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Over 300 Homeless People Expected to Participate in Informational Picketing @ Rivers Casino in Pittsburgh

 





Ed Fasulo, President and COO of Rivers Casino



Rivers Casino agrees to contribute $7.5M annually to help fund Consol Energy Center While Paying Its Workers Poverty Wages



Ed Fasulo Explain To Me, Your Customers, Your Workers and the Rest of the Pittsburgh Community on HOW The Workers at RIVERS CASINO Can Afford to Support Their Families on Poverty Wages Ranging From $8.00 to $9.50 Per Hour?



Ed Fasulo Please Be Advised that to Bring awareness to the Poverty Wages being Paid to The Workers of Rivers Casino, the International Union, Security, Police and Fire Professionals of America SPFPA along with THE HOMELESS, Community and Religious Groups, Labor Organizations and Politicians is planning to hold Informational Picketing outside of Rivers Casino to EXPOSE the Poverty Wages being paid to its Workers by Rivers Casino .....Coming Soon, The Date to be announced!

Rivers Casino Nets $1.29 million in Eighteen Hours,
Third Highest Opening Day in Pennsylvania History


About the Rivers Casino

The Rivers Casino is a joint venture between Walton Street Capital, High Pitt Gaming and Don Barden. Neil Bluhm, the Founding Principal of Walton Street Capital, has over four decades of experience developing commercial, residential and gaming properties. Greg Carlin, the CEO of High Pitt Gaming, LLC, has over a decade of gaming investment and management experience. Other casino projects owned and managed by Mr. Bluhm and Mr. Carlin include the Fallsview Casino Resort in Ontario, the Riverwalk Casino & Hotel in Vicksburg, MS, and the SugarHouse Casino in Philadelphia.

Related Sites:

Jobs With Justice

International Union, Security, Police and Fire Professionals of America SPFPA

USW | United Steelworkers

AFL-CIO

Unite - Here

Service Employee International Union SEIU

Rivers Casino Union Busting Tactics

Rivers Casino Supervisor Physically Assaults Casino Security Officer During Union Campaign

BREAKING NEWS:

PITTSBURGH: Rivers Casino Bets Against Hunger
Posted: 4:20 pm EST November 13, 2009Updated: 4:26 pm EST November 13, 2009



The Rivers Casino on the North Shore is helping out the hungry this holiday season by sponsoring a food drive for the Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank.

Beginning Monday, November 16th casino customers can bring non-perishable food or grocery items and receive $5.00 in free play for each item (limit 3 items, $15.00 per person, per day).

The food drive offer is good for Mondays ONLY through December 21st. Participants will receive their free play through their Riverwatch Player Club Card only. Food donors who don’t have a card can sign up for one at the casino; there is no charge.

Volunteers will be stationed at the front door and at the entrance from the parking garage to assist in the collection of food donations. Donors are reminded not to bring items in glass jars.

Most-needed items include canned meat and fish, peanut butter, holiday-associated items like canned yams; healthy boxed items like low-sugar cereal, rice and pasta; fruit and vegetables or non food items like shampoo, toothpaste, paper goods or cleaning items.


http://www.wpxi.com/news/21609268/detail.html

Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank

Tags: Ed Fasulo, Rivers Casino, Homeless, Poverty Wages, Workers, Pittsburgh Community, SPFPA, Neil Bluhm, Walton Street Capital, High Pitt Gaming, Don Barden, Pittsburgh News, Casino, Labor Union, AFL-CIO, Jobs With Justice,United Steelworkers USW, Unite - Here, SEIU, Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank.
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UNION BUSTING Play Book : Step by Step on What UNION BUSTERS Do and How They Run UNION BUSTING Campaigns.

 

UNION BUSTING Play Book : Step by Step on What UNION BUSTERS Do and How They Run UNION BUSTING Campaigns.

WHAT IS Union Busting?

Union-busting is a practice that is undertaken by an employer or their agents to prevent employees from joining a labor union, or to disempower, subvert, or destroy unions that already exist.



Union busting is a field populated by bullies and built on deceit. A campaign against a union is an assault on individuals and a war on truth. As such, it is a war without honor. The only way to bust a union is to lie, distort, manipulate, threaten, and always, always attack.

Martin Jay Levitt, 1993, Confessions of a Union Buster

The irony of union busters is that management is extremely fearful of “losing control” of the workplace and sharing power with its workforce in the form of a union. Yet they happily hand over control of the workplace to the union busters they hire who do exactly that—directing the entire campaign and in effect taking control of the workplace by telling management and supervisors what to say, what to do and how to act. The money that management squanders on these union busters would be much better spent on dealing with the real workplace issues.

UNION BUSTING PLAY BOOK
Step by Step on What UNION BUSTERS Do and How They Run UNION BUSTING Campaigns.


http://www.unionbusting101.com/

The Union Busting Strategy Against the Employee Free Choice Act ( EFCA )

http://efcanow.blogspot.com/2009/03/is-strategy-behind-efca-national-ads.html

Tags: Union Busting, EFCA, Employee Free Choice Act, Labor Union, AFL-CIO, Union Blogs, Union Avoidance, Union Buster, Union Campaigns, Organizing a union
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Harvard Law School Professor Vs. Union Organizer Over Employee Free Choice Compromise Solution

Harvard Law School Professor Benjamin Sachs Alternative Compromise to the Employee Free Choice Act is Completely Off Base



Sachs in Slate: A better fix for union organizing than the Employee Free Choice Act

Professor Benjamin Sachs Harvard Law School
April 16, 2009

The following article, “Card Check 2.0,” written by Harvard Law School Professor Benjamin Sachs, appeared on Slate.com on Thursday, April 16, 2009.

In the opening months of the Obama presidency, the ground rules for union-organizing campaigns have been the focus of a barrage of TV spots (a Sopranos mafia boss bullies a doe-eyed employee into signing a union card), hyperbolic predictions (the Chamber of Commerce warns of Armageddon), and public flip-flops by politicians (Arlen Specter most notoriously). The fight is over a bill called the Employee Free Choice Act, also known as the "card check" law.

The idea of card check is simple enough: When the majority of employees in a given company sign cards indicating that they want to be represented by a particular union, they get one. This sounds simple. But the stakes of the fight over the bill are enormous, because allowing organizing through card check would make it much easier for workers to unionize. For the last seven decades, organizing campaigns have been governed by a New Deal statute, the National Labor Relations Act. These days, the traditional NLRA rules make it exceedingly difficult for workers to win a union drive, in part because they allow managers to actively discourage workers from unionizing—through tactics both legal and illegal—and to massively delay the organizing process, which kills momentum. If the Employee Free Choice Act were to pass, it could quickly swell union ranks by millions of workers.

It's not surprising, therefore, that enacting the bill is the chief legislative goal of every major labor union in the United States. Burying the legislation, meanwhile, is the chief aim of the country's leading business organizations. As a result, while the Employee Free Choice Act has strong majorities in both the House and Senate and the support of President Obama, it likely will not muster the 60 votes needed to overcome a filibuster.

If we're going to move forward with labor law reform—and bring union organizing rules into the 21st century—we're going to need a compromise. I propose a new design that would respond to the demands of both sides. It would be secret, to diminish any concern about undue pressure from organizers and co-workers, and it would also protect against interference from management.

Here's the problem I'm trying to solve. While both sides of the debate agree that organizing rules should ensure that employees can choose freely whether they want a union, management and labor are worlds apart on how to get there. The business groups contend that card check is the opposite of secret balloting, because it strips away confidentiality. They argue that if workers feel coerced by union organizers or pressured by co-workers, they may vote for a union they don't want.

The labor movement, for its part, argues that employers currently can exert enormous pressure on employees to "vote no"—by firing union supporters or threatening to close plants and move overseas. With card check, all (or nearly all) of an organizing campaign could move outside the workplace, so employees and unions could conduct organizing drives in a manner that minimizes, or even eliminates, management interference.

To address the labor-business impasse, I suggest two alternatives to card check and for changing the Employee Free Choice Act. Both ensure that employees would get to choose confidentially whether they want a union, eliminating the possibility for coercion that worries business groups. At the same time, employees could organize without much of the employer interference that troubles labor.

The first alternative to card check would borrow from the model of early voting in U.S. political elections. Increasingly, in states across the country, voters cast their ballot by mail, or they go to a polling place and cast a ballot in the weeks leading up to election day. In the last presidential election, about one-third of all votes nationally were cast through some kind of early voting.

Early voting is easy to translate to the union election process. Union organizers and supportive employees would be entitled, as they are under the proposed card check law, to visit employees and make the case for unionization. The union would then give the National Labor Relations Board (or some neutral third-party established for this purpose) a list of the relevant employees. The NLRB would set up a polling place, where employees could make their decision at any time during the drive, and it would set up a confidential mail-in procedure. Just as is the case under current NLRA law, the rules would prohibit union organizers from interfering with employees while they're making their choices. The NLRB would keep a running tally, and if the union won the support of 50 percent of the prospective bargaining unit (or perhaps a higher percentage if the union wanted some cushion), the NLRB would inform the union that it was entitled to demand recognition from the employer.

My second approach borrows the successful, but seldom touted, voting technology used in union elections for airlines and railroads. Employees get a confidential voter identification number and then vote in their homes by either phone or the Internet. Union organizers, co-workers, and employer representatives are all prohibited from interfering while votes are being cast. If they don't follow the rules, the election results are overturned.

It would be easy to adapt these technologies to union drives in other industries. The organizing process would be the same as in my first proposal. And again, the NLRB would keep a running tally, and if the union won the support of half the workers, it would be entitled to demand recognition from the employer.

At the end of the process for either of the alternatives I've outlined, employers could raise challenges: They could argue that people voted who shouldn't be included in the bargaining unit, or they could argue that the union interfered. But the challenges would be heard after, rather than before, the votes were tallied, to avoid the unnecessary delays that currently plague organizing drives.

There are undoubtedly objections to my versions of card check 2.0. No decision-making system is perfect. But unlike the current version of the Employee Free Choice Act, both of my alternatives address the biggest fears of business and labor. Workers will be able to choose whether they want a union more freely than they can now, and with more confidentiality than card check allows.

Benjamin Sachs is an assistant professor of law at Harvard, where he teaches labor law. He is the author of a forthcoming law review article on employee choice.




Dear Professor Benjamin Sachs Harvard Law School

I just read your article Sachs in Slate: A better fix for union organizing than the Employee Free Choice Act and must fully disagree with you on both alternatives. Here's why:

http://www.law.harvard.edu/news/2009/04/16_sachs.html

Your first alternative to card check would borrow from the model of early voting in U.S. political elections. Increasingly, in states across the country, voters cast their ballot by mail, or they go to a polling place and cast a ballot in the weeks leading up to election day. In the last presidential election, about one-third of all votes nationally were cast through some kind of early voting.

