Saturday, August 2, 2014

Do government workers need union representatives?

Are the days of collective bargaining in the public sector numbered?

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March 20, 2013: Culinary Union workers demonstrate along Las Vegas Boulevard, protesting against their contract negotiations with Deutsche Bank in Las Vegas.AP
Unions representing government workers are expanding while organized labor has been shedding private sector members over the past half-century.
A majority of union members today now have ties to a government entity, at the federal, state or local levels.
Roughly 1-in-3 public sector workers is a union member, compared with about 1-in-15 for the private sector workforce, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Overall, 11.3 percent of wage and salary workers in the United States are unionized, down from a peak of 35 percent during the mid-1950s in the strong post-World War II recovery.
The typical union worker now is more likely to be an educator, office worker or food or service industry employee rather than a construction worker, autoworker, electrician or mechanic. Far more women than men are among the union-label ranks.
In a blow to public sector unions, the Supreme Court ruled this week that thousands of health care workers in Illinois who are paid by the state cannot be required to pay fees that help cover a union's cost of collective bargaining.
The justices said the practice violates the First Amendment rights of nonmembers who disagree with stances taken by unions.
The ruling was narrowly drawn, but it could reverberate through the universe of unions that represent government workers. The case involved home-care workers for disabled people who are paid with Medicaid funds administered by the state.
Also in June, a California judge declared unconstitutional the state's teacher tenure, dismissal and layoff laws. The judge ordered a stay of the decision, pending an appeal by the state and teachers union.
"The basic structure of the labor union movement has changed, reflecting changes in the economy," said Ross Baker, a political science professor at Rutgers University. "Manufacturing is a diminishing segment of the economy. Also, a lot of the manufacturing that's being done today is being done nonunion."
Union members continue to be a powerful political force in politics, and Baker said he didn't see the role of unions diminishing. "I just think the colors of the collars are changing," Baker said.
In 2013, 14.5 million workers belonged to a union, about the same as the year before. In 1983, the first year for which comparable figures are available, there were 17.7 million union workers.
The largest union is the National Education Association, with 3.2 million members. It represents public school teachers, administrators and students preparing to become teachers.
Next is the 2.1-million Service Employees International Union. About half its members work in the public sector.
The American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees has 1.6 million, followed by the American Federation of Teachers with 1.5 million and the International Brotherhood of Teamsters with 1.4 million.
There are 1.3 million members in the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union.
Until four years ago, the unionization rate was far higher in the private sector than in the public sector. Now the roles are reversed.
But it's been a bumpy road for public unions in some Republican-governed states.
In 2011, Gov. Scott Walker, R-Wis., took on public sector unions forcefully soon after he was swept into office. He got enacted a bill effectively ending collective bargaining for most public workers in the state. He withstood huge labor demonstrations at the state Capitol and then became the first governor in U.S. history to defeat a recall attempt. The law has been challenged in court, and continues to be. But its main thrust so far has been upheld.
A sign of the decline of traditional labor unions came in May when the United Automobile Workers raised its membership dues for the first time in 27 years to help offset declining membership. Also, the defeat in February of the UAW's effort to unionize workers at Volkswagen's Chattanooga, Tennessee, plant was a setback to labor.
A 2013 Gallup poll showed that 54 percent of Americans said they approved of labor unions, down from the all-time high of 75 percent in both 1953 and 1957.
"Labor unions play a diminishing role in the private sector, but they still claim a large share of the public sector workforce," says Chris Edwards, director of tax studies at the libertarian, free-market Cato Institute.
"Public sector unions are important to examine because they have a major influence on government policies through their vigorous lobbying efforts. ... They are particularly influential in states that allow monopoly unionization through collective bargaining."
Since 2000, factories have shed more than 5 million jobs. Five states — Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina Georgia and Texas — ban collective bargaining in the public sector.

15 comments:

  1. Anonymous8/02/2014

    I just want today that if we didn't have unions, then all of us would e living on the edge, unable to take care of our families.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous8/03/2014

      I don't have a union. I am not living on the edge. I am able to take care of our families. Does somebody have to come over and wipe your a** too?

      Delete
    2. Anonymous8/03/2014

      The good things about unions is that the Hynes s can support their families by investing all that pension money for the union members.

