We All Need a Union

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
63
RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
Workers of America: Wake Up! We All Need a Union!

By Dave Lindorff

December 11, 2008 "CommonDreams" --- W
e workers of America, white collar, pink collar, blue collar, and no collar at all, have just gotten a wonderful example of the power of having a union. It¹s an example that should have every unorganized employee in America looking for a union organizer.

With the recession deepening, it¹s clear that major layoffs are in store, and that employers are going to be putting the squeeze on employees, even if they don¹t drop them. Individually, workers have little leverage in such a situation.

Look what happened to the workers at Chicago-based Republic Windows and Doors. The company was losing business, and according to some of its employees, had been in recent weeks secretly moving some heavy equipment out of the plant, possibly in preparation for relocation to some lower-wage location. Then its bank, Bank of America, one of the nation¹s largest financial institutions, and a recent recipient of $25 billion in federal bailout funds from the US Treasury and the Federal Reserve Bank, informed the company that it would not supply credit for the firm to meet payroll. The workers were told by management that the plant would be shut down in three days.

At many companies across America, such news would be met by groans and tears, but by little else. What can an employee do when the boss says the company is closing its doors? Well, Republic¹s workers, members of the United Electrical Workers union, didn¹t take the news lying down. They took it sitting down on the factory floor.

The company's 300 workers quickly organized a round-the-clock sit-in occupation of the plant, vowing to stay until they got the 60 days notice that the law requires in the event of relocations. They also demanded that they be paid accrued vacation pay, which the company had said would be lost.

Bank of America was initially unmoved, but the workers began a national publicity campaign that was leading to protests at B of A offices across the country (one was planned for tomorrow here in Philadelphia). Boycotts were also being organized of the bank.

Then this afternoon, Bank of America folded, announcing that in the face of all the protests and the bad publicity, which focused much on the fact that the bank that was refusing to lend to a troubled American manufacturing firm had just received $25 billion from taxpayers that was intended to ³unfreeze² credit at the banks, it would after all extend credit to Republic Windows and Doors.

This is a happy ending story for the workers at Republic, who will at least get paychecks through the holidays, even if the future of their company remains iffy.

But more importantly, it is a powerful message to America¹s workers: united we can win. Divided and unorganized, we are going to be trampled.

There is a second message here too. Americans across the nation need to contact their congressional representatives and senators, and President-Elect Barack Obama (who backed the workers at Republic), and demand that as one of the first acts of the new Congress, they pass into law the Employee Free Choice Act‹a labor law reform that would end the ability of employers to stall off union elections for years, and to refuse to bargain a first contract with a new union. The act, which Obama, during his campaign, vowed to support, as did nearly all Democratic candidates for Congress, would require employers to accept the certification of a union whenever a majority of workers at a workplace signed cards saying they want a union, and would require them to negotiate and reach a first contract within 90 days.

Such an act would finally restore some semblance of fairness into the union organizing process, which has been skewed over the last 40-50 years to be almost impossibly in management¹s favor. Little wonder that union membership in the private sector has fallen to below 9% (from over 30% back in the early 1950s), even as polls repeatedly show that a majority of Americans would want to have a union at their job if they could get one.

The Republic Windows and Doors victory is a victory for all workers in America, and is a clarion call for more unions everywhere.

Let¹s get to work and organize.
 

Liberalman

Senate Member
Mar 18, 2007
5,623
35
48
Toronto
The union had good teachers as they grew and that is they acted just like corporations act. More power as a single group like more power as a business association, like more power in business special interest groups. It's a constant tug of war with the governments to get what both parties want.
 

The Old Medic

Council Member
May 16, 2010
1,330
2
38
The World
There are very good reasons why Union membership have been dropping steadily for the past 5 decades.

Detroit is a perfect example of how unions work. As the automakers moved out of the area, the unions went after all levels of government workers. They got massive salary, pension and medical benefit increases, increases that the city could not afford to pay.

The Unions refused to even negotiate the POSSIBILITY of reducing those things. As a result, the city deteriorated more and more from the 1970's onward. The city could not pay for replacement of things like the bulbs in streetlights, could not purchase any up to date fire equipment, and they could not afford to fill vacancies among city workers as they occurred.

