An article in today’s New York Times about the Teamsters’ campaign to organize Federal Express describes a typical example of how difficult it is to organize a union these days:
Not long after 21 of the 23 drivers in Northborough petitioned last fall for an election to join the Teamsters, FedEx dismissed five union supporters and six others quit, with several complaining that managers had made their lives unbearable.
"They started to harass and intimidate everybody," Mr. Williams said. "Some people they tried to starve out. Instead of giving 120 to 130 packages, they cut it to 60 or 70 to reduce the money."
Ken Flynn, a pro-union driver who was dismissed, said that after the unionization drive began, management added six managers to the three already there. The new ones, he said, spent much of their time speaking out against the union. FedEx says the new managers were assisting with the holiday rush and helping to transfer the operation to another terminal in Northborough.
To sway the drivers, FedEx prepared a 25-minute DVD that accused the Teamsters of being incompetent and violent.
Meanwhile, on another planet, readers of USA Today and other newspapers may have noticed a recent one-page ad by a new corporate supported anti-union outfit (mis)named The Center For Union Facts. The ad asks "Why is a union like a Roach Motel?"
The answer: "Because getting in is the easy part."
In that one heading lies the essence of the Center's lies, the reasons for its existence, and the state of the American labor movement today. The real union fact is that there is almost nothing harder than getting into a union these days -- particularly if the union chooses to use the classic secret ballot election process that has been the staple of union organizing for decades.
What is the Center for Union Facts, and why does it exist? The executive Director of the Center is a figure well known in corporate flackdom named Richard Berman. Berman is infamous for forming corporate-backed associations to defend mercury in fish (FishScam.com), challenge Mothers Against Drunk Driving and its efforts to lower the legal blood alcohol content limit, dismiss concern about obesity as "hype," defend the tobacco industry against smoking curbs in restaurants and the beverage industry against restrictions on alcohol use, and to argue against raising the minimum wage. The Center is funded by corporate money, although Berman refuses to reveal his funding sources.
Accrding to its website, the Center is "dedicated to showing Americans the truth about today's union leadership." In addition to running fact-challenged ads. the Center also sees itself as a repository for factoids about self-serving union “bosses” and union corruption. But Labor Economist and blogger Nathan Newman, who actually drilled down into the data that the Center’s website provides, noted that Berman’s information doesn’t exactly make the point that he intended to make. Berman highlights "$400 million in labor racketeering fines and civil restitution in the last five years" which comes from a Department of Labor list. But and, lo and behold most were
businesses that defrauded the unions-- ie. the union leaders were the victims not the criminals....In fact, almost all of the big money associated with the $400 million figure in labor racketeering was committed by private industry AGAINST unions, not by union officials.
And why have the corporate powers-that-be drafted Berman into action? The answer can be found most recently in a union victory for janitors at the University of Miami in Florida. But this wasn't your classic union victory. The janitors, represented by the Service Employees International Union, were not striking to win wage increases, nor did the victory mean that the company had agreed to recognize the union. After a lengthy strike, a hunger strike by workers and a commitment on the part of the university to raise wages significantly, the janitors continued to hold out for something even more valuable: a "card check" agreement with Unicco, the university's contractor that employs the janitors.
Card check means that instead of the traditional "secret ballot" election to determine if workers want to organize a union, management voluntarily agrees to recognize the union if a majority sign cards indicting their desire to join the union. Under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), it is up to the employer to agree to card check recognition or to require a traditional election. Another tactic being employed by unions is "neutrality" agreements where the employer agrees not to actively campaign against the union.
Because of the difficulty in conducting a fair election, card check campaigns -- instead of secret ballot elections -- have become labor's main tool for organizing the unorganized. Card checks were used to sign up roughly 70 percent of the private-sector workers who joined unions last year, according to the A.F.L.-C.I.O, compared with less than 5 percent two decades ago. Workers in Las Vegas casinos, janitors in Houston and thousands of workers at Cingular have organized recently using card check. The problem is that although some 57 million workers say they would join a union, according to research by Peter D. Hart Research Associates, secret ballot elections, conducted by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), generally fall victim to management campaigns of intimidation, threats, harassment and firings that tend to turn the vote against the union, even when a majority of workers had initially expressed interest.
For the University of Miami strikers, the prospect of an NLRA election was so threatening that the they agreed that 60% of employees would have to sign cards, whereas an NLRB election would have only required 50% of those voting in favor of a union. Nathan Newman explains the significance of this concession in a Labor Blog posting. The agreement:
illustrates how bad the NLRB election process is. The workers preferred a lengthy strike, a hunger strike that hospitalized multiple workers, and a requirement for a super-majority rather than face the buzzsaw of a federal election, where employers manipulate the rules and routinely threaten and fire workers to defeat unions.
Union elections have become so corrupted and card check campaigns have gotten so popular and successful that corporate America is starting to get a bit nervous. What to do? Create a bogus astroturf organization called The Center For Union Facts and run a bunch of ads claiming that card check violates the American way because it takes away workers’ right to a secret ballot election. One recent ad, for example, shows photos of Kim Jong Il, Fidel Castro, and UNITE-HERE President Bruce Raynor, asking which one was quoted as saying "There's no reason to subject workers to an election."
The answer, of course, is labor leader Raynor.
Anyone who knows anything about union organizing campaigns in the US understands that NRLA “secret ballot elections have little to do with “free” elections and that if democracy in American politics looked anything like democracy in the American workplace, we'd be living in a fascist dictatorship: According to a report issued by American Rights at Work,
- 30% of employers fire pro-union workers.