Early voting is easy to translate to the union election process. Union organizers and supportive employees would be entitled, as they are under the proposed card check law, to visit employees and make the case for unionization. The union would then give the National Labor Relations Board (or some neutral third-party established for this purpose) a list of the relevant employees. The NLRB would set up a polling place, where employees could make their decision at any time during the drive, and it would set up a confidential mail-in procedure. Just as is the case under current NLRA law, the rules would prohibit union organizers from interfering with employees while they're making their choices. The NLRB would keep a running tally, and if the union won the support of 50 percent of the prospective bargaining unit (or perhaps a higher percentage if the union wanted some cushion), the NLRB would inform the union that it was entitled to demand recognition from the employer.

This approach Will NOT Work for a number of reasons.



First off Professor, I would like to point out that the Federal System on running elections is much different then a union election. During a Federal run election those who are voting are not held captive by there employer. They are NOT Forced to attend daily employer Anti-Union Meetings sometimes two or more during the day. They are NOT Subject to the FEAR of Job Loss, Loss of Wages or Benefits, Intimidation or Coercion like employees are. Unlike a Federal election Unions Do NOT Have Equal access to those workers who are eligible to vote. These are two different animals.



Free and Fair? How Labor Law Fails U.S. Democratic Election Standards

Number two since the time it takes to set up this process and complete the process would be extended Not Reduced.

Number three presently Mail Ballot Elections are used UNDER THE PRESENT SYSTEM when multiple locations are involved. Under this process it takes an addition three weeks from the time the petition is filed, a stipulated agreement is signed without a hearing and the ballots are printed to be mailed out.

Once the ballots are sent out there is now at least a two to three week period for those eligible to vote to return them. Under this method the period is much longer and fewer workers vote approximately 50% vs. 95 % in a poll election.

By using a Mail Ballot system it would NOT I repeat would NOT eliminate an employers ability to conduct an all-out assault against its employees in form of UNION-BUSTING FEAR, Coercion and Intimidation Tactics. If anything this would give the Employer More Time.

Your second approach borrows the successful, but seldom touted, voting technology used in union elections for airlines and railroads. Employees get a confidential voter identification number and then vote in their homes by either phone or the Internet. Union organizers, co-workers, and employer representatives are all prohibited from interfering while votes are being cast. If they don't follow the rules, the election results are overturned.

It would be easy to adapt these technologies to union drives in other industries. The organizing process would be the same as in my first proposal. And again, the NLRB would keep a running tally, and if the union won the support of half the workers, it would be entitled to demand recognition from the employer.

At the end of the process for either of the alternatives I've outlined, employers could raise challenges: They could argue that people voted who shouldn't be included in the bargaining unit, or they could argue that the union interfered. But the challenges would be heard after, rather than before, the votes were tallied, to avoid the unnecessary delays that currently plague organizing drives.

There are undoubtedly objections to my versions of card check 2.0. No decision-making system is perfect. But unlike the current version of the Employee Free Choice Act, both of my alternatives address the biggest fears of business and labor. Workers will be able to choose whether they want a union more freely than they can now, and with more confidentiality than card check allows.

On your second approach with all due respect, it has no merit whatsoever. The Problem is NOT and I Repeat once again NOT that Union organizers, co-workers, and employer representatives are all prohibited from interfering while votes are being cast ....Its about the 42 day Period of Employer Threats FEAR Coercion and Intimidation Leading Up To the "Secret Ballot Vote".




See Employer FEAR, Coercion and Intimidation Union Busting Tactics Press Below

http://efcanow.blogspot.com/2009/02/just-say-no-to-employee-free-choice-act.html

The only Alternative Compromise which allows the Employees Not the Unions, Not Management, Not The NLRB but the Employee Right to Choose Freely is by using a Dual Purpose Membership Card. Like one shown below.



For more on this please read the following articles I have written on the subject

Amending The Employee Free Choice Act. A Compromise Every Union Can Live With.

http://efcanow.blogspot.com/2009/01/amending-employee-free-choice-act.html

Thinking Outside The Box to Get The Employee Free Choice Act EFCA Passed

http://efcanow.blogspot.com/2009/03/thinking-outside-box-to-get-employee.html


Respectfully

Steve Maritas

International Organizing Director SPFPA



Steve Maritas International Organizing Director SPFPA has over 30 years experience in organizing and Union - Busting Tactics. Rated in the top 5 by BNA for most members organized in a three quarters period in 2007. Press Here


Tags: Employee Free Choice Act, EFCA, Employee Free Choice,Free Choice Act,EFCA Compromise, Free Choice, Professor, Benjamin Sachs, Harvard Law School, Steve Maritas, Unions, Union Blogs, Labor Union, SPFPA Sphere: Related Content
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Stewart Acuff, special assistant to AFL-CIO President John Sweeney touts Employee Free Choice Act : EFCA campaign

 



Photo by Jason Kosena/The Colorado Statesman Stewart Acuff, special assistant to AFL-CIO President John Sweeney and spearhead of the EFCA, told The Colorado Statesman this week that organized labor is ready to work on behalf of lawmakers who “do the right thing” and support the act.

Stewart Acuff, special assistant to AFL-CIO President John Sweeney touts Employee Free Choice Act : EFCA campaign
4/03/2009

By Jason Kosena
THE COLORADO STATESMAN

The heat is on when it comes to the Employee Free Choice Act.

One week after U.S. Chamber of Commerce President Tom Donohue came to Denver to talk to business leaders about the importance of opposing the EFCA, a major labor leader made stops up and down the Front Range to promote the proposed legislation.

Reps. Mike Merrifeld, D-Colorado Springs, Judy Solano, D-Thornton and Rep. Gwyn Green, D-Golden, listen to a presentation by the AFL-CIO.

Acuff said that — unlike Donohue, who publicly promised last week that the business community would go after middle-of-the-road senators such as Colorado’s Michael Bennet if they choose to vote for the EFCA — he isn’t planning to play hardball.

“I will leave it to the business community to bully political leaders in the way they bully their employees,” Acuff said. “We’re not making any threats, as they are. But we are appealing to senators’ common sense and their sense of fairness…. We will fight as hard as we can to protect everyone who makes the right decision about this legislation.”

The EFCA would ease union organization rules and, in theory, clear a path for organized labor to eliminate a secret ballot in elections on whether to unionize. Republicans and business leaders say union bosses will use the open voting process to intimidate voters they know oppose union formation.

Democrats and organized labor disagree, pointing to a provision in the act that would allow for a secret ballot if 30 percent of workers ask for one. Furthermore, they say, it will level the playing field because corporate bosses currently are able to intimidate workers who are known to favor unionization.

AFL-CIO special assistant to the president Stewart Acuff speaks to Colorado lawmakers about the Employee Free Choice Act on Tuesday during a legislative breakfast.

The Colorado Statesman Acuff was in Colorado Springs, Denver and Boulder touting the importance of the labor law revision. His Front Range tour included a legislative breakfast with a handful of Democratic state lawmakers at the Colorado Education Association Tuesday morning. During the breakfast, Acuff made an impassioned speech, stressing the importance of the EFCA to working Americans and urging those in attendance to contact Bennet and demand that he support the bill.

The EFCA is not an easy call for Bennet.

He has been targeted by both labor and business groups since arriving in Congress because both feel they can appeal to his moderate political views. Bennet — a former executive for Phil Anschutz and superintendent of Denver Public Schools who has never run for public office — has appeal to the business community but was appointed to his seat by Democratic Gov. Bill Ritter. Furthermore, Bennet, along with Colorado Sen. Mark Udall, recently joined a working group of moderate Senate Democrats that, according to some insiders, will play a role in brokering a compromise on the EFCA.

Bennet has yet to make a public statement about his position on the EFCA except to say he is studying the legislation and weighing the arguments. That hasn’t stopped labor and business interests from intensifying their lobbying campaign, however.

AFL-CIO Colorado chapter leader Mike Cerbo listens intently.

The Colorado Statesman As Acuff was in Denver asking lawmakers and labor supporters to contact Bennet in order to lobby for passage of the EFCA, a delegation from the Colorado Association of Commerce and Industry was on its way to Washington to persuade Senators Bennet and Udall to oppose the legislation.

Acuff told his Denver audience that he believes the legislation will come before Congress in seven to eight weeks and that he is hopeful Senate Democrats will be able to round up 60 votes.

“This is a close game we’re playing here,” Acuff told lawmakers Tuesday morning. “Saying (Minnesota senator-elect) Al Franken is seated, we need every Democrat to support this, and one Republican. We are working on the Republican side of things, but you can help us with the Democrats like Mark Udall and Michael Bennet who have not stated their positions.”

Most political observers agree that most voters will not view the EFCA as a campaign issue by November 2010, but that the issue will help define the nation’s newly elected officeholders. If he were to oppose the bill, Bennet might find it hard to attract union campaign donations, or he could see organized labor get behind another Democrat — possibly one Ritter passed up to appoint Bennet — in order to wage an expensive primary.

On the other hand, if he votes for the legislation, Bennet risks losing his image as a business-friendly Democrat, and he could see anti-labor forces pour millions of dollars into a 2010 GOP campaign against him.

Although state lawmakers do not have a direct vote on the EFCA issue, Rep. John Kefalas, D-Fort Collins, said he wanted to attend the breakfast with Acuff to get better information and to support labor.

“I think this legislation is very important to working families and the middle class in America,” Kefalas said after the event. “I came today because I wanted more information but also because I feel it’s important that we all reach out and see what we can do to ensure this bill is passed. Talking to people and contacting our (national) lawmakers is all part of that.”



www.TheTruthAboutEFCA.Org

http://efcanow.blogspot.com/

For more information on Employer Intimidation and Union-Busting FEAR Tactics Press Below

http://efcanow.blogspot.com/2009/02/just-say-no-to-employee-free-choice-act.html


http://www.azcentral.com/members/Blog/EFCANOW


http://efcaunionbustingclub.blogspot.com/

http://www.employeefreechoiceactnow.org

http://www.FreeChoiceActNow.Org

http://www.LaborUnionResources.Org


Tags: Stewart Acuff, Employee Free Choice Act, Employee Free Choice, EFCA, Free Choice Act, Free Choice, Labor Union, Employee Free Choice Grassroots, The Truth about EFCA, Employee Free Choice Support, AFL-CIO, Workers Rights, Labor Reform, Union Blogs, Working Families. Sphere: Related Content
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EFCA: As Congress Recesses, Campaign for Employee Free Choice Goes into High Gear

EFCA: As Congress Recesses, Campaign for Employee Free Choice Goes into High Gear

by Seth Michaels, Apr 3, 2009

 
   

Members of Congress return to their districts this weekend for a two-week recess, and when they get there, they’ll be greeted with unprecedented grassroots energy in support of the Employee Free Choice Act.

Hundreds of rallies, community meetings and events will take place over the next two weeks as workers and their allies demand that members of the House and Senate act quickly to protect employees’ freedom to form a union and bargain.

