The Stern Gang and the SEIU
Washington Babylon
Ken Silverstein

November 29, 2007

http://harpers.org/archive/2007/11/hbc-90001793

No labor leader in America gets better press than Andy Stern,
president of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), which
according to its website "is the fastest-growing union in North
America, with 1.9 million members in the United States, Canada, and
Puerto Rico." Stern is routinely portrayed as a progressive union
leader who is fighting for the rights of workers and revitalizing the
long-declining labor movement in America (surely a worthy and
important task).

Yet Stern is currently presiding over what some within the union
describe as a power grab, and one that could squelch opposition to
some controversial deals he and his allies have supported (like a
provision, ultimately shot down by internal opposition, that would
have imposed a seven-year ban on strikes by Tenet Healthcare union
employees). On Friday morning Stern is seeking to push through a deal
that would severely weaken his chief critic inside the SEIU, in the
name of "restructuring."

"Stern is essentially seeking to take a public entity private," one
person familiar with the situation told me.

The chief battleground is California, where SEIU has around 650,000
members, 40 percent of its total membership. Back in 2004 there were
38 SEIU locals in California but that number was subsequently reduced
to 20. This has occurred because in 2006 Stern and his allies pushed
through a statewide reorganization that merged numerous locals into
bigger entities, whose membership, critics say, was gerrymandered.
Stern then handpicked the leaders at the newly formed unions,
installing close allies as officers.

Some of those picked by Stern had been elected at the smaller,
pre-merged entities, and some held unelected staff positions. But in
essence, Stern was able to stack the deck with loyalists who were not
voted on by the new merged local memberships.

In doing this, Stern exploited a legal loophole. When a new union
local is organized, it has no board of directors. Because someone
needs to be in charge, federal law stipulates that the parent union
can appoint officers for up to three years, by which time elections
must be held. Stern is treating the merged locals–which have large
memberships, up to 130,000 in one case–as entirely new entities, even
though many of the individual locals have existed for many decades.

Major policy issues are also at stake. Stern's primary in-house critic
has been United Healthcare Workers West leader Sal Rosselli. He is
currently head of the state council of the SEIU in California, and has
opposed deals reached by Stern and his allies that Rosselli believes
limit workers' rights.

The San Francisco Weekly has reported on this and ran an excerpt of a
letter that Rosselli sent to SEIU members:

Some in the national SEIU are negotiating an agreement with nursing
home employers—in California and nationally—and have repeatedly
excluded UHW nursing home members and elected representatives from the
process. These agreements could restrict our nursing home members'
voices on the job and be implemented without affected members even
having the right to vote.

There's also a suspicion among some SEIU dissidents that Stern is
planning to take a relatively conciliatory stance towards Governor
Arnold Schwarzenegger's proposed health-care reforms. Opponents–and
the state council under Rosselli's leadership has been quite
critical–believe the reforms would shift the primary burden of health
care costs to individuals as opposed to employers.

Stern's 2006 reorganization package included a provision that
abolishes the old California state council and creates a new one. On
Friday, in a conference call scheduled for 7:30 AM California time–the
score of state local leaders are set to vote for president of the new
council. It's virtually a foregone conclusion that Rosselli–whose
four-year term would have run into 2009–is going to lose to Annelle
Grajeda, a Stern ally. (I'll explain why in a moment.)

Stern's supporters offer a number of rationales for the steps he has
taken. The leaders he has appointed at the new locals will have to
face elections down the road, they say. And the vote for the head of
the new state council is democratic, so what's the big deal?

Steve Trossman, an SEIU spokesman, said the whole reorganization
package grew out of the national convention in 2004. "There were
hearings about it all over the state and any question that could have
been asked was asked. The whole process was above-board and then it
was put to a vote." Trossman emphasized that hundreds of thousands of
members were eligible in the 2006 balloting and that the
reorganization was approved by 86 percent. "The whole point was to
build stronger, more effective locals… and to enhance the voice of our
members and the working people of California," he said.

As to Stern's appointment of local leaders and charges of cronyism,
Trossman said that Stern "selected the logical people to head the
[newly created] locals." For example, Grajeda had come from the
largest single local within the ones that merged to form newly-created
Local 721.

But critics tell a different story. "Why should Stern decide who the
'logical' leaders are?" asked the source I cited above. "Why didn't he
let the members of the new locals decide who the 'logical' leaders
should be in a vote? There are union mergers all the time and the
normal course is to schedule a special election to select the
leadership. There was no need to have locals headed by appointees
named [by Stern]."

Another person with whom I spoke scoffed at the notion that the plan's
origins were democratic, saying that SEIU conventions are even more
scripted and controlled from the top than political conventions. After
the 2004 convention, this person said, the SEIU's national leadership
sold the reorganization on the basis of creating bigger and more
powerful locals through merger. That Stern would appoint the new local
leadership was barely discussed and certainly not something that
members were broadly aware of. This person said that mergers could
certainly make sense at times, but in this case the whole process has
been "inherently wrong" and "political."

Furthermore, complex rules excluded roughly one-third of the state's
650,000 SEIU members from voting on the reorganization in 2006,
including all but 3,000 of the 135,000 in Rosselli's local.
Incidentally, Trossman is right that the merger did pass by a wide
margin and that hundreds of thousand of people were eligible to vote,
but only about 16 percent of the total membership actually took part
in the balloting.

Stern's appointees will have to face election, but by then they will
have the advantage of incumbency and will have been able to promote
themselves heavily through their holding of office. (Just like
politicians do.) Finally, it's basically a foregone conclusion that
Grajeda will win because voting is weighted and she only needs support
from the six local union heads that Stern has handpicked since the
2006 reorganization.

This story was reported and written with Rachel Heinrichs

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