- 49% of employers threaten to close a worksite when workers try to form a union, but only 2% actually do.
- 51% of employers coerce workers into opposing unions with bribery or favoritism.
- 82% of employers hire high-priced unionbusting consultants to fight union organizing drives.
- 91% of employers force employees to attend one-on-one anti-union meetings with their supervisors.
And the systematic use of legal and illegal tactics impedes union organizing.
- Aided by a weak labor law system that fails to protect workers’ rights, employers manipulate the government-supervised union recognition process in a way that allows them to abuse their power and significantly influence the outcome of union representation elections.
- In 91% of the union recognition petitions filed with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) in the survey, a majority of workers indicated they wanted a union before the process began. In several cases, workers demonstrated more than 80% support.
- However, unions were victorious in only 31% of the campaigns in which they filed a petition.
How do these anti-union campaigns play out in the workplace? A recent New York Times article described what happens when workers try to organize
At the Consolidated Biscuit bakery in McComb, Ohio, Bill Lawhorn said more than 70 percent of the workers had signed cards in favor of joining the Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers Union when he led efforts to form a union in 2002. Nonetheless, the union lost a secret-ballot election, 485 to 286, after Consolidated Biscuit conducted a vigorous anti-union campaign. Two years later a National Labor Relations Board judge found that managers had illegally spied on union supporters and had warned them that the bakery would go bankrupt if a union was voted in.
While unions can challenge the elections, and often win, by the time the workers get their jobs back, the organizing campaign is long dead. For example, in 1997, the United Food and Commercial Workers lost an election at the Smithfield Packing Company in North Carolina 1,910 to 1,107. The union filed a number of unfair labor complaints, and nine years later, the union won:
Concluding that Smithfield had engaged in "intense and widespread coercion," the appeals court upheld the labor board's ruling that one worker was improperly coerced when he was ordered to stamp hogs with a "Vote No" stamp.
The appeals court ordered Smithfield to reinstate four fired workers, one of whom was beaten by the plant's police the day of the election. The court concurred with the labor board's findings that Smithfield's managers were not credible when they insisted that the four workers were fired for reasons other than their support for the union.
The circuit court noted that Smithfield had illegally confiscated union materials, spied on workers' union activities, threatened to fire workers who voted for the union, and threatened to freeze wages and shut the plant if the employees unionized. The Smithfield plant has 5,500 employees and is the world's largest pork-processing facility.
The union, which has complained about how long the litigation has taken, is continuing organizing efforts at the plant, but is not seeking an election.
Instead of an election, the union is putting together a coalition of churches, civil rights groups and colleges students to press the company for neutrality in the unionization fight. Not surprisingly, the company opposes those tactics, boasting about how well management and employees work together, that they don't need a "third party", that neutrality would "bar the company from telling employees about the downside of unionization," workers would be "shielded from the facts," and wouldn't learn the "full story." Here's part of the “full story” that Smithfield probably doesn't want you to hear:
Lorena Ramos, 29, an immigrant from Honduras, said Smithfield's managers and consultants often told the workers that the union only wanted employees' dues money and would cause strikes that could lead to violence, job losses and even closing the plant. Her right arm was badly injured when it got caught in a conveyer belt as she was scooping dry ice into packing boxes. She and her husband were outspoken union supporters, and they said they were shocked and embarrassed when the plant's internal police force arrested them, handcuffed them and paraded them through the plant, accusing them of setting a fire in one of the plant's cafeterias. The county's district attorney dropped the charges for lack of evidence.
Ms. Ramos quit the plant after the arrest, too scared to return. The union hired her as an organizer because of her popularity, courage and communications skills.
"Right now if the workers want something to change at the plant, the plant's not going to listen to them," she said. "If the workers have a union, then they will be listened to."
But listening to workers is the last thing on corporate America's mind, and their fear is reflected in the “Secret Ballot Protection Act of 2005" introduced by South Carolina Senator Jim DeMint in the Senate and Congressman Charlie Norwood (R-GA) in the House, which would prohibit employers from recognizing a union based on card check instead of an election. Their bill as 5 co-sponsors in the Senate and 91 in the House. Norwood and DeMint's bill is competing with a bill introduced by Congressman George Miller (D-CA) in the House and Ted Kennedy (D-MA) in the Senate, called the “Employee Free Choice Act,” (S. 842 and H.R. 1696) which would require employers to recognize a union after a majority of workers sign cards authorizing union representation. The bill would also toughen punishment for violating workers rights to organize a union. The bill has 43 co-sponsors in the Senate and 215 co-sponsors in the House.
But the Center continues its well-funded crusade. Its most recent campaign is a slick television commercial that asks a group of perky worker/actors what they “like” about their union: Paying union dues (just so I can keep my job), supporting union bosses’ fat-cat lifestyles, that mydues are going to politicians I don't like, and how uions discriminate against minorities,... You get the idea.
Union Facts raised $3 million from unnamed companies, foundations and individuals to run the ad on Fox News and other local stations. The ad is so offensive that some local stations like WJBK-TV in Detroit, are refusing to run it.
But Berman's fans can take some heart in the fact that at least they're loved in Elaine Chao's Labor Department, according to the Washington Post:
There's a new spirit at the department, judging from a June 15 [sic] e-mail from Lynn Gibson, an aide in the public liaison office that alerts people to a training opportunity."The next [noteworthy item] is a new website, if you were not already aware of it," she says. "The website is dedicated to providing information on labor unions and their expenditures. UnionFacts.com launched on Monday, February 13th, and some news links are listed below."