The broad coalition in support of the Employee Free Choice Act includes union members and their families, religious groups, students, civil rights organizations and small business owners. They’ll reach out to thank supporters and ask those who haven’t signed on yet to co-sponsor the critical bill. This outpouring of support, which will include phone banks, letters and personal meetings with elected officials, will be accompanied by a new ad running in key states. 

The ad, “Fabric of America,” talks about the benefits that come with the ability of workers to choose a union and bargain: health care, pensions, fair wages and job security.

The ad echoes the message delivered by workers across the country: To make the economy work for everyone again, we need to restore the freedom to form a union. It’s an important message in the face of big-dollar corporate disinformation campaigns. 

Mary Beth Maxwell, executive director of American Rights at Work, says the next two weeks are critical to passage of the Employee Free Choice Act, and that workers and their allies will rise to the occasion: 

This recess we will not allow our leaders to forget that workers across the country are counting on them to make the economy work for everyone again. There is an unwavering commitment by a majority of lawmakers to restore our middle class and give workers back the freedom to bargain for a better life. Our ramped-up efforts send a strong message to the rest of Congress that we can, we must, and we will pass the Employee Free Choice Act this year. 

In this critical time, the mobilization of thousands of union members and their allies will send a strong message to their members of Congress: We need to put balance back in our labor laws and give workers, not their bosses, the freedom to choose how to join a union.

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From the Field: The EFCA Battle’s Just Beginning

by Seth Michaels, Apr 3, 2009
     
       

    We’re heading into what might be the biggest two weeks yet in the fight for enactment of the Employee Free Choice Act.

    Members of Congress are returning home for the April recess, and workers and their allies are participating in hundreds of events—phone banking, leafleting, letter writing, meeting with lawmakers in town halls and rallying with allies—to make sure their elected officials pass the Employee Free Choice Act. More than 300 events are scheduled during this critical period.

    On Tuesday, union members from across northern Indiana gathered in Valparaiso to show support for workers at Georgia Pacific, who fought hard to form a union but two years later still haven’t achieved a contract. One worker was even fired during the fight for a union, an abuse that, unfortunately, happens in one out of every four union elections.

    Michael O’Brien of the Steelworkers (USW) said the experience of Georgia Pacific workers shows how badly broken our system of labor law is, and how much we need a new law to change it: 

    We should not allow this to happen in America…this issue is an example, a perfect example, of why we need the Employee Free Choice Act to pass.

     
       

    Brian McIntosh, a former worker at Georgia Pacific, said that situation shows the need for diligent grassroots efforts in support of the Employee Free Choice Act: 

    “We cannot stop. We have to continue this fight. It might be long, it might be hard, but we will win the battle. You need to get a hold of your congressperson; you need to tell them we need this act. We cannot continue to have union-busting going on like this. Enough is enough.” 

    In Wisconsin, the Milwaukee Area Labor Council organized a “Bucks Fans for the Employee Free Choice Act” day, creating a banner covered in signatures for delivery to Sen. Herb Kohl, who has not yet signed on as a co-sponsor of the bill introduced March 10. Wisconsin union members also held a rally for corporate accountability in Kenosha this week.

    In Fort Smith, Ark., state AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer Ricky Belk was among the union leaders who took part in a town hall meeting on the economy this week. He said union membership meant he and his wife could raise a family and join the middle class. Corporate dominance of the system for forming unions, he said, threatens that promise and the ability of workers to get fair wages and access to health care and pensions: 

    What I had to do was work hard, play by the rules, be persistent and that I would have the opportunity to achieve the American dream. I’ve been very, very fortunate in that I’ve had a union representing me in the workplace….The economy we find ourselves in today doesn’t afford that opportunity for everybody. 

    Allies of the Employee Free Choice Act continue to hold meetings with small business owners and community allies in support of the bill. The grassroots effort to restore workers’ freedom to form unions stretches from Maine to California, from Alaska to Florida, and we won’t stop fighting until we’ve passed the Employee Free Choice Act. 

    For more news from the field, check out the Employee Free Choice Act field blog.

    1 Comment

    1. SPFPAUNIONYES1@AOL.COM on 03.04.2009 at 14:20 (Reply)

      As Congress Recesses, Campaign for Employee Free Choice Goes into High Gear.
      A Message to all the Corporate Front Groups such as the Collation for a Democratic Workplace, Save our Secret Ballot, U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Americans for Prosperity, Joe The Horny UNION BUSTER Plumber and all other Anti-Union Busting Anti-EFCA Anti-Worker Groups :

      The Fight has yet to begun - NO Surrender - NO Retreat !

      The Employee Free Choice Act EFCA Will be Passed !

      Steve Maritas International Organizing Director SPFPA.

      http://www.SPFPA.Org

      Statement of SEIU President Andy Stern on Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Dedication to Working Families.


      “We must work unceasingly to uplift this nation that we love to a higher destiny, to a higher plateau of compassion, to a more noble expression of humanness” — Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

    2.  

      The Truth About EFCA.Org is part of a multi-faceted new media campaign slated to help shed light on the “card check” issue and expose some of the misinformation being spread by corporate front groups who oppose the EFCA and who try to continue their control and lavish life styles. Besides tracking the latest news on EFCA, the http://www.TheTruthAboutEFCA.Org website contains a link to our blog with contributions from EFCA bloggers and special guests.

      Website: http://www.TheTruthAboutEFCA.Org

      For More Information on EFCA please visit our websites and blog

      http://www.azcentral.com/members/Blog/EFCANOW#
    3. http://efcanow.blogspot.com/

      http://efcaunionbustingclub.blogspot.com/

      http://www.employeefreechoiceactnow.org

      http://www.FreeChoiceActNow.Org

      http://www.LaborUnionResources.Org

    4. For more information on Employer Intimidation and Union-Busting FEAR Tactics Press Below

      http://efcanow.blogspot.com/2009/02/just-say-no-to-employee-free-choice-act.html


      Tags:  Employee Free Choice Act, Employee Free Choice, EFCA, Free Choice Act, Free Choice, Labor Union, Employee Free Choice Grassroots, The Truth about EFCA, Employee Free Choice Support, AFL-CIO, Workers Rights, Labor Reform, Union Blogs, Working Families.Sphere: Related Content

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EFCA: Today, on the eve of the anniversary of King’s assassination, national civil rights leaders called for passage of the Employee Free Choice Act

 




EFCA: Today, on the eve of the anniversary of King’s assassination, national civil rights leaders called for passage of the Employee Free Choice Act

EFCA Civil Rights Leaders Urge Passage of Employee Free Choice


by James Parks, Apr 2, 2009 AFL-CIO Blog

Martin Luther King Jr. often drew the parallels and connections between the civil rights and union movements. Today, on the eve of the anniversary of King’s assassination, national civil rights leaders called for passage of the Employee Free Choice Act, which would give workers the choice of how to form a union.

During a telephone press conference, Wade Henderson, president of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights (LCCR), a coalition of some 200 organizations, pointed out that unions have been one of the main vehicles for African Americans to move into the middle class.



The Employee Free Choice Act has been largely written about as a labor bill but those of us in the civil rights community know it is so much more…workers’ rights are civil rights; and that the right to organize is a civil and human rights issue of the first magnitude.

From generation to generation, by organizing unions, working Americans have turned entire industries and occupations into sources of middle class incomes, secure benefits, and opportunities for upward mobility. This is true for Americans from every background—but especially for African Americans.

NAACP President Benjamin Jealous added that the fight for Employee Free Choice “is a fight not just to make sure everyone has a job, but to make sure everyone has access to a good job.”

There are those who say the Employee Free Choice Act will hurt the economy. They forget that slavery was a full employment system. Everyone on the plantation had a job.

The reality is working people’s income has flat-lined while the income of the wealthy has grown. In times when we’re looking at getting our economy going again, putting more money in the pockets of working people is good for the entire country.

The civil rights leaders’ endorsement of the Employee Free Choice Act is important, writes Art Levine on the Huffington Post, and could help convince wavering senators to support the bill and is an indication that the battle for the legislation is far from over. Click here to read Levine’s blog.

Melanie Campbell, executive director of the National Coalition on Black Civic Participation, said, “It is outrageous that in this day and age, working men and women face the same kind of mistreatment and intimidation in the workplace when trying to form unions as civil rights leaders did when fighting for equal rights and protections.”

Often what is lost in the back and forth “inside the beltway” debate over the Employee Free Choice Act is the real life impact of either being able to organize and bargain collectively or being intimidated and told to be quiet and not make a fuss.

Women in the workforce, particularly African American women have continually struggled for equal protection and equal employment opportunities. Often union membership has offered women not just the added wages and benefits but the adequate training to compete with their male counterparts.

Steven Pitts, labor policy specialist at the University of California Berkeley Labor Center, also spoke during the press conference.

The civil rights leaders echoed what labor educator Edgar Moore says in a guest column at the AFL-CIO website. In>“African Americans Win With Unions,” Moore, a faculty member at the University of Nebraska-Omaha’s William Brennan Institute for Labor Studies, writes:

The Employee Free Choice Act is important for African American workers. Union membership has been a passageway to the middle class for generations of African American workers.

Last November, the National Baptist Convention of America, one of the nation’s largest African American religious groups with 3 million members, endorsed the Employee Free Choice Act.

During the press call, Henderson summed up the issue by quoting labor giant A. Philip Randolph:

As A. Philip Randolph used to say, the two tickets for full equality for African Americans have been the voter registration card and the union card. The first card allows all Americans to choose better leaders. The second card allows all Americans to choose a better life.



www.TheTruthAboutEFCA.Org

http://efcanow.blogspot.com/

For more information on Employer Intimidation and Union-Busting FEAR Tactics Press Below

http://efcanow.blogspot.com/2009/02/just-say-no-to-employee-free-choice-act.html


Tags: Civil Rights, Employee Free Choice Act, Employee Free Choice, EFCA, Free Choice Act, Free Choice, Labor Union, Martin Luther King Jr, Kings assassination Sphere: Related Content
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Thinking Outside The Box to Get The Employee Free Choice Act EFCA Passed

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Thinking Outside The Box to Get The Employee Free Choice Act EFCA Passed


Over the last few weeks while many corporate front groups like the Coalition For Democratic Workplace, Save our Secret Ballot and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Smile and grin on the fact that Senator Arlen Specter (R - PA).and Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) have retreated from supporting the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA) in its present form, both labor leaders at the forefront of this fight and George Miller (D - CA)., Senator Edward M. Kennedy, and Sen. Thomas Harkin [D-IA] must start thinking outside of the box to get the Employee Free Choice Act EFCA passed.

One way to do this is to introduce separate bills in both the House and the Senate based on some of the provisions of the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA)since both Senator Arlen Specter and Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) have indicated they would seek alternative legislation that was less divisive.

By separating the Employee Free Choice Act into mini bills vs. its entirety the big business corporate front groups would have less to attack and their biggest gun the elimination of the "Secret Ballot" would be fought on another street corner while mini bills would be introduced.

