Tag Archives: Unions

ASUCD Supports Food Service Workers – Rally This Thursday

(Oops! Sorry that I didn’t notice this earlier. But anyways, best of luck to the UCD food workers! : ) – promoted by atdleft)


As the Aggie reported today, The Associated Students of UC Davis voted 10 to 1 (one abstention due to absence) in favor of supporting the workers of Sodexho in their efforts to become University employees and have the right to unionize. Currently, UCD contracts out food service at the Silo and elsewhere to Sodexho, a private company with a terrible labor record which has fought employee attempts to unionize and to get better wages and benefits all across the country. UC Davis is currently the only University of California still subcontracting out food service to a private company, now that UC Irvine food service workers got recognition as university workers last year.

What is heartening about ASUCD’s vote is that the traditional tactic of trying to play students and workers off against one another – often playing upon class identity – doesn’t seem to be working. Of course, many Sodexho workers are students, which could be one reason for the solidarity. Still, it is great to see, since we all do better, as workers and as citizens, when we stand together and stand up for one another’s rights to a decent wage and to organize.

For those interested in supporting the food service workers, there will be a rally on March 1st, this coming Thursday, meeting at 11 AM at the MU, marching to Mrak Hall, and then rallying in front of Mrak Hall at around 11:45 AM. See you there.

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In related labor news, CSU faculty move closer to a strike over the issue of CSU salaries, which lag some 18% below the national average. Given the repeated bonuses and raises given to the regents and administrators, it really is unconscionable for the pay disparity to be so great.

originally at surf putah

Recording the Will of the People

(cross-posted from Working Californians)

Dan Walters thinks that there is hypocrisy in the push to ensure that our votes are counted accurately and the simultaneous support for the Employee Free Choice Act.  It is about Democracy he says, and transparent election processes.

He doesn’t actually have the guts to go far enough to say that he trusts black box voting.  Instead, he tries to undercut Bowen and Feintein by saying it is just all to confusing to sort out.  In the end, this really comes down to trust.  The components of the machine matter less than how the voters perceive the security and accuracy of the voting method.  We need to fix our voting systems because people do not trust them.  There may be a extremely secure, open-source, touchscreen that enables all people to vote privately, but if the voters do not believe that their vote will count, then something needs to change.

The current system for choosing to form a union is completely broken, with severe consequences for millions of American workers.  Every 23 minutes a worker is either fired or discriminated against for supporting a union.  Employers routinely force their workers to be subjected to propaganda and threats.  There are no meaningful penalties for breaking the current law.  Walters focuses on the check card provisions of the legislation.

There is, however, an anomaly evident in the drumbeat for safeguarding the sanctity of the secret ballot. Most of it is coming from Democrats such as Bowen and Feinstein — reflecting, one assumes, the angst and anger within their party over what happened in 2000. But the Democratic majorities in both Congress and the California Legislature are simultaneously pushing the notion that secret ballots should be eliminated in union representation elections.

The unions have been losing many of those elections, so they want to do away with them and substitute a “card-check” system under which an employer would be required to recognize and bargain with a union that had gathered signed cards from a majority of the affected workers.

Unions contend that with elections, employers have too much ability to influence workers. If so, however, the remedy should be to improve the voting procedures of the National Labor Relations Board, because the card-check system would open the door to coercion by union organizers. They would know which employees were and were not supportive of the union.

Walter’s is correct, the voting procedures of the NLRB are seriously broken and I contend they are broken beyond repair.  Take a look at what actually goes on.  This is fromPaulVA over at the AFL-CIO blog:

Gordon Lafer, a professor at the University of Oregon who has studied how the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) union representation election process really works, told the staff members the process

resembles what happens in rogue regimes abroad rather than anything we call American.

Even though the process ends in a secret ballot, it is not fair, Lafer told a briefing for Capitol Hill staff members Friday. He compared what happens in union representation elections to the standards the United States sets for what is “free and fair” in foreign elections and says “every aspect of the NLRB process violates U.S. standards of free and fair.”

In a report for ARAW, Lafer compares U.S. standards for foreign and domestic elections with the union representation election:

