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Unions? Your thoughts?

Started by MeghanAndrews, March 02, 2011, 01:06:11 AM

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Sum up your feelings about unions. Discuss if you feel appropriate.

I do not like unions and think they are outdated, inefficient, a waste of time & money, etc.
6 (14.6%)
I don't really like unions that much, I'd try to avoid working in one if I had the option
3 (7.3%)
I don't have any feelings about them one way or another
8 (19.5%)
I am ok with unions, I'd belong to one if I could
3 (7.3%)
I fully support unions and think that our brothers and sisters need worldwide support, etc.
21 (51.2%)

Total Members Voted: 40

MeghanAndrews

This question speaks for itself. In light of all the collective bargaining discussions in the news, what are your thoughts about unions. Discuss :) Meghan
  •  

Flan

I think that while they have place to protect workers from bad practices, they are also what keeps alot of employers from getting rid of employees who are non-productive and use the union as a shield to accountability for behaviour (as seem at an undisclosed state government office).

personally I would rather risk the chance of being fired at will or slower pay raises for the flexability that comes with *not* being forced to "pay dues" for an entity (union) that may not care about me until something bad happened.
Soft kitty, warm kitty, little ball of fur. Happy kitty, sleepy kitty, purr, purr, purr.
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tekla

I.A.T.S.E. Local 16, AFL/CIO - represent.

"Although it is true that only about 20 percent of American workers are in unions, that 20 percent sets the standards across the board in salaries, benefits and working conditions. If you are making a decent salary in a non-union company, you owe that to the unions.  One thing that corporations do not do is give out money out of the goodness of their hearts."   
               Molly Ivins
FIGHT APATHY!, or don't...
  •  

Cindy

This opinion needs a country by country base. Unions in Australia have been essential for protecting workers rights against big business and conservative governments that have been owned by them. OK the Unions 'own' the labour government but to a lesser extent (JMO).
Some Unions here, are or have been totally corrupt. Although there are increasingly rules to try and prevent that including secret ballots etc. In the UK when I was there the Unions were incredibly strong and could and did close down the country to sway government policy. But I'll leave it to UK people to comment. 

I think we all need balances and checks and Unions supply that to workers against big business, who work purely for their stock holders (and their CEO massive salary  :laugh:).

I think if you are in a Union you have to participate, the same as when you are in a democratic country, you have to vote. If you do neither you deserve whatever falls on you, and have no right to complain.

Cindy
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caitlin_adams

Unions are responsible for so many of the working conditions we take for granted these days. In Australia we get four weeks paid annual leave  each year. This wasn't always the case and certainly isn't the case in the United States. Without unions government would never have legislated for many of the rights we enjoy.

Sure sometimes union power goes too far, as do some governments and some businesses, that doesn't mean the notion of government of business is fundamentally flawed.

Unions exist not as an entity but as democratic (like governments) organizations that try and make the lives of working people with the least power in the workplace better. Unions are a force for good as long as they are well regulated, just like governments, just like business.

In a quick response to Cindy, the Federal Parliamentary Labor Party is far more independent of unions than most think. Their FairWork legislation is criticized more (albeit less vocally) by unions than business. Labor aren't delivering to unions on their issue d'ĂȘtre (Francophiles forgive me), whilst they share a common ideology they are by no means beholden to them despite what the media say (shadowy union bosses make for a great story)
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Cindy

 Hi Caitlin_ Adams,

I totally agree. The way Australia was 'settled' as largely a penal colony would have led to  no rights for anyone. Unions in many ways built the democracy that we have.
The control of unions over the the Labour party is no less insidious as the control of the Liberal party by big  money.

What I find a problem is 'lobbyists' do they bribe before our pay after a bill is voted upon?

Sorry getting off topic

Cindy
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Kay

I'm definitely for unions.  I'm not in one currently, but my present employer treats its employees rather well, so there hasn't been a need to start one here.  In the past, I've been in the AFL/CIO, UAW, and the NEA (by way of WEAC). 
.
I definitely agree about unions being the reason we have the wages and working conditions we do now.  Most of the businesses I've worked for pay the bottom dollar wages they have to, and aren't really interested in the welfare of their employees or sharing the fruits of their employee's labors with them...it's just another disposeable resource to them...especially now with the economy the way it is.