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Peter N. Kirsanow a former member of the National Labor Relations Board from January, 2006 to January, 2008 under the Bush administration stated in his recent blog;

Senator Specter signaled a receptiveness to possible amendments to the National Labor Relations Act ("Act") that purport to remedy what he perceives as defects in the current system. In fact, he's detailed several of the changes he'd like to see.

These include, among other things, "quickie elections" that would be conducted between 10-21 days of the filing of a union election petition, a form of "equal access" that would give unions access to employees on employer premises, enhanced penalties for unfair labor practices, and expedited bargaining schedules imposed by the NLRB. He also appears open to "last best offer" arbitration of contract terms.

Furthermore, Senator Specter didn't rule out reconsidering EFCA if reforms to the Act aren't implemented or if the economy improves.

The timing of Senator Specter's remarks is interesting. When EFCA was reintroduced in both Houses two weeks ago, Senator Harkin repeatedly invoked "equal access," as if to signal a possible compromise based on that concept

The elimination of secret-ballot elections was the big drag on EFCA's prospects for passage. Now that card check may be off the table, EFCA opponents have lost their most effective talking point.

Consequently, wavering senators may now be more inclined to vote for the remaining provisions of EFCA, plus quickie-election/equal-access provisions that make union organization almost as easy as card check.

Senator Specter's announcement merely concludes Round Two according to Peter N. Kirsanow.

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So Now Lets take Peter N. Kirsanows advice and think outside of the box. What could these mini Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA) bills look like?

Here are just a few I come up with:

1. Majority Sign up based on a dual card membership card.

Under this proposal the employee would choose either to have his union membership card be used for a petition to be filed on his behalf by a labor organization to conduct a secret ballot election by the National Labor Relations Board or he or she may desire to waive their right to a secret ballot election by indicating that they wish to have their union membership card be used for the purposes of having a card check under the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA). Press Here for more on this.

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In either case it is NOT the Union, Management, nor the National Labor Relations Board who decides what their union membership card is going to be used for, it is the Employee who decides. This would now give new meaning to the spirit of the Employee Free Choice while taking these corporate front groups biggest arguments away from them that it would eliminate “ secret ballot” elections. Based on this alternative there is no question about it. The employee has a free choice to decide which method to use.

2. An alternative to the 50 plus 1 is to make it 60 percent for certification.

Since corporate front groups continue to compare a National Labor Relations Board election to a Federal election then if 60 votes is needed for cloture then 60 percent should be needed for the Board to certify the individual or labor organization as the representative of the bargaining unit as long as the Board finds that a majority of the employees in a unit appropriate for bargaining has signed valid authorizations designating the individual or labor organization specified in the petition as their bargaining representative and that no other individual or labor organization is currently certified or recognized as the exclusive representative of any of the employees in the unit.

3. FACILITATING INITIAL COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AGREEMENTS as stated under Text of H.R. 1409: Employee Free Choice Act of 2009

4. STRENGTHENING ENFORCEMENT as stated under Text of H.R. 1409: Employee Free Choice Act of 2009.

5. To amend the National Labor Relations Act to require employers to provide labor organizations with equal access to employees prior to an election regarding representation as stated under Text H.R. 1355.

6.To amend the National Labor Relations Act to require employers to provide labor organizations with equal access to employees prior to an election regarding representation prior to any organizing drive to see if such employee wish a desire to be represented by a labor organization or individual.

7. Authorizing the NLRB to impose treble back pay without reduction for mitigation when an employee is unlawfully fired.

8. Conduct quicker elections rather than 42-day period.

9. Prohibit the use of anti-union consultants as persuaders once an election is filed or notice to an employer by a union is sent.

10. Prohibit mandatory union-busting meetings by an employer. All meetings would now be voluntary for both sides.

11. Modify the NLRA to give the court broader discretion to impose a Gissel order on a finding that the environment has deteriorated to the extent that a fair election is not possible.

12. On a finding that a party is not negotiating in good faith, an order may be issued establishing a schedule for negotiation and imposing costs and attorney fees.

13. Broaden the provisions for injunctive relief with reasonable attorneys’ fees on a finding that either party is not acting in good faith.

14. last best offer" arbitration of contract terms.

15 Authorizing the award of reasonable attorneys’ fees on a finding of harassment, causing unnecessary delay or bad faith.

16. Putting a time limit for objections to be heard and resolved.

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In conclusion by thinking outside of the box by using a shotgun approach to the Employee Free Choice Act rather than all your Easter eggs in one basket approach corporate front groups would now be in a tailspin trying to stop a dam ready to burst, while labor and pro-EFCA Senators continue to work on gaining the needed 60 votes for cloture from both democrats and republicans such as Senator Specter who may support some of these mini Employee Free Choice Act Bills.

Peter N. Kirsanow said it best in his blog “Now that card check may be off the table, EFCA opponents have lost their most effective talking point “

Under my approach card check (as corporate front groups call it) would not be off the table but it would be separated under a new alternative bill giving less credence to the mini bills which are essential to the body and spirit of the Employee Free Choice Act.


Tags: Employee Free Choice Act, EFCA, Free Choice Act, Free Choice, EFCA Compromise, Employee Free Choice Compromise, Free Choice Bill, Peter Kirsanow, Labor Union,Corporate Front Groups, The Coalition For Democratic Workplace, Save our Secret Ballot, Chamber of Commerce Sphere: Related Content
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EFCA: The Employee Free Choice Act 101

EFCA: The Employee Free Choice Act 101

Hunter Ribarchak, 7, rides on the Iron Workers of America's float during the September 1, 2008 Labor Day parade in Pittsburgh, PA.

SOURCE: AP/John Heller

The freedom to form a union is a democratic right that is under attack. Too many workers are prevented from freely choosing to band together in a union to bargain collectively with their employer on workplace issues.

More than half of all workers in the United States say they would vote to join a union if they could, but union membership in the private sector is less than 8 percent today—down from one-third of private sector workers in the middle of the 20th century—because existing laws make forming a union a Herculean task that few want to undertake.

The Employee Free Choice Act is a sensible reform that would protect workers' right to join together in unions and make it harder for management to threaten workers seeking to organize a union, but conservatives are waging war against the bill.

The Employee Free Choice Act will restore balance to the union election process by allowing workers the choice to organize a union through a simple majority sign-up process—a system that works well at the small number of workplaces that choose to permit it, raising penalties when the law is violated and promoting productive first contract negotiations with a mediation and arbitration option.

Why do we need the Employee Free Choice Act?

Today, millions of American workers are denied their right to form a union because the process of voting on union formation has been corrupted. Workers that consider forming a union today face an undemocratic system and are frequently intimidated by their employer. A new report by the Center for Economic and Policy Research finds that in 2007 at least one pro-union worker was fired during 30 percent of union election processes, and pro-union activists faced a more than 20 percent chance of being fired.

The problem isn't just corporations that violate the law. Over the years, our legal system has allowed unfair elections to become the norm. More than 90 percent of companies legally force workers to attend anti-union meetings that include “one-on-one conversations” with supervisors.

According to research by University of Oregon Professor Gordon Lafer, workers often face pressure from their direct supervisors—the person with the most control over their job—to reveal their private preferences for the union. This takes the “secret” out of the “secret ballot”—the most common conservative mischaracterization of current union organizing rules. Meanwhile pro-union employees are banned from talking about forming a union except while they are on break time and from distributing pro-union information except when they are both on break time and in a break room.

Many corporations focus significant time and energy on fighting union organizing drives; 75 percent hire consultants to run sophisticated union-busting campaigns based on mass psychology and distorting the law, according to Cornell University Professor Kate Bronfenbrenner. Corporations can even make dubious "predictions" (but not "threaten") that unionization will force the company to close its doors.

Corporations have the right to their opinion, but they do not have the right to distort the election process to such a degree that it is a parody of democracy. A democratic election requires that one side does not hold all the power, control all the media, and control the timeline of the election. Yet, that is exactly what many union elections look like today.

Nevertheless, there are still workplaces where workers successfully form a union. The corporate response? Often it's to bargain with the new union in bad faith by using delay tactics and stalling the negotiation of a first contract indefinitely. These delay tactics can cause workers to grow frustrated and lose faith in their ability to be treated fairly at the bargaining table. Only 38 percent of unions certified through the National Labor Relations Board election process achieve a first contract after one year—and only 56 percent ever achieve a first contract.

Unfairly preventing workers from joining together in unions it is not only a violation of their basic human rights, it is also bad for the economy and democracy. Without strong unions, our entire community pays a heavy price: wages lag, race and gender pay gaps widen, and voter turnout is depressed as insecurity, poverty and inequality increase. Income inequality is now at the extreme levels it was in the 1920s, when unionization rates were also below 10 percent.

What are the benefits of unions?

Unions raise wages and benefits for their members. When unions are strong and able to represent the people who want to join them, these gains spread throughout the economy; non-union companies increase their wages and all workers have more purchasing power, producing a “virtuous circle of prosperity and jobs,” according to University of California at Berkeley Professor Harley Shaiken. Unionized workers also provide a counterbalance on unchecked CEO greed and promote greater income equality. A Center for American Progress report found that strengthening unions is critical to reducing poverty in the United States.

Unions give workers a greater voice at work and in our democracy. On the job, unionized nurses have been able to work with hospitals to improve staffing levels so that patients receive quality care, and firefighters have been able to implement new safety programs to reduce on-the-job fatalities. Unions help people participate in government and significantly increase voting rates, especially for non-white and non-wealthy voters. For every 1 percent increase in union density, voter turnout increases by .2 to .25 percent.[1]

How will the Employee Free Choice Act help?

By passing the Employee Free Choice Act, Congress can support workers' democratic right to bargain for their fair share, raise the wages of working men and women, and pump billions of dollars into the American economy. The bill would allow workers rather than corporations—as under current law—the choice to organize a union through a simple majority sign-up process—a system that works well at the small number of workplaces that choose to permit it. The Employee Free Choice Act would raise penalties when the law is violated, and promote good-faith bargaining through a mediation and arbitration option so that employees can negotiate a first contract.

In 2007, the Employee Free Choice Act passed the House and received majority support in the Senate, but it did not receive enough votes to break the threat of a filibuster. With a new Congress, and President Obama's promise to sign the bill, the Employee Free Choice Act has a strong chance of becoming law.

Debunking conservative myths about the Employee Free Choice Act

For the past few years, some conservatives as well as a host of CEOs have been waging a multi-million dollar campaign to defeat the bill, and they have recently ramped up the intensity of their campaign. Rather than recognize that the freedom to form a union is a democratic right and that we all do better when workers are paid their fair share, opponents are fighting to preserve the status quo. They don't want their power challenged by unionized workers. When Wal-Mart CEO Lee Scott was asked at an analyst meeting on October 28, 2008 about the Employee Free Choice Act, he stated: "We like driving the car and we're not going to give the steering wheel to anybody but us."

The campaign against the Employee Free Choice Act often relies on mischaracterization and twisted “facts” that deserve closer scrutiny. Three myths dominate opponents' arguments against the Employee Free Choice Act, and a closer look shows they're just not in touch with reality.