Turns out, according to a linked article by our colleague Amy Joyce , this is a stridently anti-union site that talks about the "political activities, and criminal activity of the labor movement." The site lets members check their union's "shady tactics" and highlights how to bust a union's right to represent workers at a company.
That doesn't surprise me much. When I worked at the Labor Department during the Clinton Administration, the televisions in the lobby were turned to CNN all day long. When I returned after 2001, the TVs were tuned to Fox.
Jordan Barab blogs at Confined Space
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Great post and glad to see it on FDL.
1,166 DAYS AND THE KILLING GOES ON AND ON AND…
Fitz, Fingold, FDL and Lamont!!!
KEEP THE FAITH AND THE RED FLAGS FLYING!!!
Jordan that’s a fabulous post. I was well aware of the intimidation tactics used by union busters but I had no idea about the card check vs. secret ballot campaign. It’s nice to see the Dems getting behind labor on this one, I think that is something we should really be playing up.
As always, great post. I feel like when I read your stuff it’s always an education.
I’m from an old union family. But I didn’t understand the discussion of card signing vs. secret ballots. Is the problem with secret ballots that management will steal the election? Or is it because they will intimidate workers to vote against unions? If so, how is that different from signing cards? Couldn’t management intimidate that process as well?
I think I’m missing something here. Fair elections or fair card signing seems to me six of one half a dozen of the other.
A card check reflects the will of the employees. An election gives managment time to deceive and intimidate.
When customer service workers at US Airways organized, management blatantly interfered with the election.
http://lw.bna.com/lw/19990615/985435.htm
The union lost. They appealed to the NMB, who ordered another election, in which the union prevailed.
US Air suffered negligible damages.
The First Amendment guarantees citizens the right to “peacably assemble”. A union is an expression of that right, and I am of the opinion laws hampering organization is unconstitutional.
Strict interpretation, yes?
damn good post! I still miss my days at UAW933…
the horrible thing about this post is that if you read labor history you know the companies have been using the same tricks for years. the good thing is to know that workers can win! and bigtime…
A healthy and strong labor movement is so essential for progressive politics.
Excellent post; very glad to see it here. This kind of counter-education is essential, given the corporate media’s relentlessly warped coverage of labor issues. Thanks to Jordan and to Jane, Christy, and Pach.
Yes Jordan, please explain how the card system works to protect workers from intimidation, bullying and firing.
KEEP THE FAITH AND DON’T LET YER CHILDREN DATE REPUBLICANS!!
Why are elections more vulnerable to manipulation by management than card checks?
Between the time the union files for an election –even with 60 or 70% of employees signing cards, management has time to hire union-busting attorneys, threaten, intimidate and often fire union activists, hold captive audience meetings, threaten to shut the place down, and other tactics that, by the time of the election, has enough people so terrified that they don’t dare vote for the union, even if they signed a card at the beginning.
With card check, once the card is signed, it’s signed. Management doesn’t have the opportunity to intimidate employees up until a specific election day, often months in the future.
Card check is in widespread use in Canada which has much higher union representation, and a much higer percentage of successful organizing campaigns.
My very first job was working as a clerk-typist at the National Labor Relations Board in Washington. A couple of months ago clearing out stuff from my mother’s house before it was put up for market, I saw some of the old notes I took for a term paper I wrote on the experience. Boy, have things changed since 196o! At that time the government actually protected union organizers.
I have come to believe that the only way we are going to reclaim our democrdacy is through a strong union movement. I say this as a professional economist who has no ties to it, and over my professional life has not been particularly sympathetic to it. But I now believe that it is our beest chance for restoring some degree of social as well a political democracy. With the disappearance of social mobility (read the recent studies by Joseph Ferrie — econ dept Northwestern –for confirmation) the only way ordinary Americans can reclaim some part of a decent life and self-respect is through organizing.
The Bush administration wanted to take the U.S. back to McKinley. That have got at least as far as Harding and Coolidge.
An excellent, informative post, Jordan-Reading this makes me wonder if at full strenghth, the United Mine Workers could have prevented some/all of the mine disasters of earlier this year, but no matter me have a war on the -American People- er, Terrorism to worry about first (snark)
Excellent post. very timely,under the current regimes dirty tricks and anti labor policies.
My father was a union organizer, local business rep and local President. He retired after 35 years with the IUOE.(Operating engineers, Heavy equipment operators).He retired as an International Rep/Grievance arbitrator.I am also a union member. As factual as that sounds, let me point out another dirty little trick business uses.Although I am a union member, The shop I work in is non union. I pay union dues so I can get health benifits. Period. The only reason the rest of the employees of this company are unionized is because we work on the docks along side the Longshoremans people.The Longshoreman union is a VERY powerful union.They will not allow non union people on the docks to work. My company found the weakest union they could, and signed a contract to make us union employees.My employer threatens to shut down the shop if we organize. I know this is financially impossible for them to do,but they would not hesitate a nanosecond in firing us for trying.Unions are responsible for multitudes of worker benifits. Safety and labor standards come to mind. The forty hour workweek is a direct benefit of the union movement.
Benefits,Busted, Benefits.
BTW, I’m sending this to everyone I know, I think it’s one of the best posts we’ve ever had.
