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Why Workers Need the Employee Free Choice Act
Unions are good for workers. Today, median weekly pay for union members is $886, compared to $691 for nonunion workers. Moving cargo on the Oakland waterfront pays three times what stocking shelves does at Wal-Mart because longshore workers have had a union contract since 1934.
In 1936, Congress recognized the value of unions and passed the National Labor Relations Act, setting up a legal system in which private sector, nonfarm workers could join unions and bargain. The preamble declares the law's purpose: "encouraging the practice and procedure of collective bargaining and ... protecting the exercise by workers of full freedom of association, self-organization, and designation of representatives of their own choosing."
Today, however, the law is virtually unable to fulfill its intended function. Rep. George Miller, D-Martinez, has proposed commonsense measures to restore its effectiveness in the Employee Free Choice Act. Employers are mounting a hysterical campaign against it, even calling it "bolshevism," and claiming to be protectors of their workers' rights. We need a reality check about what really happens when workers try to organize.
The Employee Free Choice Act would require employers to repay three times the back pay of a worker fired for organizing a union, with $20,000 fines for willful or repeated violations. It is illegal to fire a worker for union activity, but pro-union workers were fired in 30 percent of union-representation elections in 2007, according to the Center for Economic and Policy Research. There are no fines or penalties on employers for this - just reinstatement and back pay, and employers even get to deduct the unemployment benefits of the fired worker.
The National Labor Relations Act is the only federal law where violators receive no punishment. Workers, knowing they can be fired so easily, are understandably afraid to join unions.
The proposed legislation would therefore bring back the process for forming unions used in the years after the labor act was first passed (and which is used today in Canada). Workers would be able to sign union cards, and employers would have to recognize their union if a majority signed. Today, employers demand secret-ballot elections, and then wage an anti-union campaign that peaks on election day. For instance, according to the International Longshore and Warehouse Union, at Blue Diamond in Sacramento, the company told workers two days before the election that many might lose their jobs if the union won because growers wouldn't bring any more almonds to the plant.
Companies like Blue Diamond use outside union-busters, who have created a billion-dollar industry managing these anti-union campaigns. Campaign tactics include: In the weeks before these tainted elections, 51 percent of employers threaten to close if the union wins; and 91 percent force employees to attend one-on-one anti-union meetings with supervisors. This conduct is effectively unpunishable, making a mockery of free elections. Signing cards is a safer, calmer process that workers control themselves, and workers keep the option of using either the cards or the election - their choice, not their employer's.
Last, when workers form a union and a majority supports it, companies should negotiate a contract. That's what the law says. The reality? Even when workers win elections, companies don't negotiate in half the cases. After a year, they can legally walk away. When workers at the Rite-Aid warehouse in Lancaster (Los Angeles County) won an election, the most important agreement they could achieve after 18 bargaining sessions was the location of the union bulletin board.
With the Employee Free Choice Act, after 120 days of fruitless bargaining on a first-time contract, an arbitrator can resolve the issues still in dispute. Companies say they fear an outsider imposing unrealistic conditions. But with no mechanism to force agreement, companies know it's lots cheaper to wait out the year than to raise wages and provide better benefits.
Many employers simply do not accept the law's intention - encouraging workers to organize. They created the need for the act by undermining the process and rights established in 1936. By first undermining the law, and then resisting Miller's common-sense remedies, they are pushing for a return to an era when organizing a union had no protection at all.



16 Comments so far
Show Allhttp://www.unionvoice.org/campaign/att_right?rk=V1v0jJdqThfNE
ATT workers support petition
I helped organize a Union with my State Job. AFSCME, in the late 1990s got the right to be our representative. In 2002 a Republican got elected and ignored the contract because our Union did not endorse him. We went 4 years without a contract. So if Governments can get away with it, makes it very easy for private companies to abuse workers. Congress needs to pass the Employee Free Choice Act.
