WHY LABOR LAW DOESN'T WORK FOR WORKERS
By David Bacon
New America Media
http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=39555383b6cbf8c4a7a3eb8d4ed20aa2
LANCASTER, CA (3/11/09) -- After months of a
media war supporting and condemning it, the Employee Free Choice Act
was finally introduced into Congress again this week. The bill
has been debated before, but with a larger Democratic majority, its
chances of passage are much greater today, and President Obama has
said he'll sign it. Employers, therefore, are fighting it as
never before.
Behind the verbal fireworks, workers on
the ground say that current labor law has no teeth, and must be
changed. In Lancaster, California, one of the country's
hardest-fought organizing drives highlights the obstacles they face.
A year ago, employees at Rite Aid's huge drug warehouse there voted to
join a union. On March 21, 2008, the National Labor Relations
Board certified that union, giving it the right to negotiate a first
union contract. But Rite Aid, workers say, has just been waiting
for the year to expire. Once it does, the company can stop the
pretense of negotiating.
But an even more serious problem lies
beyond. When the year is up, a group of pro-company workers will
likely petition for a new election, where the company can try to undo
last year's pro-union vote.
These are just the
latest maneuvers in Rite Aid's war against the union. For the
last three years its employees have overcome one obstacle after
another in their effort to join the International Longshore and
Warehouse Union. Each obstacle has been placed in their path by
this country's weak labor laws, a problem the Employee Free Choice Act
was written to correct. That's why Rite Aid and other large
employers are fighting the bill in Congress.
EFCA would go a long way toward
solving the problems workers have at three crucial stages in union
organizing efforts - anti-union firings at the beginning, getting
their union recognized, and negotiating that first agreement.
Says Angel Warner, one of Rite Aid's most vocal pro-union employees,
"if we'd had EFCA, we'd have had our union and contract a long time
ago."
Rite Aid opened its big
new Lancaster warehouse in the high desert just northeast of Los
Angeles in 1999, with tax breaks for locating in a local enterprise
zone. The facility might have been new, but working in it was
like stepping into the past. The cavernous building was freezing
cold in winter, and broiling hot in the summer. The company
installed a computerized, state-of-the-art tracking system for the
myriad products it sends out to stores everyday. But that system
put punishing pressure on people to work faster, timing their every
move.
Employees say they
were pushed hard by their supervisors, and got rewards and advancement
only if they got on the inside track. Ten-hour days are normal
and mandatory overtime comes all the time. "If management
likes you it's fine," Warner says, "but if you're not in good, you
have to watch out because you're always on the chopping block.
I've been there since Rite Aid opened, and I've watched a lot of
people come and go."
"There's nothing out here in the
Antelope Valley that could be considered a good wage," said
Christine Martinez, another Rite Aid worker. "You start at minimum
wage and don't go up."
It's little wonder that workers started thinking
about a union -- the company left them little alternative. "A
lot of people think unions get organized over wages, and that's part
of it," according to Warner. "But our main reasons were the
working conditions, which are appalling and unreasonable. You
almost feel like you're a slave, even though you're getting paid for
it. And as for job security, we have none."
At their first meetings over
three years ago, Warner and her coworkers talked over those conditions
and began to organize a committee to spread the word. They got
in touch with the ILWU, whose experienced organizers encourage workers
to make the basic decisions about their own campaign.
If EFCA had
been passed and signed when it was first introduced, it would have
been in effect while those meetings were going on in the warehouse.
Warner and the other union committee members could have begun asking
their coworkers to sign union cards. When they got a majority,
they could have presented the cards to the NLRB. The company
would then have been obligated to recognize the union.
But EFCA didn't pass, and Bush wouldn't have signed it if it
had. So Rite Aid workers had a far different experience.
As soon as the company understood that its
workers were organizing, it adopted the all-out, scorched-earth
hostility common among most private-sector employers facing organizing
drives. Its opposition at the Lancaster warehouse was in fact
very different from the attitude the company took towards unions in
its stores. In New York City Rite Aid even signed an agreement
with SEIU Local 1199 to recognize the union based on the same
card-check process it rejected in Lancaster. Yet company
strategy at the warehouse, according to workers, rested on
identifying, isolating and terminating pro-union employees, and
scaring the rest.
When three workers
testified at a hearing to decide who would be able to vote a union
election, one was suspended and the other two written up. The
scariest experience came when union supporters began to get fired.
