Unions fight for Georgians

Moderated by Tom Sabulis

Unions are in the news, as calls continue for MARTA to privatize services and Michigan enacts right-to-work laws. Today, a Georgia union official writes about the benefits union workers bring to our state, while an expert from Emory University’s Goizueta Business School says right-to-work freedoms are needed for states to remain flexible in the new global economy.

Commenting is open below Ray Hill’s column.

Unions fight for dreams of all citizens

By Charlie Flemming

As we approach the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom organized by A. Philip Randolph, vice-president of the AFL-CIO, we are reminded of Martin Luther King Jr’s 1961 fight against anti-unionism. “In our glorious fight for civil rights,” King said, “we must guard against being fooled by false slogans, as ‘right-to-work.’ It provides no ‘rights’ and no ‘works.’ Its purpose is to destroy labor unions and the freedom of collective bargaining.”

Despite his warning, the anti-union crusade continues as de-industrialization, globalization and offshore production have diminished wages and greatly reduced the availability of good jobs.

Unions, despite the premature proclamation of their death, remain relevant in the continued fight for fair wages, decent benefits and safe working conditions. What happened in Michigan this week is a perfect example of corporations and politicians interfering with the freedom of employees to work together in unions to improve their lives. It not only undermines our belief in a voice for all who work, it lowers living standards for all of us.

Now more than ever, we need to be unified to create jobs and restore the middle class across our country, because work connects us all. While Martin Luther King Jr. made the ultimate sacrifice standing with the sanitation workers of Memphis in 1968, the work he gave his life for continues.

U.S. workers in right-to-work states, for example, earn an average of $5,538 less a year than their counterparts in states where they have the right to collective bargaining. Every citizen is diminished by these inequities, because the reduced salaries represent missed tax revenues and reduced money circulating in the local and state economy.

Unions and collective bargaining also make a difference in workplace safety; right-to-work states report 50 percent more workplace deaths. The campaigns for fair wages, decent health care, and safe working conditions through labor contracts are a continuing responsibility of the American labor movement.

Union concerns extend beyond the needs of our members. What is often left unreported is how unions work with business, civil society and government to realize the democratic vision established by our country’s founders. During the 2012 Georgia state legislative session, the AFL-CIO championed freedom of speech by opposing SB469. The bill would have curtailed the right to picket, a traditional American tool for social justice advocacy. Who can forget the picketing Memphis sanitation workers with their “I Am a Man” placards?

Organized labor also benefits the larger society in other ways often invisible to the public. More than 900 Georgia AFL-CIO members assisted in recovery efforts following the devastation of Hurricane Sandy. Each year, AFL-CIO members in Atlanta and Georgia provide millions of dollars of charitable donations to the United Way and many other charitable organizations that assist Georgians in need.

Organized labor also advocates for the reintegration of our U.S. veterans into the economy through our “Helmets to Hardhats” initiative. The program pairs our transitioning military veterans with quality career training and employment opportunities within the construction industry.

In the coming legislative session, we will fight for the constitutional and economic rights of all Georgians. We’ll push for Buy Georgia, Buy American legislation, which gives preference to products made in Georgia and/or the United States. We will also work on mass transit issues, immigration rights, privatization, unemployment, corporate tax breaks, living wages and public education.

In sum, your dreams for a better state with ample employment opportunities are what drive our work every day. The Georgia AFL-CIO will continue fighting to realize the dreams of all Georgians.

Charlie Flemming is president of the Georgia AFL-CIO.

Flexible workforce helps workers, economy

By Ray Hill

Right-to-work laws generate passionate arguments on both sides of the issue. All sorts of statistics are cited by those for and against these laws. Although econometrics was one of my Ph.D. fields, I don’t put much stock in any of this “evidence.” Too many factors contribute to an economy’s ability to create jobs and grow incomes to isolate the effect of right-to-work laws with much quantitative precision. I would rather consider right-to-work laws in a much broader context.

When we think of all the factors that contribute to an economy’s success, it seems clear to me that flexible labor markets are becoming more and more important in a world of globally connected business and rapid technological change.

The evidence is pervasive. A decade ago, Germany instituted a series of reforms designed to loosen up its very rigid labor market . Throughout the 1990s, Germany’s unemployment rate had been on par with France and much of the rest of Europe, and was consistently about twice that of the U.S. Ten years after these reforms, Germany has an unemployment rate half that of France but still pays its workers significantly higher wages. Indeed, Germany’s unemployment is now below that of the United States.

On this side of the Atlantic, we have the example of decades of migration of automobile manufacturing out of the highly unionized Midwest, where GM was required to pay its employees whether or not they actually worked. Even closer to home is last month’s bankruptcy of Hostess Brands (maker of Twinkies), brought on by incredibly rigid rules imposed by their unionized delivery workers.

Labor unions have made important contributions to promoting safer working conditions and other employee protections, most of which have now been written into our nation’s laws. However, unions also have the effect of reducing an economy’s flexibility and undercutting its ability to adapt to the rapid changes we experience in the global economy.

Unions’ ability to raise workers’ wages are a commonly cited argument in favor of right-to-work laws. High wages are great if you have a union job, but aren’t worth much if you are unemployed in a state with slow growth or shrinking industry. High wages are also not very useful when your company relocates to another state or outsources your job to another country. Even promises of job security are of little value when your company goes into bankruptcy, like Hostess, because it can’t compete.