Myth 1: The Employee Free Choice Act is undemocratic because it eliminates the secret ballot and allows unions to intimidate workers.

FACT: The Employee Free Choice Act restores previously won democratic rights.

  • The Wagner Act, passed in 1935 to protect the democratic right of workers to organize labor unions, engage in collective bargaining, and to take part in strikes and other forms of protest, promoted majority sign-up. Elections were just one way for workers to unionize during the 1930s. Under these legal rules millions of workers poured into unions, exercising their basic democratic rights. Almost a third of all union certifications between 1938 and 1939 occurred without an election according to Dr. David Brody, labor historian.[2]
  • The Wagner Act placed the federal government squarely on the side of collective bargaining and the right to organize. The original interpretation of the law was that a firm's duty was to remain completely neutral in a representation election, in recognition that economic dependence defines the relationship between employers and workers. Employer persuasion could not be separated from employer coercion.[3]

FACT: The Employee Free Choice Act promotes free and fair union election processes.

  • The Employee Free Choice Act will restore balance to the union election process by allowing workers to choose a union through simple majority sign-up or an election. Under current law, management rather than workers has the power to decide whether workers can organize a union through majority sign-up or election. Under this legislation, workers retain the right to choose a traditional election. If at least 30 percent of workers want an election, rather than majority sign-up, a “secret ballot” election will be held.
  • Majority sign-up works well at the workplaces that choose to permit it, including large U.S. corporations such as AT&T, Inc., United Parcel Service, Inc., and Dow Jones & Company.
  • Many businesses use similar petition processes to form business improvement districts that raise area taxes for the provision of collective services and allow member businesses a collective voice to influence area decision makers and improve district conditions.

FACT: The current process is not secret or democratic.

Often, management has already learned where employees stand before the “secret ballot” vote takes place.

  • Management uses one-on-one meetings—often conducted by workers' direct supervisor, the person with the most control over their job—to intimidate workers and determine their support for unionization. Union busting consultants instruct supervisors to gauge employees' support for a union based on their reactions during these meetings and use grading systems to track employee support for the union. Employees do not have the legal right to refuse to discuss the issue. Thus the “secret ballot” for most workers is anything but secret, since their vote was known long before they stepped into the polling booth.
  • A former anti-union consultant wrote that he would often create a $100 prize for the supervisors who most accurately predicted the number of anti-union votes, reporting that: “In pool after pool the supervisors were astonishingly accurate.”[4]

The current election process, governed by the National Labor Relations Board, is not democratic and fails on almost every single measure of basic fairness. NLRB elections more closely resemble the sham “elections” of one-party states than anything we would call American democracy.

  • In NLRB elections, parties do not have equal access to voters, equal access to the media, or free speech for both candidates and voters.
  • Management is permitted to plaster the workplace with anti-union information, demand workers attend mandatory, one-on-one meetings, and even “predict” —but not “threaten”— that unionization will force the company to close its doors.
  • Meanwhile pro-union employees are banned from talking about forming a union except when they are on break time and from distributing pro-union information at work except when they are both on break time and in a break room. Union organizers are banned from ever entering the workplace or even accessing publicly used but company-owned spaces, such as parking lots, at any time, for any reason. 

Firms often prevent workers from even holding an NLRB election.

  • The number of NLRB representation elections has fallen to its lowest level in over half a century.

     

  • Union avoidance consultants—employed by most companies facing the prospect of a union election—counsel corporations to conduct an aggressive, intimidating offensive as soon as workers begin discussing unionization. “Winning an NLRB election undoubtedly is an achievement; a greater achievement is not having one at all!” advises law firm, Jackson Lewis.

FACT: Intimidation by corporations, rather than unions, is the primary problem.

A new report by the Center for Economic and Policy Research finds that in 2007 corporations fired at least one pro-union worker in 30 percent of NLRB-certified elections, and pro-union activists faced a more than 20 percent chance of being fired.

Every 18 minutes a worker is illegally fired or discriminated against by their employer for their union activity—including discrimination even after a workplace has been organized—yet firms face few consequences when caught.

  • In 2007, 29,559 workers received backpay from their employers because they were illegally fired or denied work as a result of exercising their federally protected labor law rights.
  • Illegal firings have a chilling effect on union activity. When a worker is fired for union activity, the impact of that firing extends not only to the worker fired, but also to her coworkers. For every pro-union worker who is fired, 395 others witness the termination, and too often those workers see that a corporation's illegal actions are not penalized.

Unions have long demonstrated their respectful and lawful treatment of workers.

  • Increasingly, unions rely on organizing campaigns where employers voluntarily agree to recognize a union once a majority of workers have signed a card supporting unionization. Since 2003, over half a million workers formed unions through majority sign-up.
  • While critics of majority sign-up campaigns claim pro-union workers and union organizers will coerce workers to obtain their signature, they can find few cases of past fraud or coercion by pro-union petitioners. American Rights at Work recently conducted a review of 113 past union petition processes cited by the anti-union HR Policy Association as involving union fraud and coercion. Its examination revealed misconduct in only 42 of the 113 cases occurring between 1938 and 1997—far less than one per year.[5]

Cornell University Scholar Kate Bronfenbrenner's exhaustive studies have found that corporate coercion—most of which is legal—is rampant.

  • Ninety-two percent of private-sector companies force employees to attend closed-door meetings to hear anti-union propaganda; 78 percent require that supervisors deliver anti-union messages to workers they oversee; 75 percent hire outside consultants to run anti-union campaigns; and half of employers threaten to shut down partially or totally if employees join together in a union.

Myth 2: Binding arbitration prevents negotiation by imposing unreasonable time limits and will lead to the imposition of uncompetitive contracts.

FACT: Arbitration encourages negotiations and prevents companies from using delay tactics. 

After workers win an election in favor of union representation, a first contract must be negotiated to govern labor management relations. Currently, corporations often engage in bad faith bargaining to prevent recently unionized workers from ever signing a first contract.

  • Firms continue their anti-union campaigns through negotiations by using delay tactics that can cause workers to grow frustrated and lose faith in their ability to be treated fairly at the bargaining table. Only an estimated 38 percent of unions certified through the NLRB election process achieve a first contract after one year, and only 56 percent ever achieve a first contract.
  • In Canada, where several provinces require binding arbitration if labor and management cannot come to an agreement, Karen Bentham of the University of Toronto found that workers who form unions reach a first contract 92 percent of the time.

The vast majority of contract negotiations are resolved voluntarily where arbitration is an option.

  • The arbitration option does not mean that labor or management will be rushed into unfair agreements. All time limits under the Employee Free Choice Act can be extended by mutual consent of the parties—giving the parties flexibility to use the time frames that fit their specific needs. Voluntary negotiations can proceed as slowly or quickly as necessary as long as both parties feel that the other is negotiating in good faith.
  • The legislation would allow either party to seek mediation assistance after 90 days of negotiations. After 30 days of mediation, either party can request binding arbitration.
  • Mediation and arbitration prevents either party from stalling and bargaining in bad faith. The threat of arbitration—not the actual use of the procedure—tends to encourage parties to voluntarily settle. Available research shows that 70 to 90 percent of American public sector contracts covered under arbitration laws are reached without a binding arbitration award.[6]

FACT: Industry experts determine agreements based on current practices that are fair to workers and to management.

  • Wage increases and contract terms resulting from arbitration tend to be very similar to those won through voluntary negotiations. According to MIT Professor Thomas Kochan, arbitrators make decisions that reflect what is occurring in comparable jurisdictions, and there is a widely shared norm among arbitrators that contract innovations are best left to the parties to negotiate on their own.[7] A 2001 Cornell University study looking at the difference between states with arbitration statues and states without such statutes found that police officers' wages were not affected by the presence of arbitration statutes.[8]
  • The Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, or FMCS, is charged with establishing the arbitration board, but employs only mediators, not arbitrators. If arbitration is requested, labor and management together select an arbitrator from a list of FMCS recommended private-sector arbitrators. This arbitrator will determine contract terms. Private arbitrators are often specialists in particular industries and have substantial experience determining contract terms.

Myth 3: Increasing unionization, especially during the recession, will harm workers and the economy by making business uncompetitive.

FACT: Unions are good for all workers. They improve wages, benefits, and working conditions. Even in today's tough economic times, unions are good for the economy and help foster a competitive high-wage, high-productivity economy.

Unions raise wages and benefits for all workers. Union workers earn significantly more on average than non-union counterparts and union employers are more likely to provide benefits.

  • Unionized workers earn 11.3 percent ($2.26 dollars per hour) more than non-union workers with similar characteristics. Union workers nationwide are 28.2 percent more likely to have employer-provided health insurance and 53.9 percent more likely to have employer-provided pensions compared to workers with similar characteristics who are not in unions. Workers in low-wage industries, women, African-American, and Latino workers have higher wages in unionized workplaces than in non-unionized workplaces.
  • Even non-union workers—particularly in highly unionized industries—receive financial benefits from companies that increase wages to match what unions would win in order to avoid unionization and to retain employees.

Without unions, fewer workers get ahead. Union membership rewards workers for productivity gains they deserve, but do not always receive.

  • Declining unionization rates mean that workers are less likely to receive good wages and be rewarded for their increases in productivity. In 1980, 25.7 percent of American workers were either members of a union or represented by a union at their workplace. By 2008, that portion declined to 13.7 percent.
  • Throughout the 20th century, American workers have helped our economy grow by becoming more productive. Prior to the 1980s, productivity and workers' wages moved in tandem—as workers produced more per hour, they saw a commensurate increase in their earnings—but this link between economic growth and the well-being of the middle class has broken down.
  • From 1980 to 2008, nationwide worker productivity grew by 75 percent, while workers' inflation-adjusted average wages increased by only 22.6 percent—meaning that workers were compensated for only a small share of their productivity gains. Higher union wages reward workers for a larger portion of their productivity gains.[9]

Today, CEOs rather than workers are rewarded for growth in the economy.

  • CEO pay has skyrocketed from 27 times more than the average American worker's wages in 1973 to 344 times higher today. Increased unionization will mean that workers rather than CEOs are rewarded for increases in labor productivity. By joining together in unions, workers can help counterbalance the power of CEOs.

Greater unionization will lead to more money circulating in the economy, rather than stagnating in the bank accounts of rich CEOs.

  • If union coverage rates were 5 percentage points higher—18.7 percent instead of 13.7 percent—and the union wage premium remained constant —unionized workers earn 11.3 percent ($2.26 dollars per hour) more than their non-union counterparts on average— new union workers nationally would earn an estimated $25.5 billion more in wages and salaries per year.
  • Also, new research from the Economic Policy Institute estimates that if 5 million service workers joined unions, these workers would get a $7,000 annual raise on average and $34 billion in total new wages would flow into the economy. These working-class employees would be more likely than CEOs to spend their money during an economic downturn, who can afford to save during lean economic times.

