Animation Guild

Fall 2021

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16 KEYFRAME On the surface, it doesn't seem like last year's TAG-hosted Halloween party has anything in common with this summer's IATSE's 69th Quadrennial Convention. One was inundated with sugared-up kids in costumes. The other featured delegates from local unions throughout the U.S. and Canada voting on resolutions that can affect the jobs of 150,000 union members. In fact, there are strong common threads, and they all help tie the knot of solidarity that gives unions as a collective body their strength. When TAG's Family and Membership Committee came up with the idea for a drive-through, trunk-or- treat Halloween party, they joined forces with the Affiliated Property Craftspersons Guild, Motion Picture Costumers Guild, and Costume Designers Guild. It was about more than just offering a little relief from the pandemic. Families from numerous Hollywood IATSE Locals showed up, and it was a reminder during that isolating time that local unions are not islands unto themselves. Each Local might have its own unique issues, but that doesn't mean one's needs—or one's solutions—aren't relevant to the others. "It's good for us to reach out and look at what's happening outside of our own Local, because very often the issues we're experiencing—other Locals are experiencing, too," says Teri Hendrich Cusumano, chair of TAG's Color Designer Committee. "Instead of trying to work on an issue in your corner and everyone else kind of doing the same, it's usually more effective if you come together to work on your common problems. You don't know if they exist until you reach out to those other members." That outreach essentially occurs in three ways. The most formal is the International Quadrennial Convention, which takes place every four years and includes IATSE's largest legislative body. "This is where the [multi-union] membership as a whole really gets to weigh in on matters that affect them," says TAG Business Representative Steve Kaplan. "The international constitution is reopened. The international executive body is UNIONS STRONG "STRONGER TOGETHER" IS MORE THAN JUST A HANDY CATCHPHRASE—IT'S THE LIFEBLOOD OF THE IATSE LOCALS LIFTING EACH OTHER UP TO SUPPORT EQUITY AND FAIR TREATMENT ON THE JOB. reelected. It's a pretty heady thing to be a part of." Next is the annual IATSE District 2 Convention, which represents 49 locals with approximately 45,000 members in California, Arizona, Nevada, and Hawai'i. Cusumano says this is another clear way to support each other, "especially when each Local might bring forth a resolution, and they're asking other Locals for support on that resolution." Not everyone can be an executive board member or convention delegate or even attendee, though. But that doesn't mean there aren't ways to band together and effect change beyond the politics and the bargaining table. For example, pay inequities between typically male- and female-dominated jobs need to be addressed in negotiations, but reshaping the makeup of these jobs is something any TAG member can help with—especially when it's done in partnership with members from other Locals. Cusumano describes a presentation, hosted by the District 2 Women's Committee, that addressed how women typically put themselves at a disadvantage in the workplace by using qualifying language that makes them sound less certain. The committee is now exploring workshops to empower women to run for union leadership positions. T H E L O C A L

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