  • Democratic Election Standard: Each side should have equal access to the media so that competing viewpoints can create an informed electorate.
  • Union Representation Election: Employees are restricted from openly handing out information. Employers have monopoly control of media in the workplace. Employers can distribute anti-union literature anywhere anytime, while pro-union workers can only post literature in the break area during break time.
  • Democratic Election Standard: The right should be freedom of speech that allows broad debate of public issues.
  • Union Representation Election: Employers are allowed to enforce a total ban on employees discussing a proposed union outside the break room. Yet employers can have unrestricted access to employees, including mandatory staff meetings and one-on-one meetings with supervisors.
  • Democratic Election Standard: Both sides should have equal access to contact and inform voters.
  • Union Representation Election: Although pro-union workers can contact workers outside the workplace, they cannot have address information for employees until they can document that 30 percent of the workforce wants a union.
  • Democratic Election Standard: No side should coerce or have undue influence on who a voter supports.
  • Union Representation Election: Employees are not protected against economic coercion. Employers and suWalters on Elections – Google Docs & Spreadsheetspervisors exercise considerable leverage over workers. Generally, they stop short of outright threats or bribes (which are illegal) and instead, are allowed to issue thinly veiled threats like “choosing a union may lead the company to lose business or make cutbacks.”
  • Democratic Election Standard: Once the voters make a decision, it should take effect quickly through a system of regular elections and fixed terms of office.
  • Union Representation Election: If workers vote for a union, they can face infinite delays before their will is carried out. Often the delays, which sometimes take years because employers take full advantage of permissive election guidelines and drag out appeals for years. Also, the laws require that the workplace operate as if the workers did not choose a union during the appeals.
  • Democratic Election Standard: Campaign finances should be regulated to allow a competitive and level playing field.
  • Union Representation Election: The law sets no limit on the amount an employer can spend to fight workers’ choice to form a union. Also, the employer has access to resources the uniondoesn ‘t such as on-the-clock meetings, use of company property and equipment and converting supervisors to anti-union campaign staff.

Contrary to Walters assertions about coercion, academic studies show that workers who organize under majority sign-up feel less pressure from co-workers to support the union than workers who organize under the NLRB election process.  They also report less pressure from management.  It is already illegal for anyone to coerce employees to sign a union authorization card.  Anyone who breaks that law will be subject to penalties under the Employee Free Choice Act.

While the check-card process is at the heart of the Employee Free Choice Act, the increased penalties for breaking the law that will bring about enormous change and level the playing field.  It is unacceptable for either employers or union supporters to coerce employees.  Any violation of that law should be punished.  Right now the process takes way too long and renders insufficient penalties to serve as a real deterrent.  The EFCA would change all of that

Majority sign-up represents the will of the majority which votes by signing cards.  Reforming the NLRB does not address the unique concept of an election where the employer holds veto power over the will of employees by exposing them to a second election.  Additionally, the Employee Free Choice Act would not take away the right of workers to have an election.  It would merely add check-cards as another way for employees to voice their desire to form a union.

It is well past time to have fair and trusted elections in this country.  Now, it appears we have people in office who will work to ensure that happens.  We should expect nothing less.

Unions to start anti-Arnold ad blitz tomorrow

The union cooperative organization Alliance for a Better California, will begin running ads tomorrow. From Political Muscle:

Alliance for a Better California, the union-backed group that defeated Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s legislative agenda last year, starts a TV advertising blitz Tuesday for Phil Angelides.

The advertising buy is certainly multiple millions of dollars and could last through election day.

This is the big union buy Angelides has been waiting for. The ads say nothing about Angelides, however; they are all about Schwarzenegger. This is an independent expenditure, outside the control of the Angelides campaign.

Better late than never I suppose.  A big ad buy certainly would have been very helpful in July when Phil was being battered by the Schwarzenegger negative ads.  However, the unions have finally decided that Arnold really hasn’t changed.  It’s just to risky to gamble on who Arnold 17.0 will be.

ah-nold can’t even spell ‘f’

nathan ballard at earned media alerts us to the flunk arnold campaign, in which cal state u. students are encouraged to make a video explaining why the gropinator should get a failing grade for his job leading california. the asspress tells us:

the california faculty association, a union that represents about 22,000 professors and other csu employees, launched a “flunk arnold” contest on wednesday asking students to design a 30-second television commercial criticizing schwarzenegger.

more after the jump:

its goal is threefold: raise public awareness about fee increases at california colleges over the last few years; help defeat schwarzenegger in the november governor’s race; and get students involved in politics.

faculty association president john travis said he hopes students will use the skills and knowledge they’ve acquired on social networking sites such as myspace, friendster and youtube, where anyone can post video clips on just about any topic.

“this is a technology that’s going to become more important. it’s the mechanism by which they’re kind of defining themselves,” said travis, a political science professor at humboldt state university in arcata. “they spend time there, a lot of it very creatively. we wanted to tap into it.”

the contest is open only to students of california state university, the nation’s largest higher education system.

the winning spot will air statewide during the daily show in october. its creator also will win a year’s worth of fees at their school. one year of annual fees also will be paid for the student who designs the best “flunk arnold” web site.

you can see some of the entries so far on youtube.

personally, we’d just give him an ‘incomplete,’ and make him repeat the 2005 special election.

Happy Labor Day.

Invariably these days, Labor Day is occasion for progressive intellectuals all over the country to show up on community radio talk shows, academic symposia, and newspaper op-ed pages to ponder the question: Whither labor?