With all the stuff going on in Madison right now, I've seen a lot of lies floating aroud recently regarding unions, and they really piss me off.  Usually the people that post/spread that manure aren't interested in facts and sources.  Grrrr....  Guess I better stop now before I get worked up about it again.  :/
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Jennifer

United Brotherhood of Carpenters (I wish there was a sisterhood).

Unions were started in America to end legal slavery. In 1900, steelworkers in Pittsburgh worked 12 hours a day seven days a week and a double shift every two weeks for paltry wages in dangerous unhealthy conditions. Injury and death were common. Organizing put an end to this. Unions give workers the opportunity to interact with management. If I am unproductive at my job I will be replaced by another union worker. I can be fired just as easily as a non-union worker. Tekla is correct, union wages set the standard for non-union jobs in the area. Union carpenters are safer, better trained and more productive than their non-union counterparts.

I live in Wisconsin and Governor Scott Walker is tearing this state apart. Thank you to everyone around the country for uniting in the fight against this idiot. The state union workers have agreed to cuts but Walker wants to remove their right to negotiate. If this trend continues it will be back to slavery. This affects everyone. Thank you all for your support and peaceful protests. :)
Wow, did I just say all that?

Jennifer
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justmeinoz

Pretty much agree with the sentiments expressed by Cindy and Tekla above. 

I can't say I am impressed with the union that is supposed to look after people doing my job though.  I am in a position with zero industrial muscle, unlike other workers they cover, so we have never seen a union rep since I have been there.

These days it's all about membership numbers and  votes in internal political battles in  Trades Hall, as far as I can see.
"Don't ask me, it was on fire when I lay down on it"
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tekla

It's a lot like old Winston's quip on democracy: it has been said that democracy is the worst form of government except all those other forms that have been tried from time to time.  So there is plenty about the system that I could change, but its' a hella lot better than working without one. 

At any rate, a downward race to the bottom is not going to leave a few very clever (lucky) people standing at the new top, it's going to create a vortex that's going to suck in everything.
FIGHT APATHY!, or don't...
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Julie Marie

IBEW Local 701

Right now unions are about the only decent representation workers have in this country.  But our numbers are falling fast.  That's not good for the future.  Think China.
When you judge others, you do not define them, you define yourself.
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regan

During the post war boom, corporations approached the unions and offered them "whatever it takes" for their workers to agree to work as much as possible.  Quite simply as fast as the corporations could possibly build their products there was a market for them.  Now the corporations have turned on the unions and accused them of destroying the company when it was the corporation's own short sighted goals that caused the problem in the first place.
Our biograhies are our own and we need to accept our own diversity without being ashamed that we're somehow not trans enough.
  •  

caitlin_adams

I have an IBEW beanie (it's pretty cool). I bet Tekla has some good union merch.

Justmeinoz, which union are you a member of?
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Julie Marie

Quote from: caitlin_adams on March 06, 2011, 05:41:57 AM
I have an IBEW beanie (it's pretty cool).

Well, what isn't cool is how they treat LGBT people.  For labor, unions are very good but once you step out of the labor arena, you could experience treatment typically found in ultra conservative circles. 

Unions are usually very pro-Democrat.  Mine was 100% Democrat prior to Reagan.  Now I'd say their voting recommendations are about 90-95% Democrat.  But when it comes to human rights the pendulum swings the other way.  Gays?  I know only one openly gay electrician and he is harassed on almost every job he goes on.  Trans?  Well, that would be me.  Good luck!  You're on your own. 

As far as the union is concerned, my union has gone from approving almost every medical claim no questions asked to denying almost every medical claim.  They have an exception called "sex transferral" and if they can link my medical expenses in any way at all to that exception, they deny it.  I am now fighting them to pay for a blood test they required.

In construction, unions are man country and men don't take lightly any affront to their masculinity and gays and especially MTFs are serious affronts.

I started my apprenticeship in 1974 and during my years in the union I saw conservative men voting Democrat for one reason only - to support labor and that meant their jobs.  They are pro-guns, pro-life, social conservatives, fiscal conservatives, misogynistic, homophobic, very transphobic and in general intolerant of people who are different.  I've often hears union workers say Reagan was one of the best presidents we've ever had.  Today, a scary percentage like the Tea Party.

