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Cope

Nothing beats a good day at the ballpark

Local307site
Nothing beats a good day at the ballpark with your family and friends. That’s what happened thanks to your local Committee On Political Education (COPE).  Not only did the givers of COPE dollars  enjoy a summer game on Sunday June 21st between the Kansas City Royals and the Chicago Cubs they did so from the privacy of a dugout suite at the K! That’s right for spending 300 COPE dollars you received a VIP parking pass a seat in the dugout and a great Kansas City style BBQ with a full service bar, we were able to book the suite right next to the 3rd base, close enough that the game officials and players can hear you and they did. We got a few looks too because many of us really got into the game from that view point. To watch a professional baseball game from the field level should be a must do for everyone and by the way the Royals won which made it all that much better. We would like to make this an annual event so save those COPE dollars or if you’re not donating to COPE and wish to give, call the union hall and we’ll make sure you get a donation card to get enrolled thru payroll deduction.
 

Why we need unions

Local307site
 
Why you need a Union
 
 
Union members earn better wages and benefits than workers who aren’t union members. On average, union workers’ wages are 30 percent higher than their nonunion counterparts. While only 14 percent of nonunion workers have guaranteed pensions, fully 68 percent of union workers do. More than 97 percent of union workers have jobs that provide health insurance benefits, but only 85 percent of nonunion workers do. Unions help employers create a more stable, productive workforce—where workers have a say in improving their jobs.
When workers receive family-supportive wages, affordable benefits and respect on the job, their standard of living rises. Not surprisingly, the community benefits as well.

 
Unions Are Good for Business, Productivity and the Economy
According to Professor Harley Shaiken of the University of California-Berkeley,unions are associated with higher productivity, lower employee turnover, improved workplace communication, and a better-trained workforce.
Prof. Shaiken is not alone. There is a substantial amount of academic literature on the following benefits of unions and unionization to employers and the economy:
  • Economic Growth
  • Productivity
  • Competitiveness
  • Product or service delivery and quality
  • Training
  • Turnover
  • Solvency of the firm
  • Workplace health and safety
  • Economic development
Economic Growth
During the period 1945-1973, when a high percentage of workers had unions, wages kept pace with rising productivity, prosperity was widely shared, and economic growth was strong. Since 1973, union density and collective bargaining have declined, causing real wages to stagnate despite rising productivity. This decline in union density and bargaining contributed to the current financial crisis and severe recession, as unsustainable asset appreciation and easy credit too the place of wage increases most workers were not getting
Productivity
According to a recent survey of 73 independent studies on unions and productivity: “The available evidence points to a positive and statistically significant association between unions and productivity in the U.S. manufacturing and education sectors, of around 10 and 7 percent, respectively.”
Some scholars have found an even larger positive relationship between unions and productivity. According to Brown and Medoff, “unionized establishments are about 22 percent more productive than those that are not.”
Product/ Service Delivery and Quality
According to Professors Michael Ash and Jean Ann Seago heart attack recovery rates are higher in hospitals where nurses are unionized than in non-union hospitals. According to Professor Paul Clark, nurse unions improve patient care by raising staff-to-patient ratios, limiting excessive overtime, and improving nurse training.
Another study looked at the relationship between unionization and product quality in the auto industry. According to a summary of this study prepared by American Rights at Work:
“The author examines the system of co-management created through the General Motors-United Auto Workers partnership at the Saturn Corporation…The author credits the union with building a dense communications network throughout Saturn's management system. Compared to non-represented advisors, union advisors showed greater levels of lateral communication and coordination, which had a significant positive impact on quality performance.”
 
Training
Several studies in have found a positive association between unionization and the amount and quality of workforce training. Unionized establishments are more likely to offer formal training. This is especially true for small firms.  There are a number of reasons for this: less turnover among union workers, making the employer more likely to offer training; collective bargaining agreements that require employers to provide training; and finally, unions often conduct their own training.
Turnover
Professor Shaiken also finds that unions reduce turnover. He cites Freeman and Medoff’s finding that “about one fifth of the union productivity effect stemmed from lower worker turnover. Unions improve communication channels giving workers the ability to improve their conditions short of ‘exiting.’”
Solvency
Labor’s enemies assert that unions drive employers out of business, but academic research refutes this claim. According to Professors Richard Freeman and Morris Kleiner, unionism has a statistically insignificant effect (meaning no effect) on firm solvency. Freeman and Kleiner conclude “unions do not, on average, drive firms or business lines out of business or produce high displacement rates for unionized workers.”
Workplace Health and Safety
Employers should be concerned about workplace health and safety as a matter of enlightened self-interest. According to an American Rights at Work summary of a study by John E. Baugher and J. Timmons Roberts:
 
