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Come Celebrate the Life and Work of Tony Mazzocchi

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29.03.2026

The year 1926 gave birth to a slew of creative people including Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Mel Brooks, and Marilyn Monroe. Tony Mazzocchi, (1926-2002) was also born in that year and he too was creative virtuoso—a master of radical imagination who transformed our country, even though few have ever heard of him.

On June 4-5, The Rutgers University Labor Education Center will hold a centennial conference in Mazzocchi’s honor to celebrate his work and to promote his radical vision for America. All are invited.

Tony Mazzocchi, born and raised in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, was a ninth-grade drop-out who lied about his age and enlisted in WWII at age 16. After the war he used the GI Bill of Rights to go to dental school to learn to make teeth. He soon gave that up to work as a labor activist, quickly becoming a local union president in New York and Long Island. He eventually ended up a national leader of the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers and spearheaded a new occupational safety and health movement that led to the creation of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA).

Mazzocchi’s goal was to build a radical labor movement that would transform capitalism so that every person had a right to a job at a living wage, access to free higher education, and cradle to the grave health coverage.

Here’s a sample of the passion he brought to that fight:

I wanted the whole country to know in detail what had happened at that factory, and to understand that what had gone on there—the fruitless Bureau of Occupational Safety and Health Inspections, the lack of enforcement by the Department of Labor, the whole long, lousy history of neglect, deceit, and stupidity—was happening in dozens of other ways, in hundreds of other factories, to thousands of other men across the land. I wanted people to know that thousands upon thousands of their fellow citizens were being assaulted daily, and that the police—in this case, the federal government—had done nothing to remedy the situation. In short I wanted them to know that murder was being committed in the workplace, and that no one was bothering about it.

Mazzocchi, the drop-out, had a gift for science. That combined with his radicalness attracted hundreds of young scientific and medical professionals to work with unions to improve occupational safety and health. He also built labor alliances with environmental groups, anticipating that a safer and healthier planet would lead to a loss of fossil fuel and toxic-related jobs. That’s why he invented “just transition,” a policy designed to protect the livelihoods of those displaced workers. He was also active in opposing........

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