EMPLOYEE FREE CHOICE ACT - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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EMPLOYEE FREE CHOICE ACT

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Putting the Employee Free Choice Act Into Context. Introduction to Current Labor Law ... Alan Greenspan (2005) 'a free market democratic society is ill-served by an ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: EMPLOYEE FREE CHOICE ACT


1
EMPLOYEE FREE CHOICE ACT
  • CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES

2
Program Goals
  • Putting the Employee Free Choice Act Into Context
  • Introduction to Current Labor Law
  • Employee Free Choice Act what it does and why
  • What do business and labor have to say
  • Advocacy Techniques, Tips Practice
  • Opportunity making Employee Free Choice work

3
Employee Free Choice Act
  • Three main provisions
  • Majority sign up for union representation
  • First contract mediation and arbitration
  • New penalties for employer violations of labor
    law

4
Employee Free Choice in Context
  • US is facing most serious economic downturn since
    Great Depression
  • Economic Recovery Lessons of the New Deal
  • Rebuild the social contract
  • Create public policy and social programs that
    serve families and build communities
  • Promote economic recovery through economic
    stimulus that invests in infrastructure and jobs
  • Rebuild the middle class

5
Income Inequality
  • 59 of all income growth since 1989 accrued to
    the upper 1 of households and about 35 accrued
    to the upper tenth of that 1
  • The shift of income to the upper 1 since 1979
    (their income share rising from 10 to 22.9)
    represents an additional one trillion dollars of
    income for that group
  • Between 2000-2006 productivity expanded 20 while
    wages stagnated
  • In 2005 almost ¼ of all workers earned
    poverty-level hourly wages more than in 2001
    despite 4 years of overall economic gains

6
  • At the same time that income inequality has risen
    union membership declined from a high of 35 in
    the mid-1950s to about 12 today. One study found
    1/3 of the difference in the rise in earnings
    inequality between the US and Canada is
    attributable to the much faster rate of
    unionization decline in US.
  • Unions tend to shift income to the middle class,
    and low-wage workers enhancing purchasing power
    for a broader group of consumers who would buy
    the products and services they produce.

7
Union Advantage
  • One study found union workers earn 14.7 more
    than nonunion workers
  • Women in unions have 31 higher median earnings
    than nonunion women
  • Earnings advantage for African American workers
    is 35
  • For Latino workers it is 46
  • For Asian American workers it is 8

8
  • Unions provide other benefits such as health
    care, job safety, retirement benefits, job
    security, workplace voice, and fairness through
    just cause language, and grievance procedures
  • Most nonunion workers have none of these benefits
    or protections

9
Global Competitiveness
  • Most of our global competitors have higher
    unionization rates.
  • Of the 20 richest countries, the US ranks 17th in
    hourly pay for production workers in
    manufacturing (BLS). These same trading partners
    account for almost ½ of total US trade flows.
  • The key difference is not unionization but the
    burden on businesses and corporations of health
    care costs.

10
  • US needs to compete not on wages (low road) but
    on innovation, high value-added, high quality and
    high productivity.
  • Unions increase productivity through lowering
    turnover increasing skills and experience
    incentivizing employers to invest in new
    technology (labor-saving).
  • Union firms with good labor-management
    relationships show greater productivity (less
    labor strife, more worker involvement).
  • Current system of unionization is conflict-laden
    with an election process that poisons the
    relationship and if the union is certified spills
    over into the bargaining process.

11
Union Membership
  • Union membership declined from a high of 35 in
    the mid-1950s to about 12 today at the same time
    that income inequality has risen. This is not
    just coincidence. One study found 1/3 of the
    difference in the rise in earnings inequality
    between the US and Canada is attributable to the
    much faster rate of unionization decline in US.
  • Union decline is in large part the result not of
    worker lack of interest, but because of a hostile
    political climate and aggressive Corporate
    anti-union strategies abetted by weak labor laws
    that fail to protect employees as promised.
  • Hart Research Associates poll of adults(December
    2008) found
  • 75 support legislation that allows majority sign
    union certification
  • 64 support stronger penalties for employers who
    intimidate employees who try to form a union
  • 61 support binding arbitration to settle first
    contracts.

12
  • Alan Greenspan (2005) a free market democratic
    society is ill-served by an economy in which the
    rewards of that economy are distributed in a
    way which too many of our population do not feel
    is appropriate .
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