Whether you are for them or against them the trade unions are part of the
workplace.

-----Original Message-----
From: Sid Shniad [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: February 19, 2001 3:26 PM
Subject: Labor leader sounds do-or-die warning - The New York Times 


The New York Times                                              February 19,
2001 

Labor leader sounds do-or-die warning

        by Steven Greenhouse
 
Los Angeles - John J. Sweeney, the president of the A.F.L.- C.I.O., gave an 
unusual do-or-die warning at a meeting of labor leaders here, telling them 
that unless unions did far more to increase their ranks, organized labor
could drift into irrelevance. 

        Union membership slipped last year, and Mr. Sweeney is so concerned 
that unions are not doing more organizing that he has called a special 
meeting of union presidents for next month to press them to redouble their 
recruitment efforts.

        During his five years at labor's helm, Mr. Sweeney has made
increasing 
union membership his No. 1 goal. But he voiced frustration that unions were 
organizing only about one-third of the one million workers he said should be

organized each year to restore labor's might.

        One A.F.L.-C.I.O. official quoted Mr. Sweeney as telling the
nation's 
union leaders at a closed-door meeting here, "Not only are the numbers 
totally unsatisfactory, but if we don't begin to turn this around quickly
and 
almost immediately, the drift in the other direction is going to make it
virtually impossible to continue to exist as a viable institution and to
have any
impact on the issues we care about."

        The percentage of American workers belonging to unions fell to 13.5 
percent from 13.9 percent last year. That is the lowest level since the
number of unionized workers peaked at 35 percent in the 1950's. Even though
more 
than 16 million jobs have been created since 1992, the Bureau of Labor 
Statistics found that the number of union members nationwide has slipped by 
200,000 since then, to 16.2 million. 

        An ever-larger part of union organizing is in government and in the 
service sector, including hotels and nursing homes. In contrast, organizing 
has been sluggish in the manufacturing sector, partly because of the fear
that companies might close operations if they are unionized.

        Labor leaders expressed concern that just 10 of the federation's 66 
member unions were doing about 80 percent of the organizing, while many 
unions continued to do little to attract more members. 

        "We have a very uneven situation in terms of unions that are
committing 
serious resources to organizing, and therefore the numbers end up being 
completely unsatisfactory," said Mark Splain, the federation's organizing 
director.

        Several union leaders at the meeting disclosed the closely kept
statistics 
detailing how many workers various unions told the A.F.L.-C.I.O. they had 
organized last year. 

        The Service Employees International Union ranked first, reporting
that it 
had organized 70,000 workers last year. In a virtual tie for second, the
United Food and Commercial Workers and the International Brotherhood of 
Electrical Workers said they had each organized about 50,000. Far smaller 
unions, including those representing painters, roofers and hotel employees, 
won praise for doing a lot of organizing in proportion to their size.

        The International Brotherhood of Teamsters, like the service
employees 
union, has about 1.4 million members, but the Teamsters organized only 
22,000 workers last year, less than one-third of what the service employees 
reported. Union leaders said the Paper, Allied-Industrial, Chemical and 
Energy Workers Union, with 275,000 members, reported hardly any 
organizing.

        And three powerful manufacturing unions, which led the way in 
organizing decades ago, are now doing only a modest amount. The United 
Auto Workers reported organizing 22,000 workers last year, the United 
Steelworkers of America about 15,000 and the International Association of 
Machinists nearly 10,000.

        Kate Bronfenbrenner, research director at Cornell University's
school of 
labor relations, said some industrial unions appeared to have grown 
discouraged about organizing because so many manufacturers move 
operations overseas, or threaten to move them, if they become unionized. 
She conducted a survey that found that managers at 70 percent of factories 
involved in organizing drives threaten to close if workers decide to
unionize. Workers often say such threats discourage them from voting to join
a union.

        Leo Gerard, the steelworkers' newly named president, said he saw a 
simple explanation for why it was easier to organize workers in government 
offices, hospitals and hotels than in factories.

        "You can't threaten to move the public sector out of Ohio," Mr.
Gerard 
said. "You can't threaten to move a hospital or nursing home to Mexico or 
China."

        Mr. Gerard said the main reason unions were not organizing hundreds
of 
thousands more workers each year was the intense anti-union campaigns 
run by employers. But business executives say more people are not joining 
unions because many workers see unions as irrelevant and unnecessary and 
union dues as too expensive.

        When Mr. Sweeney became the A.F.L.-C.I.O.'s president in 1995,
unions 
were organizing fewer than 100,000 workers a year. Thanks in part to his 
prodding, they reported organizing 350,000 workers last year, an increase 
that Mr. Sweeney said was good but not nearly enough.

        The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that on a net basis unions
lost 
200,000 members last year, partly because of layoffs, retirements and
factory 
closings. 

        Several officials of the labor federation said they were convinced
that 
some labor leaders, eager to impress, give artificially high numbers when 
they report how many workers their unions organize each year.

        Many labor experts say Mr. Sweeney has not been more successful in 
persuading unions to increase their organizing efforts largely because the 
A.F.L.-C.I.O. is a loose federation and its president has little sway over 
member unions. The individual unions, and not the federation, do the 
organizing, although the federation is seeking to serve as a catalyst.

        In contrast to the organizing situation, Mr. Sweeney has had major 
success in persuading unions to do more on the political front.

        "The American labor movement in terms of political operations and 
political juice has showed its stuff," said Mr. Splain, the organizing
director. 

"The issue is, is there a way for the labor movement to duplicate that type
of success in organizing?"

        Andrew Stern, the service employees' president, said his union was 
growing at the fastest rate partly because it spent so much on organizing - 
about $100 million a year, or nearly half the union's annual budget. He
said it cost on average about $1,000 to organize each worker. 

        The hope among many union leaders is that if other unions with more 
than a million members could match the service employees in organizing 
70,000 a year, the labor movement could begin to approach Mr. Sweeney's 
goal of organizing 700,000 to a million new members a year. 

        "I see that some unions are organizing more aggressively," Mr.
Sweeney 
said. "We have to really try to build on that momentum."

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