First four lost their jobs for small disciplinary infractions.
Then Mike Frescas was terminated after he spoke at a union meeting.
Managers and security guards in red shirts hustled him out of the
warehouse without even giving him a reason. Christine
Martinez, who suffers from arthritis, was canned for not making her
production quota.
The ILWU filed charges with the NLRB,
accusing the company of firing people for their union activity, a
serious violation of Federal law. After a long investigation,
the NLRB announced it was ready to issue a complaint against Rite Aid,
specifying 49 separate violations of the National Labor Relations
Act. Included were the illegal suspensions and discipline
directed against Sylvia Estrada, Joey Celaya, Lorena Ortiz and Tim
Patrick. Other counts included charges that Rite Aid managers
had illegally tried to stop workers from asking each other to sign
union cards, that General Manager Gary Konopka had said he'd deny wage
increases if the union came in, and had asked employees to report on
union activity, and that several managers had threatened employees for
their union activity. Konopka was charged also with offering to
finance a committee of workers to conduct anti-union activity, and
with telling workers that the initiative in forming that committee
came from employees, not the company.
But then the Board offered to settle the charges
without filing a complaint, if the company agreed to rehire two of the
workers, Ignacio Mesa and Deborah Fontaine. The company agreed.
The board required the company to post a notice as well, but Rite Aid
didn't even have to admit that it had broken the law - just to promise
that it wouldn't do so in the future. ILWU organizer Carlos
Cardon points out that "although [Mesa and Fontaine] got back pay,
there was really no penalty on the employer for what had happened.
The way things are set up, it's like robbing the bank and getting
caught, but the only penalty is that you have to put the money back.
Nothing happens to them." In fact, companies forced to rehire
workers are even entitled to deduct any unemployment payments they
receive while they're fired.
The NLRB says it uses
the settlement procedure to avoid long and expensive hearings,
followed by appeals that can last years. And it's true that had
the Board decided to hold a hearing, the process might have lasted
much longer, and there still would have been no fines at the end.
Just one extreme example - Smithfield Foods fired union supporter
Kieth Ludlum at its huge North Carolina slaughterhouse in 1994.
Ludlum didn't walk back through the factory doors until 2006.
Fear of firing is probably the
single biggest reason why workers don't organize unions.
According to a recent report from the Center for Economic and Policy
Research, "Dropping the Ax: Illegal Firings During Union Election
Campaigns, 1951-2007," by John Schmitt and Ben Zipperer, workers
were fired for union activity in thirty percent of all union
campaigns, so fear isn't unreasonable. "Aggressive actions
by employers -- often including illegal firings -- have significantly
undermined the ability of U.S. workers to unionize their workplaces,"
according to report co-author John Schmitt. "The financial
penalties for illegal actions, including firing pro-union workers, are
minimal, so it makes perfect sense for employers to break the law to
derail union-organizing efforts." That percentage has gone
up from 16% in the last 1990s, to 26% in the early 2000s, to 30% in
2007.
If EFCA had been in effect during the Rite Aid campaign, the
company would have had to pay triple back wages for its illegal
firings. "That would dissuade a lot of employers from breaking
the law," Cardon predicts. But with no fines and no card-check
recognition process, it took over two years to overcome the fear and
get a majority of the workers to face the company's hostility.
Every supporter recruited to the union cause had to weigh the
possibility that he or she might lose his or her job. Union
supporters say it felt like working in a war zone.
Nevertheless, the union committee did finally win the support
of a majority, and when the election was held, the vote was 283 in
favor, and 261 against representation. A slim margin, but
enough.
The company could have
appealed the election results, a common tactic that can sometimes
delay bargaining for years. Rite Aid, however, adopted another
strategy. For the year following the election it sat in
negotiations and agreed to virtually nothing. "Since June 6
we've had 18 sit-down sessions," Cardon explained in late February.
"We presented Rite Aid with 43 articles for a proposed contract -
wages, working conditions, seniority. We've only been able to
reach agreement on six, and the most meaningful was where to put up
our union bulletin board."
Rite Aid claimed the union was
demanding "exorbitant" wage and benefit increases, which the
company can't afford, according to company representative Cheryl
Slavinsky. A Rite Aid statement asserts that "our wages
currently are very competitive, and we offer our associates a good
health plan, which is the same health plan that covers many of our
other union associates."
