Are Unionization Efforts Picking Up at Tech Companies? (cnbc.com) 90
About two-thirds of Americans now say they support unions, reports CNBC, "the highest approval rating since 1965." And suddenly in the last few months, "workers have been organizing at a pace this country hasn't seen since the Great Depression."
Amazon has captured headlines for union drives at its warehouses, including a successful effort on New York's Staten Island. But activity is picking up elsewhere in retail and tech at big companies that are generally viewed as progressive, with no history of labor unions. As of Wednesday, 209 Starbucks stores have officially voted to unionize according to the National Labor Relations Board. First-ever unions have also formed at an Apple store in Maryland, a Google Fiber contractor, REI, Trader Joe's, Kickstarter and Activision Blizzard....
The union movement at Apple stores is progressing at a slower pace. The first union win among Apple's 270-plus U.S. stores happened on June 18, when workers in Towson, Maryland, voted 65 to 33 to join the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers. No other stores have held a vote.... Three other stores have taken steps to unionize, although one in Atlanta withdrew its election petition in May. That same month, a memo was leaked showing Apple's anti-union talking points, instructing store managers to tell workers they could lose benefits and career opportunities if they organized....
Communications Workers of America, which has about 700,000 members, helped organize the Atlanta Apple store, as well as workers at Google. In March, Google Fiber contractors in Kansas City held an NLRB election, becoming the first to officially unionize under what's known as the Alphabet Workers Union. Nearly 1,000 other Google workers have also signed cards to join the AWU, but because the employees haven't officially held an NLRB election, their group is known as a minority union. "There's a lot of research that shows that most Americans want unions," said Sara Steffens, secretary-treasurer of Communications Workers of America. "They just don't want to go through this scary union-busting process...."
Google has also been accused of fighting back. The NLRB found that the company "arguably violated" labor law when it fired employees for speaking up. The Google Fiber contractors faced additional anti-union messaging in a letter from the contractor, which said "everyone will be stuck with the union and forced to pay dues."
The article points out that union workers earn 16.6% more than nonunion workers on average — roughly $10,000 a year. "Workers are looking at how well their employers are performing and wondering why they're not getting rewarded equally. For example, Google parent Alphabet recorded its fastest revenue growth rate since 2007 last year. Apple's margin has been steadily rising and the company closed 2021 with its biggest quarter ever for sales, at almost $124 billion....
The article also notes that official figures from October 1, 2021 through June 30 showed a 58% increase in official attempts to unionize. "Whether the organizing momentum spreads more widely across the economy may depend on how vocal and successful workers are at Starbucks, Apple and elsewhere."
The union movement at Apple stores is progressing at a slower pace. The first union win among Apple's 270-plus U.S. stores happened on June 18, when workers in Towson, Maryland, voted 65 to 33 to join the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers. No other stores have held a vote.... Three other stores have taken steps to unionize, although one in Atlanta withdrew its election petition in May. That same month, a memo was leaked showing Apple's anti-union talking points, instructing store managers to tell workers they could lose benefits and career opportunities if they organized....
Communications Workers of America, which has about 700,000 members, helped organize the Atlanta Apple store, as well as workers at Google. In March, Google Fiber contractors in Kansas City held an NLRB election, becoming the first to officially unionize under what's known as the Alphabet Workers Union. Nearly 1,000 other Google workers have also signed cards to join the AWU, but because the employees haven't officially held an NLRB election, their group is known as a minority union. "There's a lot of research that shows that most Americans want unions," said Sara Steffens, secretary-treasurer of Communications Workers of America. "They just don't want to go through this scary union-busting process...."
Google has also been accused of fighting back. The NLRB found that the company "arguably violated" labor law when it fired employees for speaking up. The Google Fiber contractors faced additional anti-union messaging in a letter from the contractor, which said "everyone will be stuck with the union and forced to pay dues."
The article points out that union workers earn 16.6% more than nonunion workers on average — roughly $10,000 a year. "Workers are looking at how well their employers are performing and wondering why they're not getting rewarded equally. For example, Google parent Alphabet recorded its fastest revenue growth rate since 2007 last year. Apple's margin has been steadily rising and the company closed 2021 with its biggest quarter ever for sales, at almost $124 billion....
The article also notes that official figures from October 1, 2021 through June 30 showed a 58% increase in official attempts to unionize. "Whether the organizing momentum spreads more widely across the economy may depend on how vocal and successful workers are at Starbucks, Apple and elsewhere."
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You know what I find interesting about people making comments like this, they are way to scared to put their name behind their beliefs. All that proves to me is these beliefs hold no water.