“Only one factor effectively moves workers who are in subordinate positions to actively cope with hazards: membership in an independent labor union.  These findings suggest that union growth could indirectly reduce job stress by giving workers the voice to cope effectively with job hazards.”
The benefits of unions in terms of safer workplaces are hardly new. According to one most recent study, unions reduced fatalities in coal mining by an estimated 40 percent between 1897 and 1929.
Economic Development
Unions also play a positive role in economic development. One good example is the Wisconsin Regional Training Partnership, “an association of 125 employers and unions dedicated to family-supporting jobs in a competitive business environment. WRTP members have stabilized manufacturing employment in the Milwaukee metro area, and contributed about 6,000 additional industrial jobs to it over the past five years. Among member firms, productivity is way up--exceeding productivity growth in nonmember firms.”http://www.aflcio.org/joinaunion/why/uniondifference/uniondiff8.cfm


 
 

The Recovery Isn’t A Recovery For the Working Poor

Local307site
By George Warner
 
January 27th, 2011
 
The economy ain’t lukewarm. Wall St. is boiling, but working America is still quite cold.
 
On Wednesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average passed 12,000, before dipping down below the mark the end of the day. The New York Times says there are only “tentative signs of [an economic] pickup.” But, if we are to trust the stock market—and by golly, as Americans we always trust the market!—things in America are looking good. And the Dow hasn’t been this high since June 2008.
 
In June 2008, Lehman Brothers was still months from closing. Goldman Sachs was still an investment bank and AIG was still a privately run corporation. Bernie Madoff’s Ponzi scheme would run for another 6 months. The markets were reacting to the largest uptick in unemployment in over 20 years—49,000 net jobs were lost (later adjusted to 60,000) that May and the unemployment rate had experienced a “steep jump,” from (wait for it…) 5 to 5.5 percent. When the jobless report came out, the angle was that high school students could not find summer jobs.
 
Two and a half years later, corporate profits are roaring once again. Big paydays are back. Hundreds of millions of dollars are being freely spent by the world’s plutocrats as they convene in Switzerland. And in the strange world that is American politics, Republicans are saying the recession was caused by government!
 
And, as a nation, we are above the 5.5 percent unemployment rate reported that June—by a lot. The seasonally adjusted unemployment rate, 9.4 percent, underestimates the true extent of our employment problems by leaving out the many workers said to have ‘dropped out of the workforce.’ By Economic Policy Institute’s estimates, we are 11.5 million jobs short. 27 million Americans are unemployed or underemployed. (To see how little our labor market has bounced back, check out this Youtube visualization of the last 3 years…the only thing you can’t see is recovery.)
 
And according to a report released this Wednesday by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, we can expect high unemploymentall the way until 2016. They expect the rate to stay above 9 percent for the rest of this year and stay above 8 percent in 2012.
 
In a disconcerting trend, the very few jobs that are coming back are overwhelmingly temporary jobs, or jobs in the retail or hospitality—basically low wage jobs that more often than not provide any benefits. They are not a career, but a stopgap. And they are not the type of job we want to see 27 million more of.
 
All this is to say that: the portrayal of a tepid, unsteady or lukewarm American economy is wrong. The corporate recovery has taken place and the rich are living easy. The recovery for working America, on the other hand, has not materialized.
 

Is Big Labor Losing Muscle Amid Economic Hard Times?

Local307site
Labor unions staged just 11 major work stoppages throughout the country in 2010, the second mildest spate of such strikes or lockouts in more than 60 years amid one of the toughest job markets in American history.

The Labor Department today said the nearly dozen major work stoppages -- which involve 1,000 or more workers and at least one shift -- idled 45,000 workers for a total of 302,000 lost workdays. Only 2009, with five stoppages idling 13,000 workers, saw fewer instances of major strife between workers and employers in all the years since the government began tracking stoppages in 1947.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Nurses form a picket line around United Hospital during a strike in St. Paul, Minn., on June 10. Members of the Minnesota Nurses Association launched a one-day strike at 14 hospitals in Minnesota.
The numbers are the latest data to confirm that at a time when a vast corps of unemployed Americans is searching for jobs, organized labor is poorly positioned to demand better compensation or working conditions.

The affected industries ranged from Boeing aircraft workers in Long Beach, Calif., to Longshoremen in New York and New Jersey.