In the meantime, though, Rite Aid
hired an anti-union consultant, Bell and Associates, to engage in what
is politely called "persuasion activities." Translation:
convince workers that it was useless to organize since the union can't
get a contract.
"People are really exhausted
now," Warner says. "They're tired. They say, 'We voted
this union in, but what has it done for us?' Employees who were
against the union before are going around getting decertification
petitions filled out. The company is wearing the employees down,
and systematically picking them off." Given that the NLRB was
ready to charge Rite Aid earlier with setting up an employee committee
to fight the union, it's not unreasonable to suspect that the
circulation of decertification petitions would have company support as
well.
And in October Rite Aid began
to lay workers off, citing the bad economy. The company had
never laid off any of its warehouse employees before. Although
the law requires the company to bargain over layoffs too, it
terminated 19 workers on October 21, cut the jobs of 29 others to 10
hours a week, and bargained only after its fait acoompli. "The
Union also contends that Rite Aid violated §8(a)(3) when it retained
individuals outside the Union's bargaining unit to perform the same
work," claimed a new charge the ILWU's attorneys filed with the
NLRB. Warner says, "since the election I've seen 36 union
supporters let go."
Especially on top of the firings
before the election, the fall layoffs had a devastating impact.
Lancaster is a city in crisis, where the economic meltdown has
produced a foreclosure rate far in excess of most other California
cities. It's not hard for workers to understand the cost of
losing a job by just looking at the sale signs on their neighbors'
lawns.
The net result is more
fear. While the union can't rely on the legal process to force
the company to negotiate, that fear is a potent barrier to any action
the workers might consider to force the issue. "We were
starting to hold lunch meetings in the cafeteria," Warner recalls.
"More and more employees were getting involved. We did a rally
right in front of the building. Managers could see it
happening. The next thing you know, they're laying off people.
That works. It's effective. Now they've got everybody
scared about losing their jobs with the economy the way it is.
They beat the people back in line with this fear of 'you're not going
to have a job anymore.'"
EFCA's third provision would have avoided this situation too.
After ninety days of fruitless negotiations, the bill would require
both parties to submit the issues still in dispute to an arbitrator.
The arbitrator would then be empowered to come up with a compromise,
and the company would have to sign the resulting contract.
Instead,
Rite Aid workers are likely to get a second "democratic election"
- this one intended to get rid of union representation, and return
matters to where they were when workers started to organize.
The right to such secret
ballot elections has won a wave of corporate protectors. The
U.S. Chamber of Commerce, trade and manufacturer associations like the
American Meat Institute, and large corporations have lined up to
condemn EFCA. The National Right-to-Work Committee, famous for
its extreme anti-union rhetoric, says, "It goes without saying that
in order to have a true democratic election, the voters should be free
from coercion, intimidation, irregularity, or illegality. The
only way to guarantee this is to make sure the voting is done in
secret, safe from the prying eyes of union officials."
Rite Aid
agrees. "We believe that our associates have the right to
choose to be represented or not represented by a union. We just think
that it's fair for them to vote by secret ballot, just as all of us
vote by secret ballot for the elected officials who represent us,"
Slavinsky told The Daily News of Washington state.
"If NLRB elections were run
like normal elections, that would be fine,"
Warner counters. "But they're not. From an employee's
point of view, we would have loved not to have had to go to that
secret ballot election. If we had been able to do it by card
check, we would have had our union and contract a long time ago, and
we wouldn't have lost so many of our people."
Employers
have even proposed their own bill to kill EFCA, the Secret Ballot
Protection Act, whose sponsor, U.S. Senator Jim DeMint (R-South
Carolina), claims "voting by secret ballot is a fundamental
principle of American democracy, and it's time to guarantee this basic
right for every American worker. The Secret Ballot Protection
Act is urgently needed to stop the growing attacks on workers'
rights."
You can almost hear the Rite Aid workers
laughing.
Just out from Beacon Press:
Illegal People -- How Globalization Creates Migration and
Criminalizes Immigrants
See also the photodocumentary on indigenous migration to the
US
Communities Without Borders (Cornell University/ILR Press,
2006)
See also The Children of NAFTA, Labor Wars on the U.S./Mexico
Border (University of California, 2004)
--
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David Bacon, Photographs and Stories
http://dbacon.igc.org
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