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That's what a troll is by definition. Someone who constantly makes incendiary statements they do believe isn't a troll, they're just an asshole.
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I don't think you're an asshole, a few incendiary statements keep life interesting.
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I think I'm more of an asshole than I should be, but I'm working on it. I try to save the assholery for those who are being assholes themselves. It doesn't make the world better, but I like to believe it doesn't make it worse, either.
Ideally one finds a way to meet people where they live and appeal to their better nature, and ignores the trolls.
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So is jmccue your real name?
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Re: "The Beating of a Liberal" (Score:2)
Hey I'm a real dragon pal!
https://youtube.com/watch?t=10... [youtube.com]
My point is that we're all really anonymous.
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There are degrees of anonymity. I may not know your real name, but over time if I notice your posts a lot I'll build up a model of your online persona. I'll learn what ArmoredDragon cares about, how they write, and how closely aligned they are with my own beliefs. You're anonymous in that I can't find you in meat-space, but you're not anonymous in that there's a distinct personality for someone calling themselves ArmoredDragon on Slashdot, even if that personal
Re: "The Beating of a Liberal" (Score:2)
Yeah but that's not what motivates trolling. Think of it like setting off fireworks. The post is just lighting the fuse, afterwords you let the chemicals do their thing all by themselves, and you get entertainment out of watching the chaos ensue.
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Yeah, but this clown is just sad. This paragraph gets posted word-for-word, periodically. It's just some little sad wanker in his mom's basement. He's probably wanking off now, given that another of the posts has appeared. Poor guy. Sad.
What is this madness ??? (Score:5, Insightful)
Next thing you know, Americans might actually get effective healthcare, affordable education and not be treated like indentured slaves !
This is the thin edge of the wedge. It's a slippery slope.
These ungrateful peasants have no love for their job creators !
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Hard to do for store fronts :) But I am sure eventually robots will be developed instead for this. Luckily, for now, many people would rather deal with 'real' people.
I hope these new unions can avoid the corruption that some unions of the 70s had. Sad to say, seems once people get comfortable, corruption creeps in. We can see that happening with some democracies for the past 20/30 years.
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Did you even read the summary ? I know this is /. and people barely read the title :) From the summary:
The union movement at Apple stores is progressing at a slower pace. The first union win among Apple's 270-plus U.S. stores happened on June 18...
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The topic was tech companies. Retail outlet at tech company is not tech. I know the media and some non tech companies like yo pretend anything with a website is a tech company but even Apple retail is not technical.
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That's what I was thinking, selling Iphone is less "tech" than selling car now. My chevy does everything an Iphone can do plus nudge the steering wheel if I forget to use the blinkers before changing lanes and stop before colliding with an object.
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Freshii caused a huge stir in Canada because they started having robot cashiers who were working in a third world country. They were grilled by the public and news crews on how much they were being paid.
Of course, the thing with robots is people will try to scam them eventually. I can't tell how the Freshii remote cashier thing works - because
Re: What is this madness ??? (Score:2)
That already happens even with human employees.
https://www.wwnytv.com/2021/06... [wwnytv.com]
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Hard to do for store fronts :) But I am sure eventually robots will be developed instead for this.
No need to develop special robots for this, Apple storefronts can easily be replaced with a vending machine system utilizing technologies we have today. A simple vending machine that utilizes a small ten cubic foot space can hold thousands of phones, tablets and laptops. Repairs can be handled by the same machine by issuing a temporary replacement, and having the "consumer" come back and trade out that replacement for their repaired unit, or just have them keep the replacement if their old one isn't repa
Re: What is this madness ??? (Score:2)
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There are many ways to make an union, and you can bet your bottom dollar the corporations will push for the worst way possible, such as getting some power hungry socialist to organize it as "all the power goes for him" until the thing crash and burn.
You need more than meme words to get those things, you need an actual plan and probably several lobbysts to play as dirty as the corporations and healthcare companies play it.
Re: What is this madness ??? (Score:3)
the corporations will push for the worst way possible, such as getting some power hungry socialist to organize it
And how can we tell the difference between the "power hungry socialist" corporate sock puppets and the native power hungry socialists that usually drive union organizing?
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That's the beauty of it, you don't need to.
As long it's not some sort of leaderless, transparent small organization that actually get shit done, or other effective structure, it's game.
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Just follow whichever one pays you more. Then go home after work, forget about all that nonsense and enjoy yourself.
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TBH I already have all of that, and I've never been in a union.
I got a kidney transplant four years ago, paid for by my employer. And trust me, they're not cheap. Is that effective enough for you?
Despite what my signature says, the entire cost of my education was somewhere under $20,000. I just went to community college followed by the cheapest in-state university. (Though what does this have to do with unions again?)