But nearly half the actions involved teachers -- among the hardest hit victims of ailing state and municipal finances -- and nurses, a profession that has remained in demand despite the economic crisis.

If supply and demand is the most dominant economic law determining the leverage unions hold over employers with the threat of a strike, the balance these past three years has overwhelmingly favored the bosses.

Richard Fisher, president of the Dallas Federal Reserve, noted in a speech today that on top of the loss of 8.75 million jobs from 2008 through February of last year, the number of Americans of working age increased by 4.4 million during the same period. And though employers created roughly a million new jobs last year, that still didn't keep pace with the number of new people entering the work force then.


"All in all, we have approximately 6 million more people of working age than we did when the recession began -- and a net loss of 7.7 million jobs," Fisher said. "Divining policies that will encourage the private sector to increase hiring by enough to make up some of this lost ground is both an urgent and a daunting task."

It makes similarly daunting any union defiance of employers, which itself has been waning for decades.

The end-of-the-decade recession may have skewed the average stoppages for the past 10 years, but the average was already down down to 34 per year between 1991 and 2000 from 69 per year between 1981 to 1990 and 261 per year between 1971 to 1980.
 

Labor and Laws

Local307site

Labor board flexes muscle, to chagrin of business

By SAM HANANEL
The Associated Press
Wednesday, February 9, 2011; 3:30 PM
WASHINGTON -- The agency that enforces the nation's labor laws has emerged as a key player in the clash between business and organized labor over union rights.
The National Labor Relations Board has been flexing its muscle in recent months by cracking down on businesses that fire employees during union organizing drives and reconsidering some business-friendly decisions made during the George W. Bush administration.
It recently proposed a new rule that would require every private employer to display posters explaining union rights. And last month, it threatened to sue four states over laws that guarantee the right to a secret ballot in union elections.
The moves are a rare bright spot for a labor movement that has lost more than 1.3 million members over the last two years and failed to win federal legislation that would make it easier to organize new members.
But business groups are unnerved, and say the newly energized board is going too far to help labor unions. The board has also provoked GOP lawmakers, who are expected to question the board's activities at a congressional hearing on Friday.
Some Republicans have suggested the NLRB and other independent agencies could see their budgets cut.
"We're not taking anything off the table as far as how aggressive we're going to be in reducing spending and bringing some fiscal responsibility back to government, and the NLRB is not exempt from that," said Brian Newell, spokesman for Minnesota Rep. John Kline, who chairs the House Education and the Workforce Committee.
But some say the board may go even further in the coming months, possibly speeding up the time frame for union elections to as little as 10 days after organizers at a work site collect enough signatures.
That would be a huge boost for unions and a blow to companies like retail giant Wal-Mart and laundry company Cintas Corp., which have successfully fought off unions for years and now count on having at least a month or two to mount union resistance campaigns.
Board chairwoman Wilma Liebman says the Republican critics are launching misguided effort to portray the board as radical. She sees an agency that is "reinvigorated" and finally back to enforcing labor laws after years of malaise.
"There are those people out there who would prefer that the board be dead or dying," she told The Associated Press. "Now that it's alive and sitting up in the hospital bed, they are upset about that. Some are even angry because they'd just as soon it stay dormant."
The five-member board, which also referees labor-management disputes and oversees union elections, has three Democrats and one Republican - with another GOP seat vacant. The balance shifts depending on which party controls the White House.
Last March, Obama had to bypass the Senate to appoint lawyers Craig Becker and Mark Pearce to the board. Republicans had blocked Becker's nomination for months, claiming the former general counsel to the AFL-CIO and the Service Employees International Union would bring a radical, pro-union agenda to the job. Now with its first Democratic majority in nearly a decade, the agency has been making waves.
Becker's term will expire at the end of this year, but Obama last month renominated Becker to serve until 2014. Within days, all 47 Senate Republicans demanded he withdraw it. The lawmakers claim Becker has politicized the board to favor unions at the expense of business.
Pressure is also coming from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which fears the board's decisions will allow unions to gain a foothold in businesses where they have had trouble in the past.
"They seem to be shifting to a mindset that says their mission is to expand union membership regardless of what the law might be," said Glenn Spencer, an executive director for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
But AFL-CIO general counsel Lynn Rhinehart said the board is being unfairly targeted for simply doing its job and enforcing the law.
"It's just really not that remarkable what is going on over at the board," Rhinehart said. "This is an agency that was set up to protect workers' rights to organize and to have a union. To the extent this board's initiatives advance that right, we support them."
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