A View from the Ranks of Efling Jacob Barker skrifar 24. janúar 2023 14:31 In a recent interview with mbl.is, the secretary of Efling, Ólöf Helga Adolfsdóttir, said that people are willing “to blindly follow” the union’s chairman, Sólveig Anna Jónsdóttir. I found this statement quite frustrating, because according to my experience, Sólveig Anna is one of the only public figures in Iceland who seems to understand and honestly assess the current struggles of the lowest-paid workers. We can all see for ourselves, if we bother to look, that Sólveig has been consistent in her messaging and steadfast in her service to the union’s members. Most of us do see what Sólveig has accomplished with the union, and indeed, we want to see more of it. This enthusiasm was clear to me through Sólveig’s re-election to the position of Chairman amid a media smear-campaign against her, and while working with her and others on strike actions after the last negotiations failed. Here's what most fail to see: blaming Sólveig for either the perceived faults or the successes of Efling as a union looks past what I believe to be the most important reason she has so much support: She is organizing the union democratically to encourage workers' participation in claiming their own power. The negotiation committee met over twenty times before talks were formally cut and everyone has seen the interest and enthusiasm of the membership in our project at the meetings with the state negotiator and SA. Efling stands united. The game is rigged Here’s what else I see, from my perspective as a U.S. American immigrant here in Iceland since 2016: Most of the time I have been employed in Iceland, I was not paid in accordance with union contracts and standards, nor was I paid according to my actual experience level (I have an open claim against one company from 2019 …still waiting). Wage theft accounts for more total theft than all other forms of stealing combined and yet there is no effective recourse for workers who have been robbed blind by their employers. I see more and more foreign workers arriving to an impossible housing situation while hotels rise on every corner and private rentals turn profits with hardly any regulation to speak of. I see the unending epidemic of young men dying here while the city government discusses construction of a sporting arena. It sure does make me feel right back at home again – not in a good way. Union culture is a strong tool By the way, my home in the U.S. is Asheville, North Carolina. A friend recently established the first union in that city for workers in the vast bar industry. I myself only had the privilege of union membership for the first time in my life when I arrived to Iceland. I see here what a colossal difference strong union culture can make in the struggle for workers to just get a bit of relief from the grind and also have their interests actually represented. We should not take the privilege for granted, because it won’t surprise me if the long game here by those who would be pleased to see less worker power is weakening of the unions to such a degree that they are no longer effective or can be dismantled. Solidarity with striking workers everywhere and every time is the best and most basic way to ensure that doesn’t happen. We are sure of our vision and we know what's best for us I also see the establishment media becoming absolutely obsessed with the Chairman of Efling and going to every inconceivable length to assassinate her character and pretend that she is “bad” for workers and her own union. All these claims (just like the suggestion of Ólöf’s that Efling’s members aren’t intelligent enough to see for ourselves and draw conclusions) are offensive to me as a member of Efling and as someone who supports Sólveig Anna’s leadership, because they attempt to invalidate my own agency and autonomy, my own good judgement and intuition, as a worker and active union member. As if the other trade union leaders are hitting us over the head with their signed contracts shouting, “This is for your own good!” Let's stand together The chairman of Efling has the support of the members, as evidenced by two fair elections. She is simply doing her job and, in my opinion, doing it well. As I said to someone online recently regarding the debate about cost of living