On behalf of the Local 21 Executive Committee, you are cordially invited to the Delegate Assembly on Saturday, June 16th at the Hotel Whitcomb in San Francisco.
Registration will begin at 8:30 am and the Assembly starting promptly at 9 am. Our agenda will begin with the business meeting and discussion of the FY 18-19 budget. We will also have an update on our activities and actions to counter the anticipated anti-union Janus v. AFSCME Supreme Court decision.
For more information and to RSVP, please visit our Eventbrite page. If you are a Delegate or will be an Acting Delegate for your chapter, you must RSVP by Friday, June 8th.
Our guest speaker, President of the California Labor Federation and AFSCME 3299, Kathryn Lybarger, will help guide a collective conversation on these critical topics.
Following the Delegate Assembly, there will be a special lunchtime reception at the San Francisco Local 21 office. The SF headquarters for Local 21 is located at 1167 Mission St., 2nd Floor, just one block from the Hotel Whitcomb. We will have a gourmet buffet-style lunch provided by a local union-friendly catering company.
Thank you, and we look forward to welcoming you in San Francisco on June 16th!
Local 21’s Special Guest
Kathryn Lybarger was elected to the Executive Council of the California Labor Federation AFL-CIO in July of 2012, and elected President of the Federation in February of 2015.
A professional gardener by trade, she took her first union job at San Francisco State University in 1999, and has been a gardener at UC Berkeley since 2001.
In 2011, Lybarger was elected President of the University of California system’s largest employee union—AFSCME Local 3299—representing more than 22,000 workers at UC Campuses, Medical Centers and Research laboratories across the state.
Under Lybarger’s leadership, Local 3299 has become one of California’s most dynamic and effective fighting unions—growing its membership by 45%, waging the first ever statewide UC Hospital strike, and delivering historic new contracts that dramatically increased wage, benefit, and staffing standards for UC service and patient care workers.
As Local 3299 President, Lybarger helped lead the effort to enact Proposition 30 in 2012, and remains one of California’s staunchest advocates for renewed state investment in Higher Education and greater accountability from public university administrators.
She also serves as an International Vice President of the 1.6 million-member American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), where she helped America’s third largest union organize nearly 100,000 new union members in the face of growing attacks against public sector workers.
The daughter of a unionized civil servant and a unionized public health nurse, Lybarger learned the importance of leading by example in the fight for working families at an early age. And from leading picket lines and organizing campaigns to walking precincts for pro-labor candidates, she has stayed true to those values—earning the California Labor Federation’s Annual “Shoe Leather” award in 2014.
Lybarger earned her BA from Earlham College and her MFA from the San Francisco Art Institute. She is a married mother of two children and resides in Berkeley.