The present economic crisis is the result of overproduction within the capitalist system. Because of the relentless class struggle waged by the capitalist class against the world's working class for decades now, the latter are unable to afford to purchase the commodities it produces. The only way that consumers can afford to purchase all they produce is if they are armed with the means to retain more of the surplus value they create during the course of production. The only thing that can give the working class this power to raise their incomes and purchasing power, is by coming together collectively and in an organized fashion within trade unions. Therefore, it is imperative that workers be provided with this most essential tool required to carry out a class struggle in their interests. Sections within the capitalist class recognize that this fundamental contradiction within the capitalist mode of production (overproduction) can only be rectified by empowering workers more than they have been for decades. It is for this reason that the Obama Administration is supporting the Employee Free Choice Act. They have little other choice.
"[T]he Obama Administration is supporting the Employee Free Choice Act"
I hadn't noticed.
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Eric Patton
Cincinnati, OH
ebpatton@yahoo.com
Try this then ...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_4qF213IceI
If President Obama was full-bore campaigning for the EFCA we would be seeing more than one video on YouTube! Yes, he is in favor of it, but he is not stumping for it in a major way. He will just stand by while the Blue Dog Democrats and the Republicans deep six it.
It might be possible that a way to raise income and purchasing power would be to reduce the tax burden on working families. While federal taxes are not as burdensome as they had been, state and local taxes in addition to social security taxes all eat up a great portion of workers income.
The best way to raise purchasing power for working families, which American history has shown, is to raise wages for the middle class, not cut taxes. You know this I suspect. Your post makes me suspicious.
I hate to sound pessimistic and cynical, however EFCA has little chance of passing both houses of Congress, no matter if the administration "supports" it or not. Just like single-payer universal (think Canada for example) health care reform will not happen (unless that is massive civil mobilization takes to the streets to demand it). When our fragmented, propagandized, American Idol worshipping, apathetic, lazy public gets off the couch and makes some demands, little will change substantively. History shows that time and time again.
Besides, how can the average working stiff make an informed decision on the topic when we are bombarded with spin, propaganda and outright lies daily?
Thank you David Bacon. You've made a clear and concise analysis of EFCA and done away with some rather creative arguments against "card check" that I've read in other posts. Mainly, that people are too illiterate to realize what they are signing. At least, that was the veiled implication.
The above posts make great points, especially Struggle and gringoflamenco. Maybe we should be passing out literature and union pins. The unemployment office might be a good place to start.
Congress is another problem. The pressure from lobbyists and business interests is breathtaking. They are willing to go to the wall on this one.
When the people fear their government there is tyranny,
when the government fears the people there is liberty.
~ Thomas Jefferson
No legislation is perfect but the reason I want EFCA to pass and badly so is that this will reopen the doors to the real meaning of labor unions to the point that it doesn't have to be about money alone. Labor unions were formed from community levels and the goal was to get more workers to actually put teamwork first and take pride in hard work. That way, employee abuse could be minimized and people wouldn't feel wasted for their hard work.
The most clinching argument for the effectiveness of the EFCA is simply the degree of no-holds barred viciousness that big business is attacking it.
The US Chamber of Commerce and Wal-Mart have both called their fight "Armageddon".
Now why would these bosses go so apoplectic over such a seemingly innocuous and harmless piece of legislation? Gee, I really wonder why...
Anyways, the costs will simply be passed on to everyone else, Wal-mart is then be able to achieve their dream of being a monopoly since it will kill the smaller retailers who do not have Wal-Marts volume. Then they can close stores, make you drive farther to get to one of their stores, and cut jobs.
Only very large corporations who control market share can afford unions, and they find unions useful since they can control the leaders and pass on any higher costs, and it hurts their smaller non-union competitors when there is competition for labour since they have to offer more even without a union, although this is not so much an issue now.
Unions, like excessive government regulation, allow bigger corporations to get bigger. When you are a monopoly or a cartel, you just pass on the costs to consumers who may or may not be part of a union, and there is nothing preventing these companies from just leaving the US if labour costs get too high. The union leaders main role today is to convince union members to sacrifice wages and benefits to save their jobs.
Unions have been growing in the public sector because they can pay the higher costs with increased taxes or debt. Governments don't go bankrupt because they don't have to pay the principal on their debt (federal anyways) and can increase taxes. Only taxpayers go bankrupt, and for individuals, many can't get bankruptcy protection like corporations due to the 2005 law.
