rio wrote:
Yo, V, I'd rather we wound this down now as, like you say, we won't agree. We should get back to talking metal and chalk unions up alongside race as something you and I should never talk about.
Just in case you're interested (because you've talked a lot about my ideological beliefs here), the below is a short elaboration of WHY I believe what I do about labour relations.
(if you don't care, please ignore)
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Gregor is a long way from a neutral, but the statistics he's listing here are from the National Labor Relations Board so presumably reasonably objective. A few years back I worked on an investigation into alleged illegal union busting at a warehouse in the deep south, and spoke to a number of people who'd seen these things first hand.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree ... ionbashersQuote:
In 2005, over 31,000 workers were disciplined or fired for union activity - that's one every 17 minutes of the year. And the number of workers being disciplined or fired is increasing - between 1993 and 2003, the average was 22,633.
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These bald figures hide a lot more. Research has found that 49% of employers threaten to close their operations when faced with unionisation attempts and 91% of employees are forced to have one-to-one meetings with supervisors to dissuade them from joining when attempts are made to unionise workplaces.
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More than half (58%) of the US workforce - some 60 million workers - say they would join a union if they could. But they do not, because employers impose costs on workers for joining a union. They make it a risk-laden activity.
I met people who'd been fired for stealing without any evidence, without any further investigation, and on the word of one person- suspiciously soon after they'd been conspicuously organising in the workplace. (The accused was a well-respected member of staff who'd been there for many years with no disciplinary problems. They'd been accused of taking approximately $2 worth of produce). Everyone there was forced(!) to go into closed meetings where supervisors would issue veiled ominous predictions about how they would shut down the firm, or they would lose all their healthcare, or even that they would lose food stamps, if the union got in. This was in a plant where mgmt. was quite open and unapologetic about having fired people for such infractions as leaving for lunch 30 seconds (really) before scheduled time. I could go on for a long time here.
A lot of this is obviously the testimony of the workers involved hence why I would never name any of the agencies involved because a lot of the accusations were unproven. But mgmt. were very explicit about their opposition to unionisation, and were open about using tactics that I believe were extremely unfair, given that they were in a position of power over their workforce. This goes back to what I was saying- unions are emphatically NOT in a position of power, especially in the US. They are really fighting for what they can get.
And to bring it back full circle- I'd be very surprised if the things we started with: undocumented migrants undermining conditions in US workplaces, are not greatly exacerbated by that decline and lack of union power.
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On a related note, the same thing is happening here in the UK, at this very moment.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2010 ... day-strikeA key BASSA union organiser gets fired in tenuous circumstances
OK fair enough, we're both reasonable men, usually (haha) after all.
Obviously unions have done some good in the past, but there is a downside as well, and some of the reasons that those employers took the actions they did may be tied in with that (see previous discussion). Or it may be for reasons that have nothing at all to do with their union status; the article doesn't supply any sources to back that up; it could have been any number of factors: bad economy, lack of work, maybe those employees were goof-offs, who knows.
The assumption is being made that all non-union labor is done in harsh sweatshop conditions, with the minimium pay.
In my experience, that is not true.
I've been in the workforce since 1984, and I have never worked in a unionized plant, and out of those 25 some odd years, I have only seen one case of lousy work conditions (low wages, exploitation of foriegn workers, unsafe conditions, nepotism, squalor, etc).
Last time I heard (I once in a great while have a phone conversation with someone that still works there) they have lost about 30% of their business over the last year.
The vast majority of my work expience has been fair and pleasant enough, with employers being pretty damn flexible, and recognizant of performance.
The article doesn't supply any reasons for the employers dissmissing (well, some were merely "disciplined") the workers, leaving the reader to any and all kinds of speculation. It states "for union activity", but what does that mean, and how is that proven?
Was that the official reason given, or was that the reason that was surmised by the union employee that was disciplined / fired?
I would imagine if they were dissmissed or disciplined for something like union activity, they would have a lawsuit. If anything in this country, employers are apt to tread very lightly on matters of discipline and dissmiss workers only after a lengthy process of "first verbal warning > second verbal > first written > second written and even a third written" before being let go. Of course there are grounds for automatic termination, but even those have to be pretty egregious.
I know a few small business owners, and believe me, their has to be a good reason, not barring the company not making money, of course.
That 31,000 number is but a drop in the bucket, though of how many
non-union people have become unemployed in the past year; as you know, it is in the many millions.
As for safety, OSHA covers that.
Did you read the article I supplied?
Anyway, we'll have to agree to disagree, as always, haha, because our world views are pretty far apart; I am not claiming that I am right, necessarilly, just the way I see things.
Carry on.
note: please excuse any grammatcal errors; it is 5:00am and I have barely started my first cup of coffee, so...