Letters to the Editor: Readers write about unions, racial justice

A United Automobile Workers office in Warren, Ohio, on July 25, 2025. When the General Motors plant in Lordstown closed, workers lost not only well-paying jobs but also their health benefits. (Madeleine Hordinski/The New York Times)

Credit: NYT

Credit: NYT

A United Automobile Workers office in Warren, Ohio, on July 25, 2025. When the General Motors plant in Lordstown closed, workers lost not only well-paying jobs but also their health benefits. (Madeleine Hordinski/The New York Times)

Workers deserve fair pay, safe working conditions, affordable healthcare and the freedom to retire with dignity. We deserve the right to join unions that give workers a voice; an economy that works for all families, not only the wealthy; and a democracy where every voice is heard and every vote counts.

Workers and families deserve fully funded public schools that are safe, welcoming, relevant and engaging, as well as higher education that is accessible, affordable and free from political intrusion.

President Donald Trump campaigned on making life better and more affordable for working families, and I’m sad to say that his administration has not delivered on these promises. Instead, we have seen funding slashed for schools, healthcare, child care and more — while handing tax breaks to the ultra-wealthy.

Our family members and communities will be sicker, hungrier and poorer. We deserve so much better.

Whether it’s peacefully protesting with our neighbors and co-workers in the streets, forming a union at our workplaces, or engaging with elected officials in Congress, let’s work together to fight for the future that all workers deserve.

- Alice Ross, Oxford

In his last will and testament, John Randolph of Roanoke, Virginia freed all his enslaved workers — 383 men, women and children. His will also provided resources to acquire property for them to farm in Ohio, supposedly a free state. His executor purchased 3,200 acres for the families in Granville and Marion townships in Mercer County.

On July 5, 1846, after traveling 600 miles to Cincinnati and from there to the canal port in New Bremen, these families were prevented from getting off the boat. Unable to land and claim their properties in Mercer County, they retreated to Piqua, where they were reluctantly permitted to occupy some land on the east side of the Miami River. Nearly 180 years later their descendants live in Miami and Shelby counties, and throughout southwestern Ohio and beyond.

Saint Charles Center is partnering with the National Afro-American Museum & Cultural Center of Wilberforce, Ohio, to host on site FREED WILL, The Randolph Freedpeople from Slavery to Settlement from Sept. 9 to Oct. 8. The Archdiocese of Cincinnati invites you to a Holy Year Pilgrimage for Racial Justice at Saint Charles Center, 2860 U.S. 127, Carthagena, Ohio on Saturday, Sept. 13, from 2-4 p.m. This is sponsored by the Anti-Racism Task force of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati, Miami County and Mercer County Partners.

- Fr. Tom Hemm, Carthagena


This is an aerial of downtown Dayton skyline looking northeast. The warm early autumn weather will continue until cool weather moves in over the weekend. JIM NOELKER/STAFF

Credit: JIM NOELKER

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Credit: JIM NOELKER

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What makes a good Letter to the Editor?

Our Letters to the Editor are generally collected and published once a week, based on the volume and quality of submissions we receive. Letters to the Editor are short, focused submissions that quickly address a single topic. They can run up to 250 words in length.

Letters to the Editor can respond to specific issues in stories we’ve reported, other contributed columns or syndicated columnists. They’re a quick and easy way to add your perspective to the discussion of any topic.

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