“Right to work states” such as my home state, are little more than the enabling by the state, of the right of employers to pay low wages, termination of workers without due cause or explanation and avoidance of employee safety regulations. In so called “right to work” (a fancy phrase for government sanctioned anti-union organizing legislation) states employers get away with paying no benifits to employees including no health coverage, no overtime pay, no sick time pay, no paid vacation, no worker safety considerations, leading in many cases to virtual sweatshop conditions, and a host of other anti-worker misdeeds. Right to work states are not much better than third-world forced labor. And the greedy Republicans, (and the DLC) love it for the grotesquely huge and immoral profits it brings.
Great and terribly painful post. My dad was deputy general counsel at the NLRB for many years. We grew up with stories of the horrible doings of management against labor, which my dad and the Board as it was then did their best to counter. My dad retired when he recognized the incoming chairman as definitively anti-labor. It is horribly sad that a Board that once upheld the rights of workers has sunk to this. I know my dad must be throwing up in his grave.
Indiana is NOT a “right-to-work-for-less” state, partially because of a moderate GOP Senate leader who blocked many anti-union bills. This primary he was defeated by a total wingnut Christianist winger who actually advocated public flogging BUT who was extensively and massively funded by Contractors Associations and the like.
I technically work for the State. Last year there was an effort to unionize the the P&S staff (professional and scientifc). The P&S staff included, research assistants, computer programmers, lab techs, and a bunch of other areas that I can’t remember any longer. It was the SEIU local 199. The employer (the State) played by all the rules, as far as I was able to tell. The State sent mass emails to everyone ‘eligible’ to vote every step of the way, providing links to the State Labor Board, etc. The only thing that they said in anyway that was anti-union was to take time to educate yourself and decide for yourself what you want. (I still have one of the emails from the employer.) The only ’sneaky’ things the State did was to set some limits on who was eligible to vote. If you worked on General Ledger, or other positions that had direct access to financials, and if you worked there for less than x amount of time.
It was the union, in my opinion, that was agressive. They physically stopped by my house at least 3 times after hours, several mailings a week, several phone calls, etc. They were allowed to set up tables in the cafeterias, but anti-union weren’t allowed to do so. They were generally annoying.
2554 ballots were mailed to eligible voters. Between 1900 and 2000 were returned. The results were 2 to 1 against unionizing. While that 2500 is only a small precentage of employees at the institution I work at, other employee classifcations (merit mainly) have union rep. After the vote was taken, it was found that the management of one department was being turds and intemidated the research assistants in the dept. From what I can recall, they didn’t go to HR, or anyone else, to lodge formal complaints and considering this is the State that we technically work for, there are an abundant avenues to lodge complaints. The end result of all this is that now the P&S staff can’t say that there’s no avenue to resolve disputes and get disaplinary action against abusive management. (IMNSHO, it was ‘mild’ abuse of position. Nothing like what you’d get in the ‘real world’, eg. non state employment.)
Malcolm,
I remember my dad talking about the NLRB quite often. The jaw dropping moment of my childhood was when my father, as a business rep, called and ACTUALLY talked to, the President of the United States about a labor problem.President Jimmy Carter. AND!!!, It was after 6:00 PM Pacific standard time!Imagine that with Chimpy….
Thanks to FDL for hosting and Jordan Barab for writing this column. I think it hightlights the fact that information about pros and cons of unionization is completely one sided in US. Most of it is now ludicrous and dishonest anti-union propaganda, aided and abetted by multiple government agencies and the media, and largely funded by self interested corporate dough.
I’m not an expert on this area, but as a standard issue mainstream economist, I am not allowed to be so hot on old style job protection unionism. But even (honest) conservative economists have not be able to deny that unions can play an important role in the labor market. But the US has gone too far in stripping protections. Even ol mainstream econ me has to admit that unions can do some very important things. Like ensuring enforcement of laws (rule of law important in labor markets too, right?) and provide some pressure for reasonable minimum wage. Most of the stuff you hear in US these days is just anti-union propaganda.
The wikipedia articles has a balanced discussion of interesting work on minimum wage:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minimum_wage
Some interesting stuff here for international comparisions. Some of the stuff here probably way to conservative for this thread. But a lot is not. But check out “How does your country compare” feature and note that by some measures, the US job performance is not so definitely hot compared to other countries with much more job protections and higher standards.
http://www.oecd.org/document/6....._1,00.html
Public employees are generally much easier to organize than private sector employees, mainly because public employers usually remain “officially” neutral. (This is definitely not the case, however, with many non-profits like hospitals and universities). Consequently, most of the orgranizing campaigns I was involved in at AFSCME were not disputes over whether or not workers would vote to unionize, but which union they would vote for. Enormous resources were wasted in fights between AFSCME, SEIU, CWA, UAW, AFT and others who would all go after the low hanging fruit, although over the past few years, they’ve generally gotten together to divide the spoils without fighting each other.
This is part of the reason that over 30% of public sector employees in this country are organized, while only around 8% of private sector workers are organized. (The other reason is that you can’t move the government of Minnesota to China) Of course, half of the states still don’t allow collective bargaining for public employees (they’re not covered by the federal National Labor Relations Act) and half the states also don’t provide OSHA coverage to public employees.
But that’s another story.
If you’re gonna organize, you’ve got to sing . . .
Folk singer John McCutcheon is a great fan of labor, and uses many old labor songs in his recordings and concert. He tells the story of one song that was requested by a persistent fan during a tour of Australia. “I know the song,” says John, “but I’ve never performed it. How about something else.” The answer was blunt: “No.” The reason is that the fan was a union electrician who helped to build the Syndey Opera House, and during the construction Paul Robeson pulled up in his limo, sang a full concert for the construction crew on the site of the Opera House, and concluded it with the following song. “It was like we were in church,” said the electrician, “all singing with tears running down our faces.”
