Drupal badly needs but doesn’t have is an automatic updater that rolls out security updates by default.”

    • La solution préconisée par l’analyste Mark Stockley :
      “What Drupal badly needs but doesn’t have is an automatic updater that rolls out security updates by default.”

    • On se rappelle ...

      When The Merde Hits The Fan...
      http://drupalradar.com/when-merde-hits-fan

      How can Drupal protect its reputation when projects go wrong?
      France.fr website is down
      France.fr, a major showcase for France as a tourist destination, went down after just one day. It was built by an agency that seems to have no prior Drupal experience. How can Drupal protect its name when any agency can claim to be ’Drupal specialists’?

  • La ségrégation raciale aux États-unis révélée par la #cartographie
    http://libertesinternets.wordpress.com/2013/09/16/la-segregation-raciale-aux-etats-unis-revelee-par-la-ca

    Dans le magazine « Wired » du mois de Septembre 2013, un article présente les travaux de Dustin Cable du « Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service » (Université de Virginie-USA). Le chercheur a généré un ensemble de cartes géographiques en SIG qui s’appuie sur les résultats du recensement 2010 U.S. La « race » de chaque personne (indiquée sur le formulaire du recensement) est représentée par un point de couleur – soit 308,745,538 points de couleur. Le résultat est une représentation visuelle immédiate de la ségrégation raciale qui persiste aux Etats-unis. C’est saisissant…

  • [Adra] CNT Calls an Indefinite Strike in the Street Cleaning and Waste Collection Services
    http://internationalworkersassociation.blogspot.com/2013/07/adra-cnt-calls-indefinite-strike-in.html

    · The staff is tired by the uncertainty created in the current process of bargaining the contract with CESPA.· The City Hall, which will manage the service, does not agree that all the work places, or the same salaries or other working conditions will be maintained. The Public Services Union of the CNT Adra wants to inform the public of the current situation of uncertainty that the workers in the public service of street cleaning and garbage collection in the municipality of Adra are (...)