Welcome, Guest.
Please login or register.
Employee Free Choice Act - NOT!
Rotterdam NY...the people's voice    Rotterdam's Virtual Internet Community    United States Government  ›  Employee Free Choice Act - NOT! Moderators: Admin
Users Browsing Forum
No Members and 1 Guests

Employee Free Choice Act - NOT!  This thread currently has 52 views. |
1 Pages 1 Recommend Thread
Admin
August 17, 2008, 8:28am Report to Moderator
Board Moderator
Posts
7,260
Time Online
60 days 6 hours 50 minutes
http://www.dailygazette.com
Quoted Text
Carl Strock THE VIEW FROM HERE
Employee free choice? Not exactly
Carl Strock can be reached at 395-3085 or by e-mail at carlstrock@dailygazette.com.

    There is a bill kicking around Washington that I like very much or at least I like the name of it. It’s the Employee Free Choice Act, also known as HR 800, and the reason I like it is that the name is almost exactly the opposite of the true purpose of the bill.
    The true purpose of the bill is to limit the free choice of employees by preventing them from voting on whether they want to join a union.
    It mandates that if more than 50 percent of the employees of a workplace simply sign cards in response to a union organizing effort saying that they want to join, without any oversight of the conditions under which such cards are signed, that would be sufficient to trigger union representation, and the National Labor Relations Board would be forbidden to conduct a secret ballot, as is done now.
    You will not be surprised to learn that the bill is backed by labor unions and is in fact their top legislative priority.
    Obviously it would make it much easier for them to expand their ranks. I mean, if you can buttonhole a worker on his front porch and spin him a line on why it’s in his interest to sign this little card here, and then have his signature count as much as a secret ballot, you don’t need a Ph.D. in psychology to see what the result will be.
    Have in mind that when the United Food and Commercial Workers tried to organize the 683 workers at Price Chopper warehouses in 2001, they readily got the approximately 225 signatures required to force an election, but by secret ballot only some 130 workers voted in favor of unionizing.
    So obviously signing a card handed to you by a possibly pushy or intimidating organizer is one thing and voting in the privacy of a voting booth is something else. It doesn’t take a genius to figure that one out.
    So clearly the Employee Free Choice Act has little to do with employee free choice and very much to do with bolstering the power of labor unions.
    For the most part it is supported by Democrats and opposed by Republicans.
    Nationally, Barack Obama suports it, because, as he says, “It will make it easier for unions to organize, make it harder for companies to block unionization,” which is surely true enough.
    John McCain voted in the Senate last year to block it.
    Locally, Democratic Rep. Kirsten Gillibrand supports it and so do the leading Democrat contenders for the seat now held by Rep. Mike McNulty, they being Paul Tonko, Phil Steck, and Tracey Brooks, all of whom boast of their union endorsements.
    The Republican candidate for the seat, Jim Buhrmaster, opposes it, and so does Sandy Treadwell, Republican challenger to Gillibrand. “The secret ballot is a longstanding fundamental right,” Treadwell says, stating the obvious.
    How could anyone take away that right with a straight face and dare to call it “free choice”?
    I asked one of the bill’s most ardent advocates, Frank Natalie, president of the Schenectady Central Labor Council, an affiliate of the AFL-CIO.
    He said the supposedly free elections conducted by the National Labor Relations Board are undermined and vitiated by the “harrassment and intimidation of workers” perpetrated by employers before the elections. He said employers regularly threaten to close their plants, move to Mexico, or reduce wages in order to scare workers into voting against union representation.
    Which they might do. I don’t know, though I suppose union organizers might well engage in their own intimidation, harrassment and propaganda, all of which would constitute an election campaign, in my view, to be settled in the secrecy of the voting booth.
    I asked Natalie how he would feel if the situation were reversed and there were a bill in the hopper that would allow an employer to defeat a union drive by getting his workers to sign cards against the union without taking a vote. “Would you be outraged?” I asked.
    “Yes, I would,” he acknowledged.
    In any case, that is the stated reasoning of the unions, which you can study for yourself on the AFL-CIO Web site. Secret-ballot elections aren’t really fair. The employer has the advantage — even though unions win about 60 percent of those elections, which they don’t tell you.
    I think the true reason is the simple one that unions have been declining in strength and numbers since the 1950s and are desperate to recover. In the 1950s, 36 percent of the American work force was unionized, and today the number is only 12 percent.
    We get a little different view here in New York, because our unionization rate is the highest in the country, at 25 percent. But even here, you have to remember that the preponderance of union strength is among government workers, who are protected from market forces.
    We also get a little different view politically, because in our state government Republicans have been as subservient to the public-employee unions as have Democrats, which is not true nationally.
    “The unions have invested so much in Democrats, and the Democrats owe the unions so much,” says Neil Golub, head of Price Chopper’s parent corporation. “Now they want to totally shift the balance of power.”
    He contends that Democrats who voted in favor of this bill last year, like Gillibrand and McNulty, “are actually taking away American rights,” by depriving workers of the secret ballot, and I wouldn’t argue.
    But then politics is politics, and it’s as hard for Democrats to defy organized labor as it is for Republicans to defy big oil companies or backwoods Christian preachers.
    Anyway, it’s called the Employee Free Choice Act. It passed the House, got filibustered to a halt in the Senate and is now a defining issue between Democrats and Republicans.
    If you wish to make yourself heard on this subject, you may do so on my blog at www.dailygazette. com.
Logged
E-mail Private Message
senders
August 20, 2008, 8:38pm Report to Moderator

Hero Member
Posts
4,922
Time Online
26 days 13 hours 10 minutes
Americans need to learn---again----that we are pioneering Americans.....we supposedly go the moon, send rovers to Mars, and have nuked Japan then
built them up and accepted Godzilla......


...you are a product of your environment, your environment is a product of your priorities, your priorities are a product of you......

The replacement of morality and conscience with law produces a deadly paradox.


STOP BEING GOOD DEMOCRATS---STOP BEING GOOD REPUBLICANS--START BEING GOOD AMERICANS

Logged Offline
E-mail Private Message Reply: 1 - 1
1 Pages 1 Recommend Thread
|


Thread Rating
There is currently no rating for this thread