The Unions bankrolled the politicians that they liked, and ensured that they were elected. Then, those politicians turned around, and gave the unions everything that they wanted, plus more.

Finally, the city became so dangerous, and so broke, that the State had to step in and take control.

Now, the Unions are screaming because not only will the pensions be reduced markedly, but so will the vastly inflated salaries and benefits of ALL municipal employees.

The unions are attempting to take their case to the U.S. Supreme Court, that their salaries and benefits can NOT be reduced, regardless of the inability of the city to pay them. They want the Federal Government to provide the money so that they can draw pay that is totally out of proportion for the jobs involved.

That is exactly what Unions in the US have come to. Almost 2/3 of the Unionized workers in the USA are government employees. And believe me, they are NOT motivated to make government a more efficient and streamlined affair.
 

damngrumpy

Executive Branch Member
Mar 16, 2005
9,949
21
38
kelowna bc
Yes actually the popularity of the unions will increase once again. We were told for years
oh unions were good in the past but today we don't need them anymore, and that my
friends ain't true.
Young people are not going to put up with the bull of working for starvation wages for these
fast food giants for no money no advancement with monetary gain that should come with it
The call is people won't pay more money for a burger. Yes they will no matter how high you
raise cigarette prices people buy them same with rum.
Tough times is a lesson learned the first ones a company will screw, the people who made
them wealthy that's who.
I have been a general manager and a union leader over time and I prefer working with a union
it is easier everyone knows where they stand.
 

lone wolf

Grossly Underrated
Nov 25, 2006
32,493
210
63
In the bush near Sudbury
Yes actually the popularity of the unions will increase once again. We were told for years
oh unions were good in the past but today we don't need them anymore, and that my
friends ain't true.
Young people are not going to put up with the bull of working for starvation wages for these
fast food giants for no money no advancement with monetary gain that should come with it
The call is people won't pay more money for a burger. Yes they will no matter how high you
raise cigarette prices people buy them same with rum.
Tough times is a lesson learned the first ones a company will screw, the people who made
them wealthy that's who.
I have been a general manager and a union leader over time and I prefer working with a union
it is easier everyone knows where they stand.
Unions are going to have to pull up their socks and actually do something to preserve jobs. A reputation of biting the hand that feeds it is hard to shake - especially if employers are wise enough to realize their money comes off the backs of good workers.
 

damngrumpy

Executive Branch Member
Mar 16, 2005
9,949
21
38
kelowna bc
Not so the union is a bargaining agent always has been even millionaire hockey players
have a union so why wouldn't the workers at Tims etc. All the old worn out statements
that were recycled years ago are the same old arguments being used today. Yes I have
lived with strikes, lockouts and all kinds of other problems usually the result of employer
cowboys who feel they can do what they please and across the table one or two hot
heads who are hell bent on trouble anyway.
The real fact is most contracts come without a strike, lockout or even a strike vote.
Less than ten percent end up with upheaval
 

lone wolf

Grossly Underrated
Nov 25, 2006
32,493
210
63
In the bush near Sudbury
Unions are businesses who look out for themselves first - too often at the expense of their own members. They only wise up when the pockets to pick get scarce - then they amalgamate to become BIG business
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
547
113
Vernon, B.C.
Not so the union is a bargaining agent always has been even millionaire hockey players
have a union so why wouldn't the workers at Tims etc. All the old worn out statements
that were recycled years ago are the same old arguments being used today. Yes I have
lived with strikes, lockouts and all kinds of other problems usually the result of employer
cowboys who feel they can do what they please and across the table one or two hot
heads who are hell bent on trouble anyway.
The real fact is most contracts come without a strike, lockout or even a strike vote.
Less than ten percent end up with upheaval


Actually, I'm in favour of unions for one purpose, safety watch dog, if only they'd keep their noses out of running the business.
 

Walter

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 28, 2007
34,843
92
48
50,000 GM members of the UAW are on strike. 50 years ago GM had 300,000+ members of the UAW. Unions destroy jobs.