We had the same problem with our opera company that organized themselves as
investors and put up the money to train the ensemble.   When we went to the
Union [AGMA] and the professional opera organization [Opera America] we were
rejected for membership because they could not imagine a worker owned
cooperative.    Eventually we were unable to exist in the system as it was
set up and so the ensemble disbanded and walked with the "Intellectual
Capital" and America lost its one and only full time repertory chamber opera
company.   We needed a Plutocracy to exist as the Metropolitan Opera does
and the NYCity Opera couldn't.

REH 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Sally Lerner
Sent: Wednesday, October 26, 2011 10:09 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Futurework] FW: Can Nontraditional Labor Orgs Really Represent
Workers? Taxi


________________________________________
From: Portside Labor [[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, October 25, 2011 9:31 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Can Nontraditional Labor Orgs Really Represent Workers? Taxi

Workers Alliance joins AFL-CIO, as number of contract
workers continues to grow
BY MIKE ELK
Working in These Times
In These Times
Oct 24, 2011
http://inthesetimes.com/working/entry/12174/can_non-traditional_organizing_r
eally_represent_workers/

WASHINGTON, D.C.--Last week, the National Taxi Workers
Alliance became the first nontraditional labor group to
join the AFL-CIO as an affiliate since the 1960s, when
the United Farm Workers were admitted to the labor
union federation. The alliance isn't a union; since cab
drivers often work as independent contractors and
rarely share common employers, they legally cannot
organize and bargain collectively.

The admittance of the NTWA, which formally occurred
last Thursday at a panel event hosted by AFL-CIO
President Richard Trumka and Labor Secretary Hilda
Solis, shows the AFL-CIO's commitment to pursuing
irregular channels to organize workers and form
community alliances. More and more workers find
themselves employed as independent contractors and in
employment relationships that do not allow for
collectively bargaining. Organizing these workers will
be crucial to rebuilding worker power.

But how do you build a financially sustainable and
membership-driven labor organization when in some cases
it's impossible to organize workers lacking collective
bargaining rights?

"We all carry around the mental mood of the workplace,
where we have an employer and a worker. And our laws
respond to that. But that no longer corresponds to
reality," panelist David Weil of Boston University said
Thursday at "The Future of Work and New Ways to Build
Power," held in Washington D.C.

More than 10 million U.S. workers are currently
classified as independent contractors and not allowed
to organize legally. In addition, several million more
work in agriculture or domestic work--sectors that are
forbidden to organize under the National Labor
Relations Act. And millions of restaurants experience
such high turnover that it is nearly impossible for
workers to form a union. And of couse, employers'
union-busting efforts also make it difficult to for
workers to organize.

The only way organized labor may be able to fight for
these workers is by engaging in nontraditional labor
campaigns that do not seek traditional collective
bargaining arrangements at their heart. Winning this
kind of non-traditional community-labor campaigns will
not only help labor advocate for these workers, but
could potentially strengthen labor's power through
building community alliances and organizing workers
that were previously excluded.

Some in the labor movement sees the New York taxi
drivers' 15-year effort to win pay increases and
improve working conditions as an example of how the
labor movement can fight for workers in industries
traditionally difficult to organize.

"We need to follow lead of the taxi drivers alliance,"
says Justin Molito, an organizer with Writers Guild of
America East. "The decentralized nature of work is
creating a new decentralized nature of resistance they
will not be able to stop."

While organizing workers outside of collective
bargaining units can bring about real change for
workers, it can be difficult to financially sustain
such organizations since collective bargaining
agreements do not exist that make it easy for unions to
collect dues automatically through paychecks. A large
part of the funding for many of these nontraditional
labor groups comes from others unions and large
foundations.

The National Domestic Workers Alliance won landmark
rights for domestic workers last year when New York
State passed the landmark Domestic Workers Bill of
Rights. However, Ai-Jen Poo, the groups' executive
director, says even the majority of their funding comes
from external sources.

The inability to self-fund workers' rights organization
can lead to significant instability when outside groups
decide to stop giving money. Outside funding from
foundations and unions can be problematic as the
funding is often dictated by the ability and desire of
those outside groups and not necessarily by people in
the group trying to improve their working conditions.

"When people get most of their money from the outside,
it can create inertia," Bhairavi Desai, NTWA's
executive director, said Thursday. The organization
gets 80 percent of its funding from internal member
dues collected individually one by one from members
through an elaborate system of union stewards.

"If you don't need dues, you don't work too hard
because getting people to give dues voluntarily is a
tough thing to do. When your organization is driven
internally, you are much more focused on meeting the
needs of the members and making sure you work hard for
that dues money."

____________________________________________

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