By not requiring workers to finance unions as a condition of employment, Georgia’s right-to-work law helps to keep Georgia competitive. This is becoming more important every day since the rest of the world is moving in Georgia’s direction. In the U.S. as a whole, union membership as a percentage of the workforce fell last year to a level not seen since the 1930s. Private sector participation in unions fell below 7 percent.

Earlier this year, Indiana, in the old industrial heartland of America, became the 23rd state to adopt a right-to-work law, and just this week, Michigan became the 24th. Only in the government sector, shielded from competition, is union membership not shrinking. However, the budgetary problems of Greece (and Illinois!) should remind us that even governments are not immune from the inability of a unionized workforce to adapt to changing conditions.

Ray Hill is senior lecturer at Emory University’s Goizueta Business School.

34 comments Add your comment

trew

December 13th, 2012
10:58 pm

I have had the displeasure of working with union crews while doing overhauls in two states in the north and northeast.

My experience with unions is that they are an employment agency for the otherwise unemployable.

Dc

December 13th, 2012
9:28 pm

Oklahoma voted to become a RTW state in the early 2000s. Since then, their average wage has gone from being 76% of US ave to 84%. That seems like pretty clear evidence of the value RTW legislation can bring. Meanwhile, forced union membership states have in general been hemoraging manufacturing jobs.

Of course, facts like these are im sure proof of nothing!……in the eyes of folks who are stuck on the lib plantation

ezbdave

December 13th, 2012
8:39 pm

I agree SAWB! Unions have only proved lately that they can be disruptive and damage public property!
We can only thank them for driving manufacturing and service jobs overseas! Their time has come and gone! America needs to offer more full time jobs and less of this part time/ minimum wage job climate that is taking over the job market! If a man will work at a lesser pay to feed his family than a union member, then so be it! Get rid of unions and bring jobs back to the USA!

An observer

December 13th, 2012
7:18 pm

I worked in a union shop and I never saw were the union helped me or anyone else except for some slackers.

Mary Elizabeth

December 13th, 2012
6:45 pm

No one should be fooled. The newly coordinated, and orchestrated, emphasis against unions in many states throughout the nation has strategic purpose, at this time, with rightwing ideologues in power positions. Their targeted goal is to influence coming election results through diffusing the union power base of the Democratic Party.

Unions will never be out-of-date. Until the consciousness of those in management elevates to the level that they are able to understand the value of the concept behind the “servant leader,” who knows that customers, clients, and workers contribute as much to the success of business endeavors as management, then labor has the right to organize for their mutual self-protection and benefit against a management who often perceives of workers only as commodities for profit, rather than as equal human beings who simply function in different job requirements needed to make the business enterprise successful for all.

“Right to Work” is as innocuous a slogan as is “School Choice.” There is subterfuge operative behind both slogans.

Brosephus

December 13th, 2012
6:36 pm

Mr. Hill

You bring up Germany as an example. Care to expound on how Germany’s management and unions work together to solve their problems instead of managment explicitly trying to curtail union activities? How is it that Germany’s auto workers could build twice as many cars as US workers while making more money in 2011 when they have strong union membership over there?

Right to work laws do nothing other than what they’re designed to do, and that is starve unions of funds necessary to fight off the very people trying to destroy them. Nobody’s forced to join unions in non-RTW states. I’m quite sure you’ve heard of Beck Rules before, and by SCOTUS decision as well as NLRB rules, unions can not force membership. They can only collect fees to cover their negotiations. I think that’s what conservatives call “paying your own way”. Removing that requirement, which is what RTW laws do, encourages freeloading off the benefits negotiated by the unions.

Gerald Mack

December 13th, 2012
6:24 pm

From the folks who brought you the weekend… It is always amazing to me to hear or read comments from those who see no purpose for unions. It doesn’t surprise however that Georgia, along with the rest of the South definitely see no purpose for unions after all the South is still pissed about the Civil War or as they call it the”War of Nothern agression” how is it that in the Southern states minimum wage is seen as living the high life, and the very mention of the word union can get a person harassed or fired even. One can always side with the “right to work” state or company management because as we all know companies always have their employees best interest at heart and will always do the right thing, look at Walmart. This is simply political and that is sad because America is a UNION!!!!! My great grandfather always taught me “skilled labor isn’t cheap and cheap labor isn’t skilled” God bless us union workers because America needs us.

Brosephus

December 13th, 2012
6:04 pm

Also, there was a recently published study that showed that the differences between RTW vs non-RTW states could not be adequately quantified. While RTW states showed lower unemployment numbers and growth, workers in non-RTW states had better benefits and better pay. I guess that working hard for less pay is the new American way.

SCAB

December 13th, 2012
6:00 pm

A scab is part of the healing process

SAWB

December 13th, 2012
5:27 pm

While we can all probably agree that throughout the years Unions have brought about changes in the workplace that benefit all Americans. However, now that most of these changes are codified in Federal Law Unions must seek ways to justify their continued existence. This has resulted in companies being held hostage and forced to provide excessive pay and benefits packages. Yes, Unions have been beneficial, but their time has come and gone.