So labor, yes, they are great.  But for almost everything else, my personal experience has been they are typical conservatives.
When you judge others, you do not define them, you define yourself.
  •  

regan

Quote from: Julie Marie on March 06, 2011, 07:29:43 AM
Today, a scary percentage like the Tea Party.

The tea party is a different animal, a large percentage of them are retired government employees collecting taxpayer funded benefits.  They complain about paying taxes, but don't seem to mind benefiting from taxes being paid.

A unionized public employee, a Tea-partier, and a CEO are sitting at a table. In the middle of the table is a plate with a dozen cookies on it. The CEO reaches across and takes 11 cookies, looks at the Tea-partier and says, "Watch out for that union guy. He wants a piece of your cookie."
Our biograhies are our own and we need to accept our own diversity without being ashamed that we're somehow not trans enough.
  •  

kate durcal

I voted against, because as they are, they are an anachronisms of the last century. They did serve an important function defending the rights of the dispossed, but they have evolved in corrupted political organization. More important, in this age of globalization, they are an impediment to more effective competition.

A new paradigm needs to emerge

Kate
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tekla

Actually some unions go back further than the last century, the first true union in the United States was started in 1820s, and in most of the craft fields unions follow a pattern that dates back to the Middle Ages in a lot of ways, right down the the practice of the apprenticeship programs, abusing said apprentices and eventually making journeymen out of them.
FIGHT APATHY!, or don't...
  •  

Britney_413

I'm pretty libertarian. An employer has the right to set the conditions but the workers also have the right to organize and say no. I believe in "right to work" states. Most people don't know what that means and assign a different definition to it. A "right to work" state means that an employer cannot require an employee to join a union nor can a union require an employee to join. A union and non-union member can work side by side. Without a union, of course you are an "at will" employee which is what many people often think "right to work" means but it is not.

Back to the point, people should have the right to organize unions to encourage better working conditions but nobody should be required to join them. There is nothing stopping people at any company from getting together and negotiating terms with their employer and striking if they need to be. What I'm against are non-right-to-work states where getting a job requires you to join a union and then have part of your paycheck go to the union. Then you have a middle-man beauracracy telling you how to vote both with company politics and with the national politics, telling you how to do your job, when you must strike, when you have to agree with the boss, etc. and at the same time not necessarily representing your interests in the first place. People should have the freedom to enter a contract with an employer or leave that contract and enter it without requiring a third party's involvement. Enough said.
  •  

Jennifer

Quote from: Julie Marie on March 06, 2011, 07:29:43 AM

So labor, yes, they are great.  But for almost everything else, my personal experience has been they are typical conservatives.
Same here. :(

Jennifer
  •  

Joelene9

  My opion is that there is a place for unions in some of the industries and not in others.  It depends on the job description.  I worked in a repair facility for an electronics retailer.  A union would not fit in my shop due to the high demands put on us and the multi-tasking we commissioned workers had to do.  Not only we did the repairs, we also had to answer the phone or go up front and answer the questions the customer had.  We also had to clean the shop, including the lavatories, do inventory and other things needed to keep the shop operating.  A union in that place will place limits on the amount of work I can do and stifle customer relations plus the shop would lose money in the process and close.  A happy customer will buy more products from our retail end. 
  I did not complain about the extra stuff I did there due to my military training,  which was routine there.  I made commission every week I worked there.  The more units I repaired, the more I made that week.  I was laid off because we didn't have work to do due to the newer products being unrepairable, the older products with parts no longer available. 
  My brother was a union member and worked in a warehouse for a trucking firm.  This was rough work.  His company then promoted him to manager, his experience in the union helped him to be a good go-between with the union workers and upper management.  This worked for awhile, then the company started to lose money due to mismanagement of funds.  He was the first fired in a cutback scheme.  The workers complained to management about my brother's dismissal that they were thinking strike for this and other issues.  The strike didn't happen, that company went chapter 7 about a year later. 
  There is plenty of blame to go around with the problems we have these days.  Unions wanting more demands, management mishandling funds or out-sourcing of manufacturing and services that they did. 
  I don't know why the states are cutting teacher salaries and especially their pensions!  Who is going to teach our children to face the future?  Compulsory education is a must-have in this country.  It is what made it great in the first place. 
  Joelene
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