Despite what you might believe, unions aren't some kind of panacea that suddenly make your
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Old argument against (Score:1)
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Reading here for 20+ years and the message is consistently, "my manager is some non-techie phb idiot".
Now you're saying non-techies are the best managers....
The reality at tech companies is almost everyone on the entering side all the way to CTO is/was a techie. It's incredibly rare to find a non-technical manager. Usually the non techie is there purely as a result of corporate politics.
Re: Old argument against (Score:1)
To me it seems to be a path situation.
The best 1st level managers seem to be the best engineers. However, they tend to manage by being a first among equals. Biggest draw back is a bad apple can ruin such a group.
Good first level managers should never be promoted. The person is all wrong for the upper levels. The best mid level tend to be people who think they are technologists. Usually technical enough to talk to but self important enough to not care about details.
Upper levels, it's situational and matters
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Re: Old argument against (Score:2)
Because tech cartels and other miscreants (Score:2, Insightful)
aren't? I don't know what kind of labor laws exist in Australia but in the US, there are basically none - I've seen TONS of blatantly illegal shit first hand, but when you don't pay people enough to afford a lawyer, nothing happens and corporations do whatever the fuck they want.
Law heavily favors the employer and business here (especially in red states), because thanks to criminal court rulings money = free speech (so "corporations are people my friend" - Mitt Romney on Citizen's United SCOTUS ruling) and
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In America, you either own the plantation, you're the overseer, or you're working the fucking field. No exceptions. No safety nets.
Assuming you are in America - there are hundreds of other better, and more fair places to live. Apparently most of them?
So why not eliminate your umbrage and move to one of them - you will be mush happier.
And if you are from another country - where do you get your knowledge from? Kim Jong Un or Vladimir Putin?
Re:Because tech cartels and other miscreants (Score:4, Informative)
It's actually not easy to move to another country FWIW. I've tried, failed.
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It's actually not easy to move to another country FWIW. I've tried, failed.
I know some want you to be financially independent or have a guaranteed job. There are some south and central American countries you could check into - I know a lot of retirees move to them.
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Yeah but they're all high crime.
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but in the US, there are basically none
Oh do stop it. There is an entire bureaucracy in the US federal government concerning labor laws (OSHA). Also, very powerful public sector unions are causing lots of problems in the US. Just look up the issues around their pensions at the state level. The parts of the government that are unionized are the parts of the government that people complain about (police and public schools) instead of what you might think people complain about (say the IRS). You think the teachers have no benefits? Maybe you
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I've worked, and currently work K-12, and have for well over a decade. I am not a teacher and there is no union doing fuck all for me.
Teachers being hard to fire generally depends on what subject they teach and/or what specialization they have (SPED is in massive demand at the moment) because there aren't enough - and they're not hard to fire at all if administrators (principals/VPs/etc) have a grudge or if they're paid too much for too long someone might notice and just fuck with job titles to make sure t
Re: Because tech cartels and other miscreants (Score:2)
Law heavily favors the employer and business here (especially in red states)
Even in Texas?
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Re:Unions = Mafia (Score:5, Interesting)
Unions are the legalised mafia of the world.
Unions are a power structure like anything else. Like all power structures, it can be abused. Corporations have been abusing their power in increasing amounts and workers are powerless. Therefore it has become necessary (in the most literal economic way) to take the risk. If corporations increasing wages and improved working conditions then there would be nobody wanting to join a union.
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You act like you have some sort of special insight but you don't. In the US, the police are untouchable in-part due to police unions. They often get away with vile offenses because laws protect them and union contracts have made it damn near impossible to fire them.
We know all about the harm that can come from unions but you seriously need to cut your whining because we're already getting railroaded en masse by tech companies.
Re: Unions = Mafia (Score:2)
If corporations increasing wages and improved working conditions then there would be nobody wanting to join a union.
That's true for unions which exist for the sole purpose of increasing pay or addressing poor working conditions. Which is why they lobby heavily against "right to work" laws; they have to force people in if things aren't bad, and make it nearly impossible to get rid of the union even when it's not needed.
But then there are other unions, like the electric workers, which work more like an old-school "guild." They provide ongoing training, certification, job placement, and spend a lot of effort to ensure that
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If corporations increasing wages and improved working conditions then there would be nobody wanting to join a union.
Not quite. There have been recently examples demonstrating otherwise. Google, for example, offers very generous compensation for its employees as well as near spa-like work environment compared to what is experienced in the average Joe's office. Once content at those levels, some workers will just look for new buttons to push and new demands to make. In Google's case, some workers decided they want more power in the business decision making and in determining the clients that they do business with. One coul
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Once content at those levels, some workers will just look for new buttons to push and new demands to make.
