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Hunger Strike! How Immigrant Taxi Drivers Took on City Hall

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Conteúdo fornecido por AZI Media. Todo o conteúdo do podcast, incluindo episódios, gráficos e descrições de podcast, é carregado e fornecido diretamente por AZI Media ou por seu parceiro de plataforma de podcast. Se você acredita que alguém está usando seu trabalho protegido por direitos autorais sem sua permissão, siga o processo descrito aqui https://pt.player.fm/legal.

When Augustine Tang’s father passed away, Augustine decided to inherit his taxi medallion – the license that had allowed his father to drive a yellow taxi cab in New York City for decades. But the medallion came with a $530,000 debt trap and years of struggling to escape it.

Augustine’s friend Kenny, a fellow taxi cab driver, committed suicide. So did several other drivers who were crushed under the weight of these impossible debts. In hopes of preventing another death, Tang joined a push by the local taxi drivers’ union, to campaign for debt relief. And eventually, city resistance to worker demands culminated in a 15-day hunger strike to convince City Hall that immigrant taxi drivers deserved a fair deal.

The drivers’ struggles for livable working conditions showed how political power doesn’t just come down to votes. It’s a reminder how strong collective will can be, especially for those often silenced and ignored by our imperfect democracy.

Resources and Reading

Credits

  • Produced by Self Evident Media
  • Reported by Sahil Nisha, with help from Alina Panek and Janrey Serapio
  • Interview recordings by Sahil Nisha, Stacey Wong, and James Boo
  • Edited by James Boo and Julia Shu
  • Fact checked by Harsha Nahata and Tiffany Bui
  • Sound mix by Timothy Lou Ly
  • Music by Epidemic Sound
  • At the Moment Theme by Satoru Ohno
  • Cover Art by Susu Schwaber
  • This episode was made with support from the Solutions Journalism Network's Advancing Democracy program
  • Special thanks to: Cynthia Liu, Alice Liu, Sabeen Shalwani, Augustine Tang, John Duda, Kuber Sancho-Persad, Jaslin Kaur, Maria Santana, Maximillian Alvarez, Michelle Faust Raghavan and Alec Saleens, and the New York Taxi Workers Alliance Media Team

Support AZI Media

Support our work on Ko-Fi

Instagram (@azi.media)

Twitter (@azidotmedia)

AZI Media’s Code of Conduct

Subscribe to our mailing list

Meet the AZI team

  continue reading

11 episódios

Artwork
iconCompartilhar
 
Manage episode 367279260 series 3488105
Conteúdo fornecido por AZI Media. Todo o conteúdo do podcast, incluindo episódios, gráficos e descrições de podcast, é carregado e fornecido diretamente por AZI Media ou por seu parceiro de plataforma de podcast. Se você acredita que alguém está usando seu trabalho protegido por direitos autorais sem sua permissão, siga o processo descrito aqui https://pt.player.fm/legal.

When Augustine Tang’s father passed away, Augustine decided to inherit his taxi medallion – the license that had allowed his father to drive a yellow taxi cab in New York City for decades. But the medallion came with a $530,000 debt trap and years of struggling to escape it.

Augustine’s friend Kenny, a fellow taxi cab driver, committed suicide. So did several other drivers who were crushed under the weight of these impossible debts. In hopes of preventing another death, Tang joined a push by the local taxi drivers’ union, to campaign for debt relief. And eventually, city resistance to worker demands culminated in a 15-day hunger strike to convince City Hall that immigrant taxi drivers deserved a fair deal.

The drivers’ struggles for livable working conditions showed how political power doesn’t just come down to votes. It’s a reminder how strong collective will can be, especially for those often silenced and ignored by our imperfect democracy.

Resources and Reading

Credits

  • Produced by Self Evident Media
  • Reported by Sahil Nisha, with help from Alina Panek and Janrey Serapio
  • Interview recordings by Sahil Nisha, Stacey Wong, and James Boo
  • Edited by James Boo and Julia Shu
  • Fact checked by Harsha Nahata and Tiffany Bui
  • Sound mix by Timothy Lou Ly
  • Music by Epidemic Sound
  • At the Moment Theme by Satoru Ohno
  • Cover Art by Susu Schwaber
  • This episode was made with support from the Solutions Journalism Network's Advancing Democracy program
  • Special thanks to: Cynthia Liu, Alice Liu, Sabeen Shalwani, Augustine Tang, John Duda, Kuber Sancho-Persad, Jaslin Kaur, Maria Santana, Maximillian Alvarez, Michelle Faust Raghavan and Alec Saleens, and the New York Taxi Workers Alliance Media Team

Support AZI Media

Support our work on Ko-Fi

Instagram (@azi.media)

Twitter (@azidotmedia)

AZI Media’s Code of Conduct

Subscribe to our mailing list

Meet the AZI team

  continue reading

11 episódios

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