The song?
Joe Hill
(words by Alfred Hayes, music by Earl Robinson)
I dreamed I saw Joe Hill last night
Alive as you and me
Says I, “But Joe, you’re ten years dead”
“I never died,” says he (2x)
“The copper bosses killed you, Joe
“They shot you, Joe,” says I
“Takes more than guns to kill a man”
Says Joe, “I didn’t die”
Standing there as big as life
And smiling with his eyes
Joe says, “What they could never kill
“Went on to organize!”
“From San Diego, up to Maine
“In every mine and mill
“When workers fight and organize
“It’s there you’ll find Joe Hill”
I dreamed I saw Joe Hill last night
Alive as you and me
Says I, “But Joe, you’re ten years dead”
“I never died,” says he. (2x)
http://www.folkmusic.com
Excellent piece. I just shared it with a source at the NLRB who chimes in that every bit of this is on target.
Thank you Jordan, what a great post. I too come from a long union line of union families. My grandfather and his brothers were participants in the Flint MI Sitdown strike December 30, 1936. http://www.historicalvoices.org/flint/
My 82 yr old father was listening to Michael Moores speach at Flint Community college last year and it jogged a memory for him of going with his father and older brother to sneak food into the strikers.
My mothers father was a letter carrier for 36 years and a proud member of the Mail Handlers Union. All throughout the depression, postal workers continued to have jobs, walking their route twice a day 6 days a week while they cut his wages at intervals while putting two kids through college who eventually served in WWII.
The two sides of my family have union roots which eventually educated teachers, psychologists, nurses and multiple other of the service professions while providing my great & great-great uncles, aunts and cousins with healthcare and pensions which provided a comfortable life and retirement.
So many of the “nice” things about our work enviroments and rules have directly come from the work of unions. The 40hr work week, healthcare, retirement pensions, workplace safety and security.
sorry for grammar in #23:
last time I looked these sets of wikipedia articles were relatively unbiased, though some links incomplete. Comparisons of UK, and US labor protections in plain English. Then look at “how your country compares” in OECD link. UK doing that much worse that US in terms of % working age pop employed? No, UK looks better.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L.....oyment_law
Jordan, excellent post.
What do you think about the likelihood of nurses’ unions increasing due to the nursing shortage?
This stuff is really a revelation to me. I had read that union membership was at all-time lows, but that fact always seems to be chalked up to the outsourcing of blue collar jobs. I had no idea that union busting was alive and well.
So if a newshound like me doesn’t know about this, that is yet another indictment against the sinister corporate media which chooses to pollute our airwaves and newsprint with crap about missing white women, rather than cover things that really matter to their customers, but run counter to their corporate interests.
Pach: You got excerpted at http://wotisitgood4.blogspot.com/
Scroll down to the post titled Haditha Massacre - Old News
I am hoping there will be a reply to this post a little later from someone who knows far, far more than I on this subject. I told them they could denounce any knowlege of me for their own personal safety.This is tuly,IMHO, an excellent and very knowlegeable post. BTW, Nice graphic too.
“Public employees are generally much easier to organize than private sector employees, mainly because public employers usually remain “officially” neutral. (This is definitely not the case, however, with many non-profits like hospitals and universities).”
Actually, this was a University and non-profit State Hospital that had certain employees try to unionize the P&S. The nurses are unionized under SEIU 199. There are a couple of other unions at the institution, but I don’t recall what they are right now. The P&S found out that the SEIU have basically short changed the ‘new hire’ nurses since unionizing. ‘New’ hires (this is a relative term because it applies only to nurses hired after the unionization) don’t get the same vacation/sick benefits as ‘old’ hires. There is less flexability in their work schedule, eg, the schedule for the next 6 weeks can’t be changed, no matter what changes in your personal life. Example would be that you planned a vacation period to do home repairs, but something came up and couldn’t do the repairs at that time. To bad, you’re taking the vacation time anyway and you’ll have to schedule additional vacation for when you can do the repairs, but that can’t be for another 6 weeks at least. Those of us in P&S didn’t like that ‘change’ and felt that that would cause employee relation problems later on.
Iowa is also a right-to-work state and I’d have to say we’re not third world employees with third world conditions.
“(The other reason is that you can’t move the government of Minnesota to China)”
I’d argue that point. While the *entire* government entity can’t relocate, many ‘background’ functions can and are being outsourced to foreign countries.
OT - Pach, did you see that Aravosis picked up on your WOT post?
The whole nurse situation is interesting. Although nurses have always belonged to the American Nurses Association, it’s only been relatively recently that the ANA has started acting more like a real union. In the meantime, SEIU, AFSCME and AFT have been aggressively organizing nureses (not just RNs, but also LPNs and other health care workers).
Of course, the worse the nursing shortage, the harder (and more dangerous) the work, the more demand there is for a strong voice to represent them.
The problem that’s looming (and may be the subject of a future Firedoglake post) is the the NLRB is set to rule on a number of cases that may result in nurses being defined as supervisors, and therefore ineligable to belong to unions. Needless to say, such a ruling by George Bush’s NLRB could have a devestating impact the ability to organize nurses. The National Labor Relations Act does not protect the right of supervisors to join unions and permits employers to discipline or fire them for supporting the union.
punaise:
Yeah I saw it. The peice actually has been linked to and discussed all over the blogosphere, from all sides.
I disagree with John, of course, but it’s tough to tell exactly where, because his argument seems muddled and seems not actually to address what I actually wrote.