There will always be people who are never happy but that doesn't mean they would get anywhere near enough support for a union. That said, your hypothetical sounds like corporate propaganda trying to dissuade people from trying to make ends meet by demanding fair pay.
Pendulum swings... (Score:5, Insightful)
As I get older, I find myself swinging more and more Left. I'm near the end of my career. But I owned my first home at age 26 and had an excellent, well-paying job by the time I was 27. Never belonged to a union in my life.
But for my kids to buy a place? Science fiction. Obviously, I'll help to the extent that I can, but what about all the other 20-somethings who don't have parents that can help out?
This generation is being screwed by corporations. They need to do something to correct the power imbalance. The idea that anyone can succeed as long as they work hard is just a joke nowadays.
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Well when are your kids going to take some personal responsibility for their situation? If they wanted a house they should have picked richer parents. I expect they also had avocado on toast too and maybe some coffee which wasn't awful, so really it's their fault.
Re: Pendulum swings... (Score:2)
This generation is being screwed by corporations.
How so? Do you really think that there is a corporate conspiracy to keep people from owning their own home? Do you think that corporations (outside of the resl estate industry) even care?
Of course corporations seek to minimize their costs. But as a profesdionsl engineer, I've never found unions to be particularly good at negotiating my wage. Certainly, that is different in lower skilled, low wage industries. But they negotiate on behalf of all workers, seeking a floor under wages and demonizing highly pro
Re: Pendulum swings... (Score:5, Insightful)
It's the people in less-skilled jobs or less-prestigious jobs who are being screwed. I'm also an engineer, though work mainly in software, and we have great bargaining power because of our professions. Baristas, teachers, warehouse workers, etc. have much less bargaining power... for them, unions are likely a win.
And they're being screwed with poor working conditions and low wages.
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I'm in the USA. In the 2000-2001 time frame, tech startups largely could not get funding unless their business plan included an action to send the tech work offshore. Established companies also were sending the tech work offshore. There was no bargaining power that I witnessed, then, and this effect seems to have continued up until recently. The only transient effect that I see recentl
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If you've been in the industry for 30+ years and are an expert in multiple areas... then you have bargaining power.
If you're just starting out, then probably not.
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As I get older, I find myself swinging more and more Left.
That would be odd. I've often heard that the older one gets the more conservative one becomes. Not to say that radicals become conservative with a capital C, but simply less radical, more resigned to the fact that we can't really change world.
Your image of a pendulum seems especially appropriate, a back and forth between social progress and regression, even while society, save for the oscillations in fashion and habit brought about by technology, stays the same. The pendulum stays in place. But a pendulum i
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I'm not in the USA, so my country is nowhere near as polarized as the USA (though it is still a lot more polarized than it should be.)
I think it's not only liberals who have been moving the line left in the United States, but also conservatives who have been moving it very far to the right. In fact, I don't think conservatives in the United States are worthy of that name... how can people who believe in small government and in freedom nevertheless promote intrusion of government into people's private liv
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That is my worry, most kids these days will have things far worse then we did. Kids in the 30s may be 50/50 with an OK life, but their kids (our grandchildren), god help them.
Unless a miracle happens, or if they are in the top 1%, things will be real bad with the climate outlook.
I think with unions we may very well start seeing things like this in 10 to 20 years, seems we are slowly heading back to the "old days".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1912_Lawrence_textile_strike
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As I get older, I find myself swinging more and more Left. I'm near the end of my career. But I owned my first home at age 26 and had an excellent, well-paying job by the time I was 27. Never belonged to a union in my life.
But for my kids to buy a place? Science fiction. Obviously, I'll help to the extent that I can, but what about all the other 20-somethings who don't have parents that can help out?
This generation is being screwed by corporations. They need to do something to correct the power imbalance. The idea that anyone can succeed as long as they work hard is just a joke nowadays.
It's not "evil corporations" preventing new construction that'd drive prices down, it's moronic zoning laws imposed by your leftist overlords "for your own good". But yeah, keep voting for them.
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It is moronic zoning laws to some extent, but "leftist overlords"? What are you smoking? NIMBYism crosses all political lines. You think electing a more right-wing slate of candidates will improve local zoning laws?
Rebranding is the key. (Score:2)
Don't form a union, form a company which supplies other companies with workers, maybe call it Bunion Inc. Everybody is an equal shareholder in Bunion Inc and everybody is availible to be farmed out to these client companies.