When unions were stronger, the economy thrived.

  • From 1947 to 1973, the period when unions were strongest and nearly one-third of workers were organized, nearly tripled in size, growing at an average of 3.8 percent annually. The strength of unions during this period meant workers were rewarded with increasing real wages, and greater American purchasing power produced more profit for U.S. companies, more investment, and increased labor productivity. In the years since 1973, U.S. economic output grew by an average of 2.9 percent annually, and since 2001, output has grown by an average of only 2.2 percent per year.

Higher wages are competitive.

  • Competitiveness is linked to productivity, quality, and innovation—all of which can be enhanced with higher wages. Henry Ford found in 1914 that paying employees $5 per day—double the auto industry's prevailing wage—reduced turnover, allowing him to cut the price of the Model T and increase profits significantly. Also, higher wages meant his employees could now afford to purchase his cars. Ford commented that the $5 daily wage was one of the finest cost-cutting moves the company ever made.
  • Still today, companies that invest in their workers through fair wages see higher profits than low-wage corporations. In the retail world, labor costs in 2005 for partially unionized retailer Costco were 40 percent higher than Sam's Club, but Costco produced almost double the operating profit per hourly employee in the United States—$21,805 per employee versus $11,615 per employee.

Small business will continue to thrive under the Employee Free Choice Act.

  • Current labor law excludes from its jurisdiction small businesses with low sales volumes. These exemptions have existed for over 70 years. The Employee Free Choice Act makes no changes to the exemptions for small businesses.
  • The Employee Free Choice Act will streamline the union selection process, so small business where workers exercise their right to form a union will be spared the cost of a long election battle.

Conclusion

The freedom to join together in unions is a democratic right – but for American workers this right is under attack. Today union membership rates are low because the current union election process has been corrupted. Workers attempting to organize face an undemocratic process where intimidation is rampant, pro-union voices are silenced, and too often corporations violate workers' rights. Opponents of the Employee Free Choice Act are fighting to preserve the status quo with a multi-million dollar campaign based on myths and scare tactics. However, by passing the Employee Free Choice Act, Congress can support workers' democratic right to organize, restore balance to the union election process, raise the wages of working men and women, and pump billions of dollars into the American economy.

Download this fact sheet (pdf)

For more on the Employee Free Choice Act, see the resource page from the American Worker Project.

Endnotes

[1] Benjamin Radcliff and Patricia Davis, “Labor Organization and Electoral Participation in Industrial Democracies,”American Journal of Political Science, 44 (1) (2000): 132-141.

David Brody, Labor Embattled: History, Power, Rights, (Chicago, University of Illinois Press, 2005).

[3] David Brody, “New strategies: How the Wagner Act became a management tool,” (New Labor Forum, 2004).

[4] Martin Jay Levitt, Confessions of a Union Buster (New York: Crown Publishers, 1993).

[5] HR Policy Association's review looked for any NLRB decisions involving coercion or deception in connection with a union's solicitation and collection of union authorization cards. It covered cards signed for union representation purposes. The vast majority of these petitions were most likely petitions for a union representation election.

[6] Julie Martinez Ortega and Erin Johansson, “The Facts Behind the Employee Free Choice Act,” (Washington: American Rights at Work, 2008).

[7] Ibid.

[8] Orley Ashenfelter and Dean Hyslop. “Measuring the effect of arbitration on wage levels: The case of police officers,” Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 54 (2) (2001).

[9] The cost of benefits—especially health insurance—has increased over time and now accounts for a greater share of total compensation than in the past, but this increase is nowhere near enough to account for the discrepancy between wage and productivity growth. For example, according to analysis by the Center for Economic and Policy Research, between 1973 and 2006 the share of labor compensation in the form of benefits rose from 12.6 percent to 19.5 percent.

"This material [article] was created by the Center for American Progress Action Fund" (online)
 
 
 



www.TheTruthAboutEFCA.Org

EFCA Blog http://efcanow.blogspot.com/


Tags: Employee Free Choice Act, EFCA, Employee Free Choice, Employee Free Choice Act 101, Free Choice, Free Choice Act, Labor Union Sphere: Related Content

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Employee Free Choice Act: Rally Planned at the Headquarters of The Coalition for a Democratic Workplace in Washington D.C. This Week

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

March 10, 2009

The formal introduction of The Employee Free Choice Act in Congress Today the "End of Civilization will begin to disappear" for Corporate Front Groups such as The Coalition for a Democratic Workplace, My Private Ballot, Save Our Secret Ballot, U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Employee Freedom Action Committee, Alliance For Worker AFW, Americans For Job Security and the public relations firm behind the Employee Free Choice Act " Losing our Secret Ballot strategy Navigators Global.


AFL-CIO



This according to Bernie Marcus, co-founder and former CEO of The Home Depot, who said during a conference call about the Employee Free Choice Act last October. Retailers who don't speak out against it "should be thrown out of their goddamn jobs."

"This is how a civilization disappears," Marcus said. "I'm sitting here as an elder statesman, and I'm watching this happen, and I don't believe it."
 

All across the nation America's Workers are holding Over 100 Grassroots Events Across the Country Urging Congress to Pass the Employee Free Choice Act.

Workers are also planning to come to D.C. Tomorrow to Tell Their Stories Directly to Their Representatives and to Testify Before the U.S. Senate Health, Education, Labor & Pensions Committee.




This week a Coalition of some of the Biggest and Largest Labor Unions, Religious Groups and Civic Groups are Planning a Massive Rally in Support of the Employee Free Choice Act at the Headquarters of The Coalition for a Democratic Workplace a Corporate Front Group made up of over 500 members who are opposing the Employee Free Choice Act.





Employee Free Choice Act: Rally Planned at the Headquarters of The Coalition for a Democratic Workplace in Washington D.C. This Week

The Time and Date of the Rally will be Announced Shortly.

Coalition for a Democratic Workplace
901 7th Street NW, 2nd Floor
Washington, DC 20001(202) 580-7289


In Other News:



Hundreds Demonstrate at Chamber of Commerce, Industry Trade Groups To Expose Massive Anti-Worker Lobbying

By Kate Thomas on March 9, 2009 5:23 PM

Tell Corporate CEOs: Stop Standing in the Way of an Economy That Works for Everyone

We've just returned from Lafayette Park - right across the street from both The White House and the Chamber of Commerce - where hundreds of workers from across the country joined with labor, religious and community leaders to stage one amazing rally.

After five separate actions in front of places like Burger King, Bank of America, and the headquarters for the hotel and restaurant trade association, we coalesced together near the Chamber of Commerce, where we participated in some crowd-pleasing skits, heard stories from members along with a brief word from SEIU President Andy Stern.

Why try to get the attention of these organizations? We took a look at their lobbying disclosures and found that the Chamber of Commerce and the leading associations for the restaurant, hotel, manufacturing, retail, and financial industries spent a combined $138.4 million on federal lobbying last year, hired 44 lobbying firms, and used at least 34 different front groups to push their agenda.

And, for the Chamber specifically, in the last ten years, they've spent $375 million to advance the interests of big business over those of small businesses and working families.

"So they might be a big and mighty lobbying machine--but guess what, when I asked their top officer Tom Donohue to debate me on employee free choice - he declined," said Andy Stern during the event. "It's not surprising they don't want to face us in public... how could they defend what they're doing?"

While the median hourly wage for workers in most industries is at or below the federal poverty line for a family of four, a look at 2007 CEO pay at leading firms in the trade groups found executive compensation ranging from $2 million up to $67 million. All opposed the Employee Free Choice Act, which is supported by 73 percent of Americans according to national surveys, and most also fought minimum wage increases and pushed restrictions on family and medical leave.

Tomorrow, the workers that participated in today's events (including more than 300 SEIU grassroots member lobbyists) have another full, exciting day ahead of them: discuss the importance of the Employee Free Choice Act. They're going meet with their Senators and Representatives to share their stories about being fired, intimidated, and harassed by their employers for trying to form a union.

For More Information on EFCA please visit our websites and blog



www.TheTruthAboutEFCA.Org

http://www.employeefreechoiceactnow.org

http://efcanow.blogspot.com/

http://efcaunionbustingclub.blogspot.com/

http://www.FreeChoiceActNow.Org

http://www.LaborUnionResources.Org

For more information on Employer Intimidation and Union-Busting FEAR Tactics Press Below

http://efcanow.blogspot.com/2009/02/just-say-no-to-employee-free-choice-act.html


Tags: Employee Free Choice Act, Free Choice Act, EFCA, Coalition for a Democratic Workplace, My Private Ballot,Chamber of Commerce,Navigators Global,Labor Union, Unions, U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Employee Freedom Action Committee, Alliance For Worker AFW, Americans For Job Security, Secret Ballot, Card Check, SEIU. AFL-CIO, USW, Change to Win, UAW Teamsters, Sphere: Related Content
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U.S. Senate and House Introduce Employee Free Choice Act ( EFCA ). SPFPA at the Forefront of This Fight!

 

 
U.S. Senate and House Introduce Employee Free Choice Act ( EFCA ). SPFPA at the Forefront of This Fight!

March 10, 2009 1:01 PM

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Leading members of the U.S. Senate and House today introduced legislation that would help enable workers to bargain for better wages, benefits, and working conditions by restoring their rights to form unions.

“The current crisis has shown us the dangers of an economy that leaves working families behind. The people who work in our factories, build our roads, and care for our children are the backbone of this great nation. The Employee Free Choice Act will give these hardworking men and women a greater voice in the decisions that affect their families and their futures. It’s a critical step toward putting our economy back on track, and I hope that we can act quickly to send it to the President’s desk," said Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-MA), chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee.



“Just as the National Labor Relations Act, the 40 hour week and the minimum wage helped to pull us out of the Great Depression and into a period of unprecedented prosperity, so too will the Employee Free Choice Act help reinvigorate our economy,” said Sen. Tom Harkin (D-IA), member of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee. Today is one of those defining moments in history as we introduce legislation that puts power back into the hands of the people who are truly the backbone of this economy.”



“Americans’ wages have been stagnating or falling for the past decade. For far too long, we have seen corporate CEOs take care of themselves and shareholders at the expense of workers,” said U.S. Rep. George Miller (D-CA), chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee. “If we want a fair and sustainable recovery from this economic crisis, we must give workers the ability to stand up for themselves and once again share in the prosperity they help to create.”

Since 1935, workers have been allowed to form a union either through majority sign-up or through a National Labor Relations Board election.

While the NLRB election process uses slanted rules that dramatically favor employers, studies have found that the majority signup process reduces pressure and coercion in the workplace. Currently, however, employers can veto workers’ decision to organize through majority signup and force them into the divisive NLRB election process where, according to a recent study, a pro-union worker is illegally fired in a quarter of all organizing drives.



The bipartisan Employee Free Choice Act simply gives workers the choice of whether to form a union either through majority signup or an NLRB election.