Jordan,
Because this NLRB has been rigged, many unions are avoiding bringing actions to this Board, given the nature of its composition and the very real risks you cite.
The WoT post got picked up in a lot of spots. This technorati list is not complete, because I don’t see Digby there, but this is a reference point for any who may be interested:
http://www.technorati.com/sear.....on-terror/
(The other reason is that you can’t move the government of Minnesota to China)
I’d argue that point. While the *entire* government entity can’t relocate, many ‘background’ functions can and are being outsourced to foreign countries.
Iowa christine, you make a good point here. Certain “background” functions that can actually be done via computer from anywhere in the world. In addition, more and more public employee functions are being contracted out to private sector, non-union companies, which are sold as being “more efficient.”
I think the best model for unionism today is the low hierachy, global branded, ‘ just-in-time-manufactured’ Industrial Workers of the world model. The IWW or Wobblies or Wobs click well with this new internet age and can respond in real time to assaults such that launched by Rupert Murdoch and his ilk.
While I retain sentimental attachments to the CNT I am now leaning more toward free fair trade agreements. A terrible mistake would be to try and wind the clock back for more protectionism imho. Libertarian socialism - SI!
Authoritarian socialism - NON!
Viva wobbly power Viva!
I have no problems with the nursing staff (and yes, it does include the LPN’s, CNA’s and many others) unionizing. It was their choice. They wanted teh $5.00 per hour pay increase, but apparently were willing to sacrifice how the vacation/sick time worked for new staff to get it. I’ll have to look at the link you gave tomorrow, it’s late now (9:40pm CST). Would this ruling be retroactive and effectively bust the nursing union at this institution??
OT - Just watched the You Tube Allman Brothers video from last night, AWESOME!
Here’s my numero uno, ever. Also on You Tube ; )
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v.....ch=santana woodstock
Nurses are unionized in California which has a very strong union. I have been an RN for 33 years and never belonged to a union, never had the opportunity to join. The Nurses unions that I have had any experience with did nothing to support their employees or in the one hospital where we tried to unionize, we were threatened with firing and blackballing from work. In a city that has a large number of hospitals that belong to a single corporation, it would mean certain unemployment permanently. Now that the average age of nurses is 50 and every state has a critical shortage, unions are needed more than ever. Today, nursing shifts are a mandated 12 hour shift, working every other weekend and in some areas to fill in evening and night shifts too.
Nurses unions need to be strong advocates for their workers, provide safe work enviroments and support nurses to gain some status in the workplace. When I was injured on the job in 1987, along with 9 other of my fellow co-workers in a years time, we were disposable. There was always cheaper younger nurses to fill our experienced shoes.
Fascinating. Ed schultz ran that ad on his radio and put out an invite and all the free radio time union dudes need to refute these claims. He also took the unions to the woodshed for not puttin up some bucks for their own ad campaign. He’s right. Unions are vulnerable to these kinds of attacks. Wingnuts have built an entire inustry around the meme of bootstraps and self reliance and responibility. Ads like that shouldn’t be on for more than 15 seconds without a response. This post is the first response I’ve seen. Get ahold of Big Eddie and move forward on this.
punaise,
I went back to the end of the last post and left a message for you.
Hey! Is everyone out at the Al Gore movie ?!?!?
You are missing an astonishing post ! Good God, I’m already pro-labor and this blows me away - can see it’s illuminating effects on the commenters
There is an entire generation (Thank you Ronald Reagan !) who believes all the anti-union crapola . . . a nod to progressive affinities from the Jane Hamshers of the Left is very encouraging (not that I’m in any way surprised)
Thank you Jordan for this incredibly informative piece - great to have you with us
OT - Well, that certainly went well…
Iraqi Ambassador Sumaidaie: Marines shot my cousin
http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/.....index.html
There is an entire generation (Thank you Ronald Reagan !) who believes all the anti-union crapola
If you wanted to join a union, and be lionized, not threatened for it, you’d have to have been an electician in a Polish shipyard, I figure.
All during the eighties we were rolling up unions in the US and supporting them in the East bloc, all the while supporting union-smashing governments in South Africa and the Philipines.
And when you put anti-union activities like these next to today’s whistle-blower ruling from the Supreme Court . . . it’s Happy Days in Dubyaville.
Canadians can Unionize with secret card certifications — what are the rules in Canada, and how can we (save us, President Gore!) implement them here?
University of California allowed the AFSCME contract to lapse with their hourly food service and housekeeping workers and then spent three years “negotiating.” It was my first experience with a public institution’s attempt at union-busting. AFSCME is no great shakes as a union, believe me, but the workers had no choice but to threaten to strike. Retaliation was swift and obvious. Fucking institute of higher learning, my ass.
cbl:
Do they even cover the history of unions in high school history courses anymore? I think most people have no sense of the abuses that led to the creation of the unions, nor the blood that was spilled creating them.
Ah, we do forget history at our own risk I guess. Even the fading memory of the tragedy that was Vietnam was not enough to prevent the tragedy that is now unfolding in Iraq.
Katymine, amen.
As a former tech and recently a patient, it’s getting very worrisome on many of the units.
I think most people have no sense of the abuses that led to the creation of the unions, nor the blood that was spilled creating them.
Nor the occasional blood still being let on picket lines.Been on a few picket lines, things can get real nasty. I have also been on picket lines supporting brothers and sisters from other unions.I can also remember the starvation pay for picket duty.