in the capital area: Don’t get upset that Efling is demanding more and consider instead putting pressure on your own union to do the same! Efling is not the bad guy for recognizing that workers need and deserve more, especially during years of record profits for the largest and most powerful business interests – and Efling is not the bad guy for organizing and acting accordingly. Finally, I see that all these obstacles, all of the unfounded claims and insults to both Sólveig and the members of Efling, are clear indications that we are doing well, perhaps better than some might have imagined. Áfram Efling! Höfundur er innflytjandi og meðlimur Eflingar. Viltu birta grein á Vísi? Sendu okkur póst. Senda grein Ólga innan Eflingar Stéttarfélög Kjaramál Kjaraviðræður 2022-23 Mest lesið „Múslimahjörðin“ að taka yfir Ísland? Árni Þór Þórsson Skoðun Halldór 10.01.2026 Halldór Sjálfstæðisflokkurinn yfirgefur okkur Lárus Bl. Sigurðsson Skoðun Málið of stórt fyrir þjóðina Hjörtur J. Guðmundsson Skoðun Af hverju efast fólk enn – þegar loftslagsvísindin eru skýr? Eyþór Eðvarðsson Skoðun Þegar samhengi breytist – og orðræðan með Bogi Ragnarsson Skoðun Að elska nóg til að sleppa takinu Ingrid Kuhlman Skoðun Manst þú eftir hverfinu þínu? Pétur Marteinsson Skoðun Reykjavík má ekki bregðast eldri borgurum Gunnar Einarsson Skoðun Traust: Hinn ósýnilegi hornsteinn íslenskrar heilbrigðisþjónustu Jón Magnús Kristjánsson Skoðun Skoðun Skoðun Þegar samhengi breytist – og orðræðan með Bogi Ragnarsson skrifar Skoðun Íþróttaskuld Kristinn Albertsson skrifar Skoðun Traust: Hinn ósýnilegi hornsteinn íslenskrar heilbrigðisþjónustu Jón Magnús Kristjánsson skrifar Skoðun Að vera vakandi karlmaður Sigurður Árni Reynisson skrifar Skoðun Mýtuvaxtarverkin - inngangskúrs í loftslagsafneitun Sveinn Atli Gunnarsson skrifar Skoðun Af hverju efast fólk enn – þegar loftslagsvísindin eru skýr? Eyþór Eðvarðsson skrifar Skoðun Reykjavík má ekki bregðast eldri borgurum Gunnar Einarsson skrifar Skoðun Að elska nóg til að sleppa takinu Ingrid Kuhlman skrifar Skoðun Ábyrgð og aðgerðir – fyrsta ár Flokks fólksins í meirihluta borgarstjórnar Einar Sveinbjörn Guðmundsson skrifar Skoðun Ný kynslóð Björg Magnúsdóttir skrifar Skoðun Manst þú eftir hverfinu þínu? Pétur Marteinsson skrifar Skoðun Málið of stórt fyrir þjóðina Hjörtur J. Guðmundsson skrifar Skoðun Sjálfstæðisflokkurinn yfirgefur okkur Lárus Bl. Sigurðsson skrifar Skoðun Bókun 35: Þegar Alþingi missir síðasta orðið Júlíus Valsson skrifar Skoðun „Múslimahjörðin“ að taka yfir Ísland? Árni Þór Þórsson skrifar Skoðun Ahhh! Þess vegna vill Trump eignast Grænland! Ágúst Kvaran skrifar Skoðun 35% aukning í millilandaflugi um Akureyrarflugvöll Ásthildur Sturludóttir skrifar Skoðun Við erum hjartað í boltanum Ásgeir Sveinsson skrifar Skoðun Áramótaheit sem endast Sigrún Þóra Sveinsdóttir skrifar Skoðun Vernd hvala er þjóðaröryggismál Micah Garen skrifar Skoðun Tímabært að koma böndum á gjaldskyldufrumskóginn Hanna Katrín Friðriksson skrifar Skoðun Uppgjöf í barnamálum Bozena Raczkowska skrifar Skoðun Að óttast að það verði sem orðið er Helga Þórólfsdóttir skrifar Skoðun Börnin okkar eiga betra skilið en ókunnugar afleysingar Kristín Kolbrún Waage Kolbeinsdóttir skrifar Skoðun Að nýta atvinnustefnu til að móta hagvöxt Mariana Mazzucato skrifar Skoðun Villi er allt sem þarf Birgir Liljar Soltani skrifar Skoðun Börnin borga verðið þegar kerfið bregst Svava Björg Mörk skrifar Skoðun Ómissandi innviðir – undirstaða öryggis og viðnáms samfélagsins Sólrún Kristjánsdóttir skrifar Skoðun Atvinnuþátttaka eldra fólks og sjálfbærni Halldór S. Guðmundsson,Kolbeinn H. Stefánsson skrifar Skoðun Mannasættir Teitur Atlason skrifar Sjá meira