      Delete
  2. Anonymous8/02/2014

    CHICAGO - On July 30, Teamsters top officials took over Chicago Teamster's Local 710, removed its officers and board of trustees and assumed control of the local's assets. accusing Local 710's officials of embezzling membership funds.

    In a recommendation to the Teamsters International's Independent Review Board on July 18, 2014, the IBT's General President James P Hoffa said taking over the local was "necessary to correct financial malpractices and corruption."

    Local 710's 13,000 plus membership is headquartered in Mokena, Illinois and up until this week was led by Secretary-Treasurer Patrick Flynn, Local President Michael Sweeney and Vice-President Gerald Pauli. Flynn was paid $482,543 by Local 710 members’ dues in 2013, plus an additional $44,900 in deferred income, making him the highest paid of all Teamster officials.

    "This decision was not made lightly and is a result of the serious administrative and financial issues detailed in the 152-page IRB report," an announcement to the members posted online says. "As a result, all seven members of the Local 710 Executive Board have been removed from their positions."

    Hoffa's recommendation states that Flynn took advantage of poor accountability within Local 710's board and officers to misrepresent the local's financial status, sign leases and agree to loans without the board's permission, and to accumulate $58,000 worth of gift cards not distributed as Flynn reported they would be.

    A car loan for over $100,000 was obtained to purchase five cars for Local 710 officers to use, but board records do not document authorization. A lease for the Mokena building in which 710 is located was signed without board permission.

    But most egregious was Flynn and Sweeney's alleged misreporting of Local 710's financial status. Hoffa says the two failed to disclose the local's liabilities after they were warned to do so by their auditors. Flynn and Sweeney's reports led members to believe the Local had over half a million in assets when they had not paid promised commissions and salaries to union employees.

    During an election year, the report says, Flynn was able to boast the Local was "in the black" when they were substantially in debt.

    Hoffa's report does not indicate any criminal or civil lawsuits on the horizon, but does say union bylaws would require Flynn to make restitution for the amount stolen while leading the local, and he would be required to reimburse the local for the salary paid him if he was proven to have misappropriated the members' funds.

    Teamsters Central Region International Vice President John T. Coli has been appointed Trustee of Local 710.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous8/03/2014

      The teamsters were having some kind of election a few weeks ago at 109 Kedzie. What was that about?

      Delete
  3. Anonymous8/03/2014

    FIREMEN DESERVE THE MOST MONEY.

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  4. Anonymous8/03/2014

    Union officials ok,ed the shorted pension contributions after several rounds of steak dinners and cigars. Those are the people that should be the targets of our anger. Several of them live in the neighborhood.

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  5. Anonymous8/03/2014

    I know the Irish,when the Feds coming knocking,and they will you can bet either Sweeney or Flynn will roll over on each other,,

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  6. Anonymous8/04/2014

    the irish for years blamed the prots in the north and the english for lack of job opportunities and the closure of the trade guilds and unions to them because they were who they were,but the shoe was on the other foot when they got control of the unions here and milked them for all they were worth and made them a club house for there friends and relatives,have no sympathy for any of them,closed out jobs to the guys coming back from ww11,vietnam and now this mid east adventure,,,maybe the orangmen knew something we didnt???

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  7. Anonymous8/05/2014

    You are confusing several issues here. That and I would like to get my hands around your throat.

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  8. Anonymous8/05/2014

    the poster is right about the unions closing out thoese who '' WERE NOT LIKE THEM", saw this yrs back,went to a union that represented school engs in 1959 and a old country Mick tried to shake me for 2000 dollars in 1959 dollars in order to get on a hiring list.this after spending 3 yrs on a destroyer in the Pacific,broke my heart to have to resort to go to a foreigner in my own country to get a job and then tried to get extorted.needless to say never got the job..

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  9. Anonymous8/05/2014

    The key here is that pubic sector unions with a well documented contract will protect the janitor,teacher,
    safety worker, etc. from a politically connected supervisor. These supervisors,principals who are politically sponsored will destroy the good order and dicsipline of any organization because these so called supervisors only understand ass kissing. These fools who are unqualified only understand politics as ass kissing. The ward has scores of these opportunists in the courts,police,fire,school board,sheriff and on and on.

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  10. Anonymous8/06/2014

    how bout getting your narrow back hands around my johnson instead,here you ppl are good at that,

    ReplyDelete