Jordan, correct me if I am wrong, but I am pretty sure you can sign cards anywhere, but an election is held on the job site. That would be another reason why employers can not intimidate employees when signed cards are accepted.
My husband is a Teamster and we are most definitely a pro-union household and one of the few around here with excellent healthcare including mental health, dental, and eyecare. At my eye doc the other customers get envious when they hear that I am paying about $200 for 3 pairs of glasses and 1 set of contacts for myself and my two sons.
I think that sometimes people with unions take them for granted. They don’t realize the reduced benefits they would have without them.
As for the two tier system where new hires get less than the other workers, that is managements doing. The union never suggests that as a good idea, they know it causes friction among the employees, which is the point of management suggesting it. They know that instead of putting the blame where it belongs that new hires will resent the union. Negotiations are give and take, sometimes the union has to swallow a bitter pill in order to get the best possible contract for everyone eventually.
DonnaM: Yes, you’re right. Cards can be signed anywhere, anytime. And time is another factor. Management often challenges elections in an effort to delay them as long as possible, and studies have shown that the longer an election is delayed, the more votes the union loses.
To quote the federal regulators:
“I work with Secretary Chao helping her implement her compassionate conservative agenda. At the Labor Department we don’t let any unions tell us what to do!”
Lorretta Herrington, Bush Appointee, Office of Disability and Employement Policy, U.S. Department of Labor, in a speech to citizens of the Virginia 11th Congressional District.
NEED I SAY MORE?
DonnaM said:
“…envious when they hear that I am paying about $200 for 3 pairs of glasses and 1 set of contacts for myself and my two sons”
You darn tootin I’m envious. I’ve got no dental, my last pair of eye glasses cost me right around $500, and the only mental health coverage I have is provided by reading Firedog Lake…
Great Post! I second DonnaM’s observation above about two tier contract negotiations. Years ago, I was a county employee union president (CSEA). Management originally wanted to reduce everyone’s annual vacation time from 3 weeks to 2 weeks, and significantly increase all our health insurance costs. In negotiations for the new contract, we had to make the choice/trade-off about keeping our health insurance co-pays low vs. a reduction in vacation time for new hires. We hated to do it, but …
Frankly, I don’t have fond memories of my union affiliation…But as the union was not really in a position, ultimately to screw anybody but itself should labor negotiations turn unpleasant ( due to regional competition, including affiliated union locals), the futility of the process was disenchanting for others as well and those who remained were there strictly for the cash, or the erotic charms of the power politics.
Thus, it might be viewed as an atypical example. Or perhaps not.
As far as other, more meaningful applications of labor organization are concerned…As long as unwavering principles and universal brother/sisterhood are made to be the guide for measuring real achievement, rather than mere lust for lucre and dominion over others (all the better to play boardroom footsie with the Tweed Mafia)…Then it has my unwavering support.
Some links to ground breaking labor laws,
The Wagner act;1935.
http://www.stfrancis.edu/ba/gh.....wagner.htm
The Taft Hartley act ;1945.
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/bus/A0847620.html
Davis-Bacon wage law;
http://www.dol.gov/compliance/laws/comp-dbra.htm
Of course, not all inclusive,but a good reference point.
darkblack,
“Frankly, I don’t have fond memories of my union affiliation%u2026″
Mine isn’t either. I was in management in a company in California decades ago that made parachutes. The hourly workers made little more than minimum wage, back out the union dues, and it was LESS than minimum wage. WTF was the IBEW doing “representing” them in the first place? Parachutes??? No “right to work” there. You HAD to join the union to work there.
Ooops. How did I double post? Sorry ’bout that.
I was originally puzzled as to why my #59 comment was “in moderation” but it obviously was approved.
Actually when we moved here and went to the eye doc the first time, even he was shocked at how much our insurance covered.
The same goes for my regular family physician. When I need a prescription more often than not he offers me some of the freebies he gets from the pharma sales people. I remind him to save them for his other patients because we also have prescription coverage, it’s free for generics and $10 for the name brand stuff.
On the other hand, the hospital never forgets my coverage, they’d order up a thousand tests and procedures for a hangnail if I would let them.
When your healthcare providers are awed by your coverage you know it’s good! **saying a prayer to give thanks to the Teamsters gods and goddesses** LOL
Hmmmm,
Just had a post disappear into the void completely. Nothing serious,just had some links to historical labor laws.The Wagner act, Taft-Hartely,Davis-Bacon.Stuff people can easily google like i did.
I am also from a strong union family. The problem for unions in the United States is the downsizing of industry, the days of the large concentrated workforce is gone.
When somebody comes up with a plan of how to effectively unionize the contingent workforce maybe we can talk.
Minimum wage is another sore spot with me. It has been proven over and over again that it is an ineffective means of dragging hard working families out of poverty. Living wage programs have proven to be much more beneficial to communities and families. Living wage programs are also broader in scope and truthfully, easier to achieve.
Living wage, that’s where its at…if the service union gets Walmart, I’ll be proud to say that I was wrong about the labor movement in the United States. Deregulation, Reagan-Bush-Clinton-Bush, and outsourcing killed the union movement in the US. The unions now have to take their battle overseas…
But I am a US citizen, and I don’t have the patience to wait for “world-wide” standards to catch up with American wages. Why should I sit here and have my wages depressed because of outsourcing? Its my tax dollars getting spent anyway, might as well go to a fellow American getting paid enough to take care of his/her family/self! Support Living Wage Laws in your community!
As a Proud member of The I.A.T.S.E Stagehands Union, I can VOW that getting in is NOT the easy part. Getting in took me nearly 10 years of my life, and I had to be voted in by my peers… and I WAS one of the easy, early entrants.