In a recent interview with mbl.is, the secretary of Efling, Ólöf Helga Adolfsdóttir, said that people are willing “to blindly follow” the union’s chairman, Sólveig Anna Jónsdóttir. I found this statement quite frustrating, because according to my experience, Sólveig Anna is one of the only public figures in Iceland who seems to understand and honestly assess the current struggles of the lowest-paid workers. We can all see for ourselves, if we bother to look, that Sólveig has been consistent in her messaging and steadfast in her service to the union’s members. Most of us do see what Sólveig has accomplished with the union, and indeed, we want to see more of it. This enthusiasm was clear to me through Sólveig’s re-election to the position of Chairman amid a media smear-campaign against her, and while working with her and others on strike actions after the last negotiations failed. Here's what most fail to see: blaming Sólveig for either the perceived faults or the successes of Efling as a union looks past what I believe to be the most important reason she has so much support: She is organizing the union democratically to encourage workers' participation in claiming their own power. The negotiation committee met over twenty times before talks were formally cut and everyone has seen the interest and enthusiasm of the membership in our project at the meetings with the state negotiator and SA. Efling stands united. The game is rigged Here’s what else I see, from my perspective as a U.S. American immigrant here in Iceland since 2016: Most of the time I have been employed in Iceland, I was not paid in accordance with union contracts and standards, nor was I paid according to my actual experience level (I have an open claim against one company from 2019 …still waiting). Wage theft accounts for more total theft than all other forms of stealing combined and yet there is no effective recourse for workers who have been robbed blind by their employers. I see more and more foreign workers arriving to an impossible housing situation while hotels rise on every corner and private rentals turn profits with hardly any regulation to speak of. I see the unending epidemic of young men dying here while the city government discusses construction of a sporting arena. It sure does make me feel right back at home again – not in a good way. Union culture is a strong tool By the way, my home in the U.S. is Asheville, North Carolina. A friend recently established the first union in that city for workers in the vast bar industry. I myself only had the privilege of union membership for the first time in my life when I arrived to Iceland. I see here what a colossal difference strong union culture can make in the struggle for workers to just get a bit of relief from the grind and also have their interests actually represented. We should not take the privilege for granted, because it won’t surprise me if the long game here by those who would be pleased to see less worker power is weakening of the unions to such a degree that they are no longer effective or can be dismantled. Solidarity with striking workers everywhere and every time is the best and most basic way to ensure that doesn’t happen. We are sure of our vision and we know what's best for us I also see the establishment media becoming absolutely obsessed with the Chairman of Efling and going to every inconceivable length to assassinate her character and pretend that she is “bad” for workers and her own union. All these claims (just like the suggestion of Ólöf’s that Efling’s members aren’t intelligent enough to see for ourselves and draw conclusions) are offensive to me as a member of Efling and as someone who supports Sólveig Anna’s leadership, because they attempt to invalidate my own agency and autonomy, my own good judgement and intuition, as a worker and active union member. As if the other trade union leaders are hitting us over the head with their signed contracts shouting, “This is for your own good!” Let's stand together The chairman of Efling has the support of the members, as evidenced by two fair elections. She is simply doing her job and, in my opinion, doing it well. As I said to someone online recently regarding the debate about cost of living in the capital area: Don’t get upset that Efling is demanding more and consider instead putting pressure on your own union to do the same! Efling is not the bad guy for recognizing that workers need and deserve more, especially during years of record profits for the largest and most powerful business interests – and Efling is not the bad guy for organizing and acting accordingly. Finally, I see that all these obstacles, all of the unfounded claims and insults to both Sólveig and the members of Efling, are clear indications that we are doing well, perhaps better than some might have imagined. Áfram Efling! Höfundur er innflytjandi og meðlimur Eflingar.
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