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Analysis of Labor Board Stats: Workers Who Want a Union Rarely Get One

 

by Seth Michaels, Jul 7, 2009

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Time and again, the evidence shows that when workers try to form unions, they often face harassment and intimidation from their employers. In fact, an analysis of labor board elections by University of California-Davis professor David Brody shows the odds of making it all the way through the process, from filing a petition to getting a first contract, years later, are only 573 out of 2,388 or less than one in four.

Pulling facts from the latest Annual Report of the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), which covers the fiscal year (FY) running from October 2007 to September 2008, Brody notes:

  • During FY 2008, the NLRB closed 2,388 representation cases (NLRB annual report, Table 10).
  • Of these, 782 were withdrawn and another 46 were dismissed, presumably before they ever got to an election (NLRB annual report, Table 10).

  • Of the 1,610 representation case elections held, unions won 1,024 or 63.6 percent (Table 13).
  • If recent trends continue, of these 1,024 newly formed unions, only 573 or 56 percent will succeed in bargaining a first contract.
  • So the odds of making it all the way through the process, from filing a petition to getting a first contract, years later, are only 573 out of 2,388 or less than one in four.
  • The workers involved in this process had a 97 percent chance of being subjected to an anti-union campaign by their employer—usually orchestrated by a professional union buster—and usually featuring captive audience meetings and one-on-one closed door meetings with supervisors, frequent threats to close or move the workplace if workers vote to form a union, and a one-in-five chance that active union supporters would be fired illegally.
  • Bottom line: Only 68,000 workers managed to form unions via the corporate-dominated NLRB representation process in FY 2008—and only a little more than half of these will ever obtain the protection of a collective bargaining agreement.

But corporate mouthpieces are desperate to attack any change in the nation’s labor laws that would level the playing field for workers seeking to form unions. So they distort reality to make it appear that America’s workers can easily form unions.

The National Association of Manufacturers (NAM), for instance, says, “Workers who wish to become union members are able to do so.” But check the facts and you’ll find a much different reality. In fact, most of the workers who have successfully joined unions during the period NAM refers to, between 2007 and 2008, did so in the public sector, often through majority sign-up—the kind of worker-directed, voluntary formation that all workers would have access to under the Employee Free Choice Act.

Only a small minority used the corporate-dominated NLRB election system, which requires not only the same gathering of signatures used in majority sign-up, but a second, company-dominated election process. And of the minority of workers who were able to successfully use the NLRB election system, thousands still don’t have contracts.

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3 Comments

  1. PublicTrader on 08.07.2009 at 01:43 (Reply)

    If there was ever a time for the Employee Free Choice Act, that time is now. Not only is it nearly impossible to form a union without fear and intimidation by employers, but union-busting has grown into a $4 billion a year business in the U.S. alone. Companies that previously had good relationships with their union employees have been emboldened by weak labor laws. One of those is the McGraw-Hill Companies. Read more at:

    http://nabetcwa54.org

  2. gdub30 on 09.07.2009 at 21:54 (Reply)

    We have been fighting for our first contract for three years now. Two of those years spent on the picket line (locked out of the company we work for). We need the EFCA and have spoken at many rallies for the cause. We HAVE to have this law in place to MAKE our employer recognize us as a union. We don’t want to see the last three years wasted because “Big Business” can’t accept that the working class in America want to be heard!
    Gail Warner
    AFSCME Local 3494; Effingham Illinois
    two years stronger; one day longer!

  3. DHFabian on 12.07.2009 at 08:48 (Reply)

    Big Business does what Big Business does. What we need is political leadership that represents ordinary Americans (you know, the people who pay politicians’ wages). We need to find the courage to throw out the old business model that no longer works, and invest in new businesses that are legally required to meet certain conditions that benefit workers. This is not 1909, and we need a business model focused on the good of the nation and the people, not solely on self-interest, benefiting the few at the expense of everyone else. Government needs to invest in these businesses, putting legally-binding guidelines in place. Companies that move our jobs to foreign nations must
    be restricted from benefiting off US sales. Those businesses that refuse to play by the rules, and move elsewhere, will quickly be replaced; let them go.

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