Instead of being evil commie union scum destroying the fabric of society by asking for enough money to live on, it would be a corporation quite rightly leveraging everything availible to maximise income in accordance with the holy priciples of business.
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But then I'll form a company called Onion Inc. I'll hire H1B employees and underbid Bunion.
But not always. The whole subcontracting scam has been used in many cases. Some to avoid government regulation on the primary business. Even thought they pay employees higher.
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Oh, yeah, somebody may undercut Bunion. The point is that a company will agree to a 10% increase in Onion or Bunion fees at the yearly reassessment where they will fight all the way to deny their own employees 1%.
A lot of us have seen it. Company is expanding, but can't find anyone else willing to work for their shitty wage so they get agency workers in and cheerily pay the agency double the shitty wage for an agency worker who doesn't know how to do the job until he is trained by the shittily paid normal s
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Don't form a union, form a company which supplies other companies with workers, maybe call it Bunion Inc
Usually they call those temp agencies or staffing agencies, generally they suck worse than being an employee.
. Everybody is an equal shareholder in Bunion Inc and everybody is availible to be farmed out to these client companies.
The union kind of thingies tend to be seniority driven rather than equality or meritocratically driven .
Instead of being evil commie union scum destroying the fabric of society by asking for enough money to live on, it would be a corporation quite rightly leveraging everything availible to maximise income in accordance with the holy priciples of business.
Maybe the workers could do something like buying stock in the company, that way if the company does good the workers do good, if the company crashes and burns, so do the workers.
Re:and people wonder why theres inflation (Score:5, Insightful)
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Well strictly speaking this isn't a classical inflation. It's higher prices caused by prices raised by external reasons. Microchips didn't get expensive because the guy delivering them can now actually live of his job.
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Well strictly speaking this isn't a classical inflation. It's higher prices caused by prices raised by external reasons.
Any general and broad increase in prices across the majority of sectors is inflation. You are literally just describing inflation, then saying it's not "classic" inflation in an attempt to weasel out of the corner you painted yourself into. It's inflation, period.
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The companies selling those bags of chips are making record profits, again. Meanwhile, earlier this year, those chips weren't even on the shelves as the grocers were using their power to deny paying the chip makers any increases even with the price of potatoes having gone way up due to external factors like the price of diesel and fertilizer pretty well doubling.
Meanwhile the wages paid to the employees have been dropping in real buying power, rent, fuel and food are increasing in cost way faster then wages
Re: and people wonder why theres inflation (Score:2)
A bag of chips doesn't cost $10 in the real world, it's only that much in the Fox News alternative reality.
Not about tech companies (Score:3)
The examples given in the TFS are only half tech companies. It's not just happening at tech companies, it's happening across the board.
Unions are a shitty patch on shitty labor laws written by shitty politicians (or by corporate lawyers, and then handed to same) but they're a zillion times better than nothing, and workers are realizing that.
Re: Not about tech companies (Score:2)
Unions go home (Score:2)
I want nothing to do with being in a union and I hope to God my work never gets one. And if they do get a union, I hope I'm not forced to join one.
My wife has been trying to get out of here union for well over a decade, and everyone says ti can be done, but no one knows how to do it.
My wife's best friend, who is a paralegal, was forced into a union. The law firm unanimously voted the union out, and the union sued the law firm for union busting.
My SIL worked for a restaurant that went union. It's no longer
Memoir of a former local union official (Score:2)
I grew up when the UK was being messed up by strikes. As a result I was pretty anti-union. Then I ended up as a programmer in a large local government organisation. For about 6 years I ignored the unions. We then saw a 'job evaluation scheme' which sought to put our wages on a 'rational basis' implemented; the more 'skilled' you were, the more you should get. The idea was that this was 'fairer' - but the organisation was implemented it in a way that would have cost some people a lot of money. The union went
More unions = more China (Score:1)
If only unions were about representing workers (Score:2)
For example, take a stand against outsourcing in order to preserve American jobs and wages, would gladly pay dues for that. But no, the focus is supporting various Democratic politicians and preferred gender pronouns. I am not spending thousands of dollars per year on other people's special interests to a body that is supposed to represent mine. If I support particular causes, I can always donate directly to charity a political campaign.
not for me (Score:2)
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You're a liar.
And I retired a couple years ago, and never got to "negotiate" my rate, working for companies from 9 people to Ameritech and AT&T.
Meritocracy (Score:2)
Something that always comes up in discussions of unionization is whether high performers will lose out under a union contract.
There is a well known example of a union which protects the vulnerable and also allows the top people to get rich. The Screen Actors Guild sets a floor on pay and some protections on working conditions, while the Meryl Streeps of the world can negotiate compensation in line with their value.