With union density what it is (13% overall, less in the private sector), it’s a discussion worth having, and having often.  Happily however, here in California, we have as muscular a labor movement as ever (or maybe not ever, but in living memory).  If I could post pictures here, I would put up a nice one from this morning’s L.A. Labor Fed breakfast at the Cathedral of Our Lady of Angels, where just about every Southern California Democratic officeholder above dog catcher showed up to honor the organizations that fight for what we now apparently refer to as the “middle class,” and that we once knew better as the working class.  With that kind of political juice, breakfasters were safe to table the discussion of Labor’s Future in favor of that of what unions need to get done between now and November to get a new governor in Sacramento.

The big news of the night: the California Teachers Association has worked out an agreement allowing it to affiliate with the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor.

That may sound less than earth-shattering to those who have other interests than the political machinations of union bureaucrats, but it is actually quite significant.  The 335,000-member CTA is an unaffiliated union, meaning that it does not belong to the California Federation of Labor, the state’s governing body of the AFL-CIO, and by extension, nor to the L.A. Fed, the county’s AFL-CIO governing body.  Yet the teachers union is, arguably, the single most powerful campaigning and lobbying organization in the state.  And the L.A. County Labor Fed is not just another Central Labor Council — it is a legendarily capable labor council.  It has helped launch the careers of many California political stars, including Antonio Villaraigosa.  Fabian Nunez was the L.A. Fed’s political director before winning his seat in Sacramento.  The combination of these two formidable outfits is promising indeed.

So, some good news for Labor Day in California, an occasion usually devoted in progressive circles only to nostalgia and hand-wringing.

[From NCP] No On Prop 75

[Originally posted at Norcal Politics by Stephen Green on October 23, 2005]

Those who wrote and are pushing for the passage of Proposition 75 on the ballot want us to believe that it’s up to us to protect the members of California’s public employees unions from their unions.  If we fail these poor people, their unions will use part of their dues to support political causes or candidates that individual members may not approve of.  We need to do this, the pro-75 people say, because these union members, who have the power to decide whether or not they will join the union, who have some control over who holds office in their unions, and have some say, through elections and conventions, to determine how the unions’ energies and resources will be channelled, apparently lack the ability to exercise these choices in their own best interests.

How absurdly paternalistic is this measure?  This is part of the text of the proposition:

  • "Section 2(e) Because public money is involved, the public has a right to ensure that public employees have a right to approve the use of their dues or fees to support the political objectives of their labor organization."

 What public money are they referring to here?  They apparently consider the salary paid to public employees to still be public money, to be spent according to the dictates of the public, after these employees have received it in their paychecks.  They not only think they, and the voters of California, have a better idea of what’s in the best interests of public employees than these employees’ unions do, they also think they have a better idea of how these employees should spend their money than the employees themselves do.

Although public employees have suffered job losses and wage stagnation along with other California workers over the last five years. through the efforts of their unions they have competetive wage and benefit packages, including sick and vacation leave and health and retirement benefits.  They have, through their unions’ efforts, work rules that protect them from arbitrary or capricious actions by their employers.

I have no doubt that these unions support causes and candidates that their members don’t universally support, but stockholders in corporations and taxpayers and voters in cities, counties, states, and nations don’t get to opt out of financially supporting things those entities stand behind.  The backers of Prop 75 somehow feel that labor unions alone should bear such a burden, that union members alone should have such a privilege (isn’t this concern for the union members by the yes-on-75 people touching?).

Labor unions are inherently political organizations and this is particularly true of public employees labor unions.  Things that are settled in collective bargaining in other industries are often settle in the legislature or at the polls for public employees.  We need look no farthr for an example of this than Propostion 74, on the same ballot, which would extend from 2 to 5 the number of years public school teachers must work to achieve tenure.

In truth, the problem here is that when labor union get involved in politics, they tend to support progressive causes and candidates.  They tend to support the same kinds of things for Californians in general that they support for their members through collective bargaining.  Higher wages, better access to health care, and a more comprehensive social safety net.  These are things that the backers of Proposition 75 are, for whatever reason, opposed to.  These people will work to silence the organized voices that advocate for such things.  That’s what this is about.  The backers of Proposition 75 want to raise barriers  to organized labors ability to work to strengthen their members’ rights at the polls and in the legislature, to block labor’s ability to support progressive causes that benefit all California workers.  Because the backers of Prop 75 have an agenda that is unpopular among Californians, they want to silence the voices, particularly the organized voices, that oppose their agenda.

In the interest of full disclosure, I have to reveal that I am a public employee, but not a member of a collective bargaining group or a labor union.  As with other non-union workers in our society, however, I enjoy most of the benefits my job offers because labor unions, through the power of collective bargaining and organized public advocacy, have raised the level of expectations that individual workers have of their employers.