In addition to allowing workers to form a union through majority sign-up, the Employee Free Choice Act would also:

Stiffen penalties against employers that illegally fire or discriminate against workers for their union activity during an organizing or first contract drive, including requiring employers to pay treble back pay to workers whom they are found to have illegally fired; and Allow employers and newly formed unions to refer bargaining to mediation and, if necessary, binding arbitration if they are not able to agree on a first contract.

Both President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden believe the Employee Free Choice Act is a critical part of what must be done to build an economy that works for everyone again. In separate speeches last week, they made it clear that the legislation is a priority and that Congress must pass it.



For More Information on EFCA please visit our websites and blog



www.TheTruthAboutEFCA.Org

http://www.employeefreechoiceactnow.org

http://efcanow.blogspot.com/

http://efcaunionbustingclub.blogspot.com/

http://www.FreeChoiceActNow.Org

http://www.LaborUnionResources.Org

www.SPFPA.Org

For more information on Employer Intimidation and Union-Busting FEAR Tactics Press Below

http://efcanow.blogspot.com/2009/02/just-say-no-to-employee-free-choice-act.html

For more information on the Employee Free Choice Act from Congress, click here.

















Tags: Employee Free Choice Act, Free Choice Act, EFCA, Employee Free Choice Act News, Employee Free Choice Act Bill, Employee Free Choice Act Now, Labor Union, Unions, Workers Rights, Labor Law,SPFPA Sphere: Related Content
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Employee Free Choice Act: "Ask not what your country can do for you. Ask what you can do for your country" EFCA NOW!


Employee Free Choice Act: "Ask not what your country can do for you. Ask what you can do for your country" EFCA NOW!


John F. Kennedy inaugural speech

The inaugural speech of John F. Kennedy set a tone for his administration and gave people a renewed vision of America and the task at hand. He asked for sacrifice from a generation who understood what that was

Now we are in the biggest financial crisis, world leaders say, since the Great Depression;A few days ago a new report revealed that Unemployment hits 25-year high. The U.S. economy continued to hemorrhage jobs in February, bringing total job losses over the last six months to more than 3.3 million, and taking the unemployment rate to its highest level in 25 years.



The Employee Free Choice Act must be signed into law and soon. Recent studies show that it will help rebuild our economy. Leading Economists have all agreed the Employee Free Choice is Key to Rebuilding Economy The statement, signed by 39 of America’s top economists, including two Nobel Prize winners, points to the failure of U.S. labor laws to protect employees’ freedom to form a union and bargain as a major factor in our economic crisis. The statement says in part: Indeed, from 2000 to 2007, the income of the median working-age household fell by $2,000—an unprecedented decline. In that time, virtually all of the nation’s economic growth went to a small number of wealthy Americans. An important reason for the shift from broadly shared prosperity to growing inequality is the erosion of workers’ ability to form unions and bargain collectively.

Now is the time to take back our country and only you and your families can make this happen.



It is important that we let our legislators know that the Employee Free Choice Act is something that we need to have as workers….We need to take action and level the playing field.

To help keep that pressure on lawmakers, a grassroots effort must be started now.

This can be done in a number of ways:



By writing to our legislators both in the House and Senate we can let them know that the ability to form and join a union is a right that should be guaranteed to all workers. As union members and working families we must take on the challenge of making sure all our fellow workers are able to enjoy the benefits of having a union.



Another way is to Sign the Petition in support of the Employee Free Choice Act(EFCA).

America’s workers are struggling to make ends meet. Paychecks are shrinking and health care is skyrocketing while CEOs earn millions. In today’s economy, we need policies that give workers a fair shake.

When workers are free to choose to join a union, our economy can work for everyone again. That’s why we need the Employee Free Choice Act—a bill in Congress that would help level the playing field and give workers the freedom to choose a union.

The Employee Free Choice Act will give more workers a chance to form unions and get better health care, job security, and benefits – and an opportunity to pursue their dreams.

Support this bill and add your name to our list of over one million signatures!

Despite the flood of careless misinformation and intentional falsehoods about the freedom of workers to form unions, the Employee Free Choice Act has earned broad support and is likely to be passed by Congress and signed into law by Obama. The corporate hacks and anti-union groups are spending millions (an estimated $72 million in 2008 alone, reports The Hill) in a losing battle against the bill.

To help counter the misinformation and intentional falsehoods about the Employee Free Choice Act by such corporate front groups such as the Coalition for a Democratic Workplace, My Private Ballot,Save Our Secret Ballot,U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Employee Freedom Action Committee, Alliance For Worker AFW, Americans For Job Security and the public relations firm behind the Employee Free Choice Act " Losing our Secret Ballot strategy Navigators Global, we ask that you set up a FREE blog using Blogger https://www.blogger.com/start and post your letters to your legislators on your blog.

In addition you can repost any of my articles on my blogs http://efcanow.blogspot.com/ or http://efcaunionbustingclub.blogspot.com/ which are posted daily.

Another Source is the AFL-CIO Blog



"In the end with your help we can together achieve democracy in the workplace by restoring workers rights with your efforts in helping the Employee Free Choice Act become law"

Steve Maritas International Organizing Director Security, Police and Fire Professionals of America SPFPA

For More Information on EFCA please visit our websites and blog

www.TheTruthAboutEFCA.Org

http://efcanow.blogspot.com/

http://www.employeefreechoiceactnow.org

http://efcaunionbustingclub.blogspot.com/

http://www.FreeChoiceActNow.Org

http://www.LaborUnionResources.Org

For more information on Employer FEAR, Coercion and Intimidation Union Busting Tactics Press Here

Tags: Employee Free Choice Act, Free Choice Act, EFCA, Card Check, Secret Ballot,Coalition for a Democratic Workplace, My Private Ballot, Navigators Global, Workers Rights, Labor Union, Unions, Save Our Secret Ballot,U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Employee Freedom Action Committee, Alliance For Worker AFW, Americans For Job Security,SPFPA. Sphere: Related Content
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Employee Free Choice Act: New Website Reveals The Truth about The EFCA

 

 
 Employee Free Choice Act: New Website Reveals The Truth about The EFCA




Employee Free Choice Act News and Press Release

Employee Free Choice Act: New Website Reveals The Truth about The EFCA

WASHINGTON, March 6 /EFCAPRNewswire-EFCAUSNewswire/ -- Employee Free Choice Act Now Launches Website to Educate Public on Card Check Legislation The Truth About EFCA.Org , to help educate the public understand why the middle-class and workers need this very important legislation.



The Truth About EFCA.Org will track the latest news from the mainstream media and social networking sites, highlight academic studies and contain video's and interviews to expose Corporate Front Groups like the Coalition for a Democratic Workplace, My Private Ballot,Save Our Secret Ballot,U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Employee Freedom Action Committee, Alliance For Worker AFW,Americans For Job Security just to name a few. In addition we will also look at the Union Busting Strategy behind the Employee Free Choice Act created by Navigators Global on behalf of the Coalition for a Democratic Workplace.

The Employee Free Choice Act does NOT seek to eliminate the secret ballot election. What it does is it give the employees rather than an employer the right to choose which method to use. Either a secret ballot election or a card check if the majority of workers wish to form or join a union.



The Employee Free Choice Act must be signed into law and soon. Recent studies show that it will help rebuild our economy. Leading Economists have all agreed the Employee Free Choice is Key to Rebuilding Economy The statement, signed by 39 of America’s top economists, including two Nobel Prize winners, points to the failure of U.S. labor laws to protect employees’ freedom to form a union and bargain as a major factor in our economic crisis. The statement says in part: Indeed, from 2000 to 2007, the income of the median working-age household fell by $2,000—an unprecedented decline. In that time, virtually all of the nation’s economic growth went to a small number of wealthy Americans. An important reason for the shift from broadly shared prosperity to growing inequality is the erosion of workers’ ability to form unions and bargain collectively.

Today a new report revealed that Unemployment hits 25-year high. The U.S. economy continued to hemorrhage jobs in February, bringing total job losses over the last six months to more than 3.3 million, and taking the unemployment rate to its highest level in 25 years.

"This new website is an important tool in keeping the public informed and getting them involved in the political process so they can voice their support for this legislation." stated Steve Maritas, Organizing Director for the International Union, Security, Police and Fire Professionals of America (SPFPA)

The Truth About EFCA.Org is part of a multi-faceted new media campaign slated to help shed light on the "card check" issue and expose some of the misinformation being spread by corporate front groups who oppose the EFCA to continue their control and lavish life styles. Besides tracking the latest news on EFCA, the website contains a link to our blog with contributions from EFCA bloggers and special guests.

Website: www.TheTruthAboutEFCA.Org
Website: http://efcanow.blogspot.com/ Website:http://www.employeefreechoiceactnow.org
Website:http://efcaunionbustingclub.blogspot.com/
Website:http://www.FreeChoiceActNow.Org
Website: http://www.LaborUnionResources.Org

For more information on Employer FEAR, Coercion and Intimidation Union Busting Tactics Press Here


Tags: Employee Free Choice Act, Employee Free Choice Act News, Free Choice Act, EFCA, Secret Ballot, Card Check, Corporate Front Groups, Coalition for a Democratic Workplace, My Private Ballot, Save our Secret Ballot,Navigators Global, U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Employee Freedom Action Committee, Alliance For Worker AFW, Americans For Job Security, Union Busting, Union Avoidance, Fear Tactics, Labor Union, Union, SPFPA Sphere: Related Content
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Exposing Corporate Front Groups Like Save our Secret Ballot and The Coalition for a Democratic Workplace



Exposing Corporate Front Groups Like Save our Secret Ballot and The Coalition for a Democratic Workplace

In the States, Opponents of Freedom to Form Unions Spread Disinformation


by Seth Michaels, Mar 2, 2009

Powerful corporate interests who oppose the Employee Free Choice Act and workers’ freedom to form unions and bargain are carrying out a campaign in state legislatures, hoping to wrench public opinion in their direction and spread misinformation about the Employee Free Choice Act.


We’ve reported previously about the ”SOS Ballot,” a shady corporate front group, headed by anti-worker ex-congressman and Big Business crony Ernie Istook, which is attempting to maintain corporate dominance over workers’ ability to form a union. We noted that Istook and his non-disclosed donors were hoping to get anti-majority sign-up initiatives on the ballot in at least five states—Arizona, Arkansas, Missouri, Nevada and Utah. They’ve expanded their reach, however, investing big dollars to push anti-worker ballot initiatives in Florida, Georgia, Illinois, South Carolina and Washington as well.


In addition, corporate front groups are pushing their state legislators to pass resolutions urging Congress not to pass the Employee Free Choice Act. This effort was defeated in at least one state so far—in Wyoming, where a resolution was defeated in a committee vote before it even hit the state House floor.

A good analysis of who SOS Ballot” is and what it’s up to appeared recently in the Washington Independent. David Weigel writes that there’s a “disagreement of strategy” between corporate funders who want to fight directly against the Employee Free Choice Act in the Senate and those who want to carry out a sneakier strategy in state legislatures.