Small businesses, which as a group are the largest source of new jobs in the country, will likely find themselves besieged with demands for unionization. These businesses operate on small budgets, without the assistance of full time lawyers. Under EFCA, their first exposure to unions could come at the conclusion of a secret campaign, which requires them to both hire and acquire expertise on matters for which they are not equipped to deal, at a high cost. Big companies have in-house personnel to handle these matters.
These calls for unionization in smaller companies will divert management from product development, marketing and sales, on which their business models depend. The likely consequence of EFCA will be to slow the formation of small businesses, as entrepreneurs will reassess their prospects of success to take into account the dangers at an early stage in the process. In the long term the EFCA will reduce the rate of job creation and technology growth.
It is impossible for unions to claim monopoly rents in the face of globalization, when businesses can move offshore or outsource jobs. In the end, wages will increase with more unions, so too will prices, and more companies will leave the US for cheaper labour, and there will be fewer jobs, union and non-union. Unless they do something about immigration, and remove tax incentives for companies to move production outside the US (replaced with tax penalties), not to mention the health care burden, then things will not improve for the American worker. Unions are not the solution.
Single payer health care paid for with debt free government created money would do more to increase wages, or effective wages, than anything. Unions would benefit mostly the insurance companies who would collect insurance premiums they do not get because smaller companies can not afford to provide them without putting their business at risk.
The Unions will STAND ALONE. They will NOT join with other groups or movements as equals to fight for common causes. Attempts to combine THEIR goals with others that would multiply their strength, will be met with polite dismissal by "Communications Directors" who are very good at doing what they are told to do - "get rid of cranks". Standard institutional behavior - "Not Invented Here".
The Unions, as always, are opposed by the ENTIRE corporate structure of America who consider Unions to be their mortal enemies (which they are) - "Morte!". A fair portion of Americans (authoritarian personalities) who are trained to kiss the whip will stand with the corporations. Because of that, the $200 million slush fund to destroy EFCA (only took $40-60mn to kill Chapter 7) will be used in combination with our "Greater Depression II" to annihilate Unions altogether ("we just can't afford them"). This will parallel the total evisceration of SSI & Medicare after BHO kills the $$, empties the Treasury, and turns Larry Summers loose to do his "steel toe flamenco" on America's corpse, just like he did in Russia as a gift from Klinton.
Curious parallel - as Russia has been an "Enemy" since the Bolshevik Revolution in '17 - working men and women in America have been the "Enemy" of kiddie raping, slaveholding, richfilth animals since our Founding Fathers modeled this country on the Roman Slave Republic ruled by feral patrician clans. Because of this, they will apply the same methods they used to cripple Russia: Human die-back, homeless elderly, no pensions, no savings, no jobs, no health care, life expectancy 46 for men, 55 for women - and glad to be dead. When people's lives are ruled by Kleptocracy, Death is gift. This is the one area where Oligarchy believes "giving is better than receiving".
Piece
Not until working men and women have self-respect and respect for their fellow workers, will the Employee Free Choice Act, unadulterated, be passed. The Republican Party is one big crime family and many in the Democratic Party collaborate with them, making sure no meaningful legislation which benefits people who work for a living ever gets passed.
It's unbelievable how many unionized workers spend their money at Wal-mart, one of the biggest anti-union companies on this planet. Another reason I don't spend my money at Whole Foods, either. Mackey, the founder, believes in corporate personhood, and is a staunch Republican supporter.
All wealth is created from labor. And while we are at it, add single payer health care for all into the equation.
Until the American worker decides to unlock the shackles and stand up for their rights, nothing will change, and the babbling will go on. It takes concerted effort, determination, education and knowledge of the facts.
Readers might also like to consult my Nolan Chart column, "A Libertarian Alternative to the EFCA":
http://www.nolanchart.com/article6060.html
--
Dan Clore
Smygo: News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo
Eyrie of the Arch-Anarch:
http://www.nolanchart.com/author341.html