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Unions fight for comeback after split
Christian Science Monitor ^ | December 07, 2005 | Amanda Paulson

Posted on 12/06/2005 6:55:51 PM PST by Sonny M

CHICAGO - America's labor movement may be at its weakest point in decades, with just 8 percent of private-sector workers in unions and a huge split in its ranks. But it's also fighting back, trying to resonate with Americans worried about job losses and healthcare.

Among its hopeful signs:

• A big victory in organizing janitors in Houston, not known as a union-friendly city. The win by the Service Employees International Union came just months after it and five other unions split from the AFL-CIO.

• The Communications Workers of America have been busily organizing at Cingular Wireless, adding more than 13,500 new members this year.

• The AFL-CIO has kicked off its largest worker-rights campaign in 15 years. It plans huge rallies this week, leading up to Saturday's International Human Rights Day and focused on workplace organizing as a fundamental - and threatened - human right.

"There's a real awareness on both sides [of labor's divide] that it's not business as usual," says Harley Shaiken, a professor who specializes in labor issues at University of California in Berkeley. While he emphasizes that it's too soon to assess the split's impact, Professor Shaiken says that both factions are trying creative tactics. "There are some really tough challenges out there for unions, but it's also a moment of real opportunity. There is so much downward pressure on wages and working conditions ... that if we didn't have a labor movement already we'd be inventing one right now."

Some early worries about the AFL-CIO split - due in part to philosophical differences over how much to focus on organizing versus political lobbying - have lessened. Last month, the members of the dissident Change to Win coalition and the AFL-CIO solidified an agreement to let state and local affiliates work together. The SEIU and the American Federation of State, County, Federal, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) - often at odds - have created antiraiding pacts and appear to be mending at least a few of their differences.

"I think the worst is over in that the two sides have overcome some of their initial bitterness or bad feelings," says Ruth Milkman, director of the Institute of Industrial Relations at the University of California in Los Angeles. "Both sides are trying harder to prove that they were right in the debate that occurred in the last year and a half. That can only benefit labor movement as a whole."

She and others point to the SEIU's success with Houston janitors as an example of how the labor movement is adapting to modern economic realities. The union used strategies that have worked in other cities: demonstrating workers' desire to unionize with "card checks" rather than National Labor Relations Board elections; organizing a whole industry at once so individual employers don't face unfair competition; and building a broad coalition of support including local churches, politicians, and immigrant groups.

"What they showed is, if you can do it in Houston, you can do it anywhere," says Professor Milkman.

It's a model the SEIU is holding up as an example of the direction labor should be - and is - heading, and the ways in which realities of globalization can be harnessed rather than fought.

"The world is shrinking so quickly that US cities look more and more alike and major capitals look more and more alike, and there are similar solutions," says Stephen Lerner, who runs the SEIU's Justice for Janitors campaign.

Another innovative tactic: public information campaigns against nonunion Wal-Mart, which have attacked the company's worker policies and forced it to defend its image.

Such successes, though, provide the labor movement only occasional respite from an economy that's increasingly hostile to unionization. Current laws provide little protection to workers, and companies are rarely stopped from intimidating or harassing workers who try to organize.

Despite the studies routinely cited by labor leaders showing that some 50 percent of American workers would join a union if given a chance, the reality is that very few - fewer than 12 percent, including government workers, are unionized. Many Americans doubt labor's relevance. The recent job losses at places like General Motors underscore the threats to jobs more easily moved overseas than janitors or service workers.

At rallies, marches, serenades, and hearings around the US - and in a few far-flung locales like Bosnia and Bahrain - labor leaders this week are making the case that such an environment is an abuse of basic human rights.

In a survey of Chicago-area organizing campaigns, nearly a third of employers fired pro-union workers and just under half threatened to close a work site where workers tried to form unions, according to a pro-labor group, American Rights at Work.

"The average person doesn't know the horror stories that are out there when a worker wants to join a union, doesn't know what employers spend in high-priced legal firms whose job is to build an anti-union environment in the workplace or to bust unions," says AFL-CIO President John Sweeney. "The ability to form unions is the key to this nation's middle class, yet the right to come together in a union is a fundamental freedom that has been eroded beyond recognition."

That can be a tough argument to make in the US, where people tend to see work as an economic exchange rather than a human rights issue, says Robert Bruno, a labor expert with the Chicago Labor Education Program of the University of Illinois, but he believes it's an important piece of unions' quest to show relevancy in a 21st century economy. "It's another effort to broaden the question."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: business; economics; freetrade; outsourcing; unions

1 posted on 12/06/2005 6:55:52 PM PST by Sonny M
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To: Sonny M

Unions ruined our chances for true reform in California.

At least the went into debt to maintain the status quo though.

Maybe next time people will will pull together nationally against unions. As the Union do to help each other.
California is effing screwed now. Unions out spent Arnold two to one. And the Unions are emboldened now.


2 posted on 12/06/2005 7:06:18 PM PST by Names Ash Housewares
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To: Sonny M

Houston janitors? Municipal workers or private sector ones?


3 posted on 12/06/2005 7:20:05 PM PST by LenS
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To: All

Seems like all the unions are doing is costing people their jobs.


4 posted on 12/06/2005 7:47:19 PM PST by 383rr (Those who choose security over liberty deserve neither-)
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To: Sonny M

Die, unions!!!!


5 posted on 12/06/2005 10:33:14 PM PST by MonroeDNA (Look for the union label--on the bat crashing through your windshield!)
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To: Sonny M

A janitor strike to bring the nation to it's . . . hmm, come to think of it, a janitor strike would hardly be noticed.


6 posted on 12/06/2005 10:35:38 PM PST by Larry Lucido (Boycott taglines that don't say Merry Christmas!)
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To: Sonny M

When we're talking about basic human rights, how about the right not to join a union?

How about the right not to have your union dues go to subsidize politicians?

And where does John Sweeney get off talking about the middle class? How many days in a typical week does he even encounter anybody in the middle class? This grifter has been paid six figures a year (now, high six figures) almost since he started shaving. He travels by Gulfstream and limo. He wouldn't know a working man from Adam -- he'd probably kick one out of his way, or have his goons do it.

Sweeney knows about as much about the lives of working Americans as Michael Jackson knows about healthy relationships. But he's going to save them. Yeah, right.

d.o.l.

Criminal Number 18F


7 posted on 12/06/2005 10:42:16 PM PST by Criminal Number 18F
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To: Names Ash Housewares
Actually, and I could be wrong, but I think unions outspent "Arnold" 4 to 1.

That was some of the union numbers I was told by friends of mine in unions.

However, they concede, that the numbers they were told could be wrong based on how much was probably stoeln.

8 posted on 12/06/2005 10:48:02 PM PST by Sonny M ("oderint dum metuant")
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To: Criminal Number 18F
And where does John Sweeney get off talking about the middle class?

I give Sweeny credit on one thing.

He is a card carrying member of the socialist party, and he is open about it.

He doesn't run away fron marxism (he is backing bernie sanders for senate), he is what he is, and he says it, now why conservative are to chicken "s*%t" to quote him, is a different story....since he does want to be quoted.

9 posted on 12/06/2005 10:51:55 PM PST by Sonny M ("oderint dum metuant")
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