Why They (And You) Need A Union

Yesterday I wrote about the security guards who are striking at Kaiser Permanente because their contractor-employer is engaging in illegal tactics while trying to block them from forming a union.  The guards work for Inter-Con Security Inc., which is contracted by Kaiser to provide security services.

sfs-234x60-animated-v2

You can read articles with details about what happened with the strike yesterday here and here.  (There is close to zero coverage of this strike in newspapers.  But you wouldn't expect a corporate-owned media to provide information about labor, now would you?)

Please visit the site Stand for Security for background and details about the security guards' fight to form a union.

While this strike is about violations of workers' rights, there are very good reasons for their three-year effort to form a union.

In Oregon, the state just north of California, Kaiser Permanente security guards are employed by Kaiser, not by a contractor.  They are unionized and here is a short chart of just some of the difference this makes.











In-House Union (ILWU)
Kaiser Security Officers
Inter-Con Officers at Kaiser
Wages$15 - $18 per hour
(Oregon has a much lower
cost of living)
As little as $10.40 per hour
Raises$.70 - $1.45/hour annually,

depending on seniority

(Guaranteed in writing!)
No schedule, no guarantee
Free Family Health CareYESNO
Health Insurance Elegibility20 hours worked"Full-time", which for many

officers means 1-2 years of

working 40 hours a week before

qualifying for health insurance.
Bereavement Pay3 days paid time offnone
Sick Leave1.6 hours per pay period

(Time accrues)
none
Jury DutyPaid off as needednone
PensionYESnone
Grievance ProcedureYESnone
Shift Differential$.90/hour evenings
$1.25/hour nights
none

This chart is an example of the difference that a union makes.  The column on the left -- the one with better pay, health care, sick days, pension and other benefits -- is the workers who are in a union.  The column on the right is these security guards.  So this is why these security guards have been fighting for three years to join a union.  The employer, Inter-Con Security won't even give sick days!  For people working in hospitals!  What are these workers supposed to do?  And they won't even pay when the workers have jury duty!  (Shouldn't a company be concerned about the greater public good, like a court system that works?)

But this chart is also representative of other workplaces, showing the difference that forming a union can make for other workers.  How else are workers going to get back their rights, get health care, get pensions, and get paid?  If you see a better idea out there, please let us all know because this strike and the things happening to these security guards shows that it is very very difficult to form a union.  In today's environment where workers are afraid of employers moving their jobs overseas - or even just laying them off and telling everyone else to work harder - and then giving their pay out as raises to the executives and multi-million-dollar bonuses to the CEO, this is a very brave action to take.  

On top of that, the Republican government has stacked the labor Department and the National Labor Relations Board to side with the big corporations.  So it is even harder to form a union than ever.  Which is, of course, why wages are stagnating and CEO pay is off the charts.

This is why these workers are striking -- to demand that their civil rights be honored and to demand that their right to form a union be honored.  These security guards are placing everything on the line -- and doing this for all of us.  If they win this fight, all of us are a step further toward our rights being honored, and toward our own jobs paying more and giving benefits.

I am proud to be helping SEIU spread the word about this strike.  sfs-234x60-animated-v2



Display:


Re: Why They (And You) Need A Union (2.00 / 1)

I'd also note that unionization also pushes up wages for non-union workers, since those companies realize that they need to give their workers a fairer shake or their workers will take it for themselves.  

The anti-union stuff pushed by this Administration has been crazy.  In this age of increasing inequality, we need unions more than ever.  

Hopefully we can get a Democratic Administration, larger majorities in both Houses, and pass the Employee Free Choice Act.


John McCain: Healthcare for Kids? In America? No way
by bosdcla14 on Wed May 07, 2008 at 12:38:01 PM EST

Re: Why They (And You) Need A Union (2.00 / 1)

I saw a nasty anti-Card Check add last night.

The setting was a voting booth.

You vote privately now, private ballot! But if the Card Check people win, then some obnoxious guy in a suit demands to know how he's voting. Then the private ballot change into a card check and the guy takes a look. Then all these other guys in suits surround some regular Joe worker type and they all take a peek at his card.

So vote against Card-Check if you want your vote to be private!

That was the add.


by MNPundit on Wed May 07, 2008 at 12:41:38 PM EST

Re: Why They (And You) Need A Union (none / 0)

Ha - you know I'm not up on the law in question, but by the imagery in it I could just tell that it wasn't advancing anything good.  You've got a mafioso guy intimidating someone; that's a classic image that union busters love to use.


by Mostly on Wed May 07, 2008 at 02:14:18 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Why They (And You) Need A Union (none / 0)

Glad you are doing this.

It's good to see labor issues on MyDD.


by TomP on Wed May 07, 2008 at 01:34:24 PM EST

And what's more fun than labor issues? (2.00 / 1)

Strike Pics

100_1387

*Proud to be working for SEIU


Bob Brigham Blog
by Bob Brigham on Wed May 07, 2008 at 02:00:35 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: (Comment Deleted) (none / 0)

Huh.  Wonder what this was.


by Mostly on Wed May 07, 2008 at 02:15:39 PM EST


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