I had to work my ass off, prove my worthiness, accept EVERY call for work, give up Family engagements, ALWAYS have EVERY tool I might expect to need– even if I didn’t know what department I’d be working in– from Rigger to Wardrobe, and to know every aspect of my job. The training was grueling, long, and thorough. Few made it in in less than ten years in my Local.
–mf
Bustednuckles, it’s at 61
Busted- it did not disappear. But, if there are more than “x” links in a comment it goes into moderation. That is my experience, anyway. And, depending on what other multifold things JH or RH are doing, it emerges sooner or later.
“Anyone who knows anything about union organizing campaigns in the US understands that NRLA “secret ballot elections have little to do with “free” elections and that if democracy in American politics looked anything like democracy in the American workplace, we’d be living in a fascist dictatorship: According to a report issued by American Rights at Work,”
That was rich! Wake up and smell the fascism, sista!
I was expecting moderation,but got no message. and all I see at 61 is Cozumel.No biggie.I don’t know how many links it takes,much like a tootsie pop, but it’s o.k..
That’s weird because Cozumel is at 62 on my computer.
Bustednuckles:
Try SHIFT REFRESH, I’ve had the same thing happen from time to time and a refresh will usually fix it.
Also, OT -
If you haven’t seen it yet, the short video that 15 year old Ava Lowery produced for YKOS is worth a look. I think she may have a future in media:
http://www.crooksandliars.com/.....html#a8497
Monkeyfister—I’ve has the pleasure of working with a few IA locals across the country. Which local is lucky to have you as a member?
I hate to say it but the card check system is not the union (or employee) panecea that you make out. An employer can agree to a card check for their employees and sit back on the side lines but there is nothing to stop a second union (upon hearing that an employer is allowing the card check process to occur) coming in unbenownst and having all the employees sign their cards. By enlarge many employees think they’re just signing up for “the union” and upon being told that they’ll get x,y, & z benefits they sign another card.
So the employer can agree to recognize a union and enter into discussions to formalize a contract only to discover that another union also has cards signed and thus succeeding in poaching the members from the first union. Often the second union is offering reduced benefits but as long as their cards were signed on a later date then that is the count that matters.
An open and fair ballot with a single union seems to me as the only way to go.
Of course on the other hand if all employers paid decent wages and provided 100% of employees health insurance as well as some 401K then the unions (effectively middle men) would be even more redundant than they’ve become.
Busted- it is at #61. I don’t know why you didn’t get a “mod alert”- I have in the past. From my own experience, may I suggest that links in a single post less that a number with five letters? This has helped me. xxoo
I’ve been union for 55 years - and learned early on that they are needed. However, in the case of the Teamsters I also learned that all Teamster unions aren’t alike. Organizers should always ask themselves “Will I be as active to kick them out if it doesn’t work out as I am active in trying to get them in?”
One of the first things fascist regimes have done (often with the active complicity of the US) is crush trade unionism.
I’m afraid I don’t believe that trend can be reversed; the eradication of the middle class and the yawning division of the country between really rich and really poor ( la Brazil or Argentina) is already well under way.
We have become in effect a Banana Republic.
The destruction of organized labor in the US is the result of Americans not understanding that the good wages they earned was due to the blood and tears of workers during the 30’s. Once the gains were made, non-union people were paid good wages and received the same protections that union workers got in their contracts, and non-union labor did not see the benefit of belonging to unions. I remember when Reagan fired the air traffic controllers, most Americans supported Reagan and not the the union. Companies did what was best for them, but the workers who abandoned other workers by crossing picket lines are responsible for the destruction of organized labor. Now it’s too late. Americans will have to compete with China and other low wage workers around the world.
On the issue of a “free elections” vs. card check. Seems to me the term “free election” here refers to a little version of free election modeled on a political campaign, with a campaign season, secret vote, etc. That process can be just as gamed and corrupted while following the empty forms of a political election. This is especially true if there is no impartial regulatory body that can control the side with more power to intimidate the workers during campaign, or election, or violate secret ballot. The more powerful side has been sometimes management and sometimes labor, depending on the when and where you are talking about. But recently the regulatory bodies and interpretation of the law have been completely captured by business anti union forces. Card checks have their own drawbacks as some commenters have pointed out. So, too much sloganeering over these systems is silly.
i own and operate a non-union shop. a large number of my employees used to work in union shops.
they like it better non-union.
on the other hand, we think that fedex is the lousiest freight company around. we much prefer UPS.
FRED SMITH, THE FOUNDER OF FEDEX, is of course a bushit pioneer, i think. though his bio may try to paint him as a self-made man, he like ted turner and george, was born with a silver spoon in his mouth.
hell, fred might even have been a boner during the era of kerry and bush.
but there is this odd phenomenon out there. ups acquired mail boxes etc. a few years back. when mail boxes etc was an indy, it pushed UPS freighting.
imagine my surprise when i used them after they became the UPS STORE. now they pushed fedex. at lower rates.
have UPS-FEDEX formed a cartel?
I’m an APWU member.
I have a love-hate relationship with my union.
APWU (and all postal unions) has a multi-tier system in place. I’m in the bottom tier, and I’m not happy about it. I’ve been there for 7 years now. It’s really, really old.
Getting in is easy? Yeah, it’s easy to get in the APWU–ONCE YOU GET THE DAMNED JOB.
Try getting into an APWU clerk craft job. The only people who get in quickly are V