Why all this frantic, if not particularly effective, activity at the state level? It isn’t about setting policy, it’s about poisoning the atmosphere with disinformation. Quoted in Weigel’s piece, Istook says that the goal is to influence the media and the public against the Employee Free Choice Act and “kill the idea” of making it easier for workers to form unions and bargain.

Fortunately, across the country, union members, the religious community, civil rights leaders and community organizations of all kinds are reaching out to educate the public about the need for the Employee Free Choice Act. That energy and mobilization will be needed to defeat the big-money corporate spin campaigns and protect workers’ freedom to bargain for a better life.

__________________________________________________


As for one part of the Strategy Behind the Employee Free Choice Act we can credit that to Navigators Global, founder Vincent A. Roberti, Sr who's elite team of federal lobbyists, political consultants and communications experts have built their careers advising Fortune 500 companies, elected officials, and trade associations and coalitions.

One of Navigators Global clients is the Coalition for a Democratic Workplace as well as Walmart and Home Depot. On Navigators Globals website it clearly defines their Strategy Behind the Employee Free Choice Act which we have posted just a few days ago.
 



Their Stratagy: change the "face" of the campaign, making it a fight between union bosses and workers, and brand the private ballot as the symbol of the campaign.

Execute the campaign with print,television and radio ads and an all-inclusive Web site promoting the message of the campaign and serving as a one-stop shop of information.

Launched an effort to put pressure on congressional and senatorial candidates who were sympathetic to card check ( FEAR and Intimidation Union Busting Tactics. )




Recruite a nationally-known celebrity ( Johnny "Sack" Sacramoni, played by Vince Curatola from the HBO series 'The Sopranos') to star in educational TV ads and used humor to drive home our key messages about protecting worker privacy by saving the secret ballot.

In the end Corporate Front Groups like Save our Secret Ballot,The Coalition for a Democratic Workplace and their multi-million dollar public relations firm Navigators Global continue use the same old strategies used in every Union Busting Campaign in hopes that their lies will now become the truth.

Union busting is a field populated by bullies and built on deceit. A campaign against a union is an assault on individuals and a war on truth. As such, it is a war without honor. The only way to bust a union is to lie, distort, manipulate, threaten, and always, always attack.

Martin Jay Levitt, 1993, Confessions of a Union Buster


For More Information on EFCA please visit our websites and blog

http://www.employeefreechoiceactnow.org

http://efcanow.blogspot.com/

http://efcaunionbustingclub.blogspot.com/

http://www.FreeChoiceActNow.Org

http://www.LaborUnionResources.Org

For more information on Employer Intimidation and Union-Busting FEAR Tactics Press Below

http://efcanow.blogspot.com/2009/02/just-say-no-to-employee-free-choice-act.html

Tags: Employee Free Choice Act, Free Choice Act, EFCA, Coalition for a Democratic Workplace, Save our Secret Ballot, Navigators Global,Vincent A. Roberti, Corporate Front Groups,SOS Ballot, Ernie Istook, Union Busting, Union Avoidance, Labor Union Sphere: Related Content
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The Employee Free Choice Act vs FEAR, Intimidation. Corruption & Bribery by Employers : Is This What You Call a Fair Election?



The Employee Free Choice Act vs FEAR, Intimidation. Corruption & Bribery by Employers : Is This What You Call a Fair Election?

The Employee Free Choice Act Does NOT Eliminate Secret Ballot Elections it Eliminates the EMPLOYERS opportunity to conduct an Anti-Union Campaign built on FEAR Intimidation Corruption and Bribery against its own employees.

So we elect our president using a secret ballot system. But imagine our presidential election if only one candidate was allowed access to voter lists, only one candidate was allowed to campaign with voters in the only instance where they are all together, and one of the candidates could fire you or take away hours or responsibility from you -- or offer you more money or more responsibility. What would the secret ballot reflect?

Welcome to the World of Union Organizing which I have lived for the past 30 years.

In understanding why the Employee Free Choice Act is so desperately needed to balance the playing field for workers we must first look at what really happens during critical period 42 days leading up to an election.

But first I should explain what the problem is and why we need the Employee Free Choice Act Now. The problem isn't the secret ballot voting like opponents of the Employee Free Choice Act would like you to believe -- a process that would still be available under EFCA, alongside mandatory recognition of a majority showing of interest; it's the process that leads up to the secret ballot.

A union can only trigger an election with a "showing of interest," meaning no less than 30 percent of a given workplace must sign an authorization petition or cards and file them with the NLRB.

The NLRB will then schedule an election -- after first a process of determining if the 30 percent threshold was met. The employer will often insist that certain workers shouldn't be included in the calculation, because, for example, they are technically management, or they work in different job classifications, etc.

The election will then take place within six weeks. In those six weeks, employers can "campaign" for the election during work hours and in coerced meetings -- oftentimes high pressure one-on-one meetings -- where they discourage not only a vote for the union ("It's a secret ballot!" you're thinking) but more importantly they discourage campaigning publicly for the union.


They suddenly drop the hammer on union activists, carefully scrutinizing them for the smallest mistake to find any grounds on which to fire them -- which would insulate them from accusations of retaliatory action.

During Union Busting Campaigns Employer FEAR and Intimidation Is Widespread

Some 82 percent of employers hire high-priced union-busting consultants, according to American Rights at Work. Further, when employers are faced with organizing campaigns:

30 percent fire pro-union workers.

49 percent threaten to close a work site when workers try to form a union, but only 2percent actually do.

51 percent coerce workers into opposing unions with bribery or favoritism.

91 percent force employees to attend one-on-one anti-union meetings with their supervisors.

During the critical 42 day period leading up to a union election union organizers are NOT allowed access to the work site or the workers involved in the election. However MANAGEMENT IS and they TAKE FULL Advantage of it.

During this time an Employer will immediately begin a FEAR and Intimidation campaign against its workers. This would include half- truths, misinformation and outright lies. Mandatory meetings whereby employees must attend or be fired are conducted daily for hours at a time.

Is this what you call a Fair Election?



The Real Truth is that The Employee Free Choice Act has nothing to do with whether or not employees have a right to a secret ballot (which still will exist under The Employee Free Choice Act ) it is about the Employer losing its ability to run a Anti-Union campaign during the 42 day period leading up to a Secret ballot election. END OF STORY!

Under the Employee Free Choice Act if the majority of workers sign cards in support a union the NLRB would certify the union using a card check system. Under this system THE MAJORITY OF WORKERS DECIDE if they wish to unionize or not. Under the current system even if the majority of workers sign up for the union or even 100% of the workers wish to unionize an EMPLOYER can REFUSE to recognize a union and force an election, which now triggers a 42 day Anti-Union Campaign.

So under the Employee Free Choice Act the power shifts from the Employer to The Worker!.....That's The Secret Behind The Secret Ballot Election!

One of the Biggest LIES spread about the Employee Free Choice Act besides workers losing their right to a Secret Ballot is that if the Employee Free Choice Act is passed that it would lead to union intimidation in the card signing process.

With all the false and misleading negative propaganda by Corporate Front Groups like The Coalition for a Democratic Workplace and Alliance for Worker Freedom (AWF) have you ever heard them ever talk about union intimidation in signing union membership cards under the present system whereby unions must obtain at least 30 percent or more of a showing of interest to trigger an election? Absolutely NOT!

WHY NOT?

The argument by opponents of the Employee Free Choice Act that if the Employee Free Choice Act should be passed that it would lead to Union Intimidation in signing membership cards is absolutely false and misleading. If this was the case EMPLOYERS would be filing unfair labor (ULP) charges at the National Labor Relations Board every time an election is filed.

I openly challenge The Coalition for a Democratic Workplace The Alliance for Worker Freedom (AWF) any Senator or Congressman or any Corporate Front Group who opposes the Employee Free Choice Act to present any ULP charges in conjunction with Unions Intimidating workers into signing membership cards over the last five years and I will be happy to present ULP charges filed by labor organizations for Employer Intimidation and Firings!


The only difference under the present system vs. the Employee Free Choice Act is that 51 percent of the workers seeking a union need to sign union membership cards to gain a majority status vs. 30 percent to trigger an election.

The thing about labor relations in the U.S. is that it's kind of a lawless Wild West, where might usually makes right. The laws are widely interpreted and poorly enforced; punishments rarely fit crimes. In some cases, labor has the might -- but in the vast majority of cases, it is management. And like any sphere where there are no laws, it is hard to understand unless you've experienced it firsthand for the last 30 years!



Written by Steve Maritas International Organizing Director for the International Union, Security, Police and Fire Professionals of America SPFPA.

SPFPA Leads the way as one of the top 15 organizing unions in the world today according to BNA Elections Data & Statistics.

NLRB Elections Data & Statistics from BNA PLUS
BNA PLUS collects data from each of the 35 NLRB regional offices, including RC, RM, ... Professionals (SPFPA). 38. 23. 60.5%. 2241. Service Employees (SEIU)

For more information on Employer Intimidation and Union-Busting Tactics press Below

http://efcanow.blogspot.com/2009/02/just-say-no-to-employee-free-choice-act.html


For More Information on EFCA please visit our websites and blog

http://www.employeefreechoiceactnow.org

http://efcanow.blogspot.com/

http://efcaunionbustingclub.blogspot.com/

http://www.FreeChoiceActNow.Org

http://www.LaborUnionResources.Org

Tags: Employee Free Choice Act, Free Choice Act, EFCA, SPFPA, Steve Maritas, The Coalition for a Democratic Workplace, The Alliance for Worker Freedom (AWF), Union Busting, Union Avoidance, Union Organizing, Labor Union, Union Busting Tactics Sphere: Related Content Posted by Employee Free Choice Act Now . Org at 5:33 PM

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Senate voted 80-17 to confirm Hilda Solis as President Obama's Secretary of Labor

Senate voted 80-17 to confirm Hilda Solis as President Obama's Secretary of Labor

The Department of Management Will Now Be Known as the Department of Workers Rights!



February 24, 2009

Dear Employee Free Choice Act Now . Org,

I am pleased to report that earlier today, the Senate voted 80-17 to confirm Hilda Solis as President Obama's Secretary of Labor. I strongly supported her confirmation.

Secretary Solis comes from a proud union family, and has been fighting for the rights of workers her entire career. She understands the difficult issues facing our economy, and I have every confidence that she will work tirelessly at the Labor Department to make sure working families are not left behind.

At a time when we have 11 million workers unemployed in America, it is inexcusable that her nomination was held up due to partisan politics. I am glad the Senate was finally able to move her nomination forward, and I look forward to working with her on the issues that are so important to Michigan's working families.

As always, please don't hesitate to contact my office if we can be of assistance to you or your family.


Sincerely,

Debbie Stabenow

United States Senator


http://efcanow.blogspot.com/

Tags: Employee Free Choice Act, Free Choice Act, EFCA, Hilda Solis, Senate, Senator Debbie Stabenow, Labor Union News, Labor Union Sphere: Related Content

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