http://blog.aflcio.org/2007/03/09/hey-boss-lose-the-second-yacht/Hey, Boss: Lose the Second Yacht
by Tula Connell, Mar 9, 2007
Photo Credit: Jared Rodriguez
Why is Pace University making it so hard for Chris Williams to get a union contract?
This is a crosspost from The Bonddad Blog.
The U.S. House passed legislation last week that would level the playing field for employees trying to form a union—but judging by the reaction in the business community, you’d think the bill is the end of corporate freedom as we know it.
On March 1, the House voted 241–185 for the Employee Free Choice Act, which would establish stronger penalties for violation of employee rights when workers seek to form a union and during first-contract negotiations. It also would allow employees to form unions through a majority verification process, in which workers sign cards to indicate their support for a union.
In attacking the bill, Big Business has misleadingly insisted it would take away the secret ballot election process by which workers now form unions. But that argument is a red herring. First of all, Employee Free Choice Act doesn’t take away the secret ballot process. Workers will have a choice between the ballot process and majority verification.
Second, as currently run by the nation’s labor board, this management-controlled election process is anything but democratic. The long, drawn-out process gives management plenty of time to harass and intimidate workers—and let’s face it, how many people want to join a union if their employer threatens to fire them (which 25 percent of private-sector employers do, even though it is illegal)?
Former Labor Secretary Robert Reich puts it this way:
A secret ballot sounds democratic, but workplaces aren’t democracies because employers have the power to hire and fire. That’s where the potential for intimidation lies. And the only way around it is to go with a simple up-or-down vote.
Why is Pace University making it so hard for Chris Williams to get a union contract?
There are many examples of how the so-called “election process” doesn’t work. Chris Williams, an adjunct physics professor at Pace University in New Jersey, shared his story with us at the AFL-CIO. In December 2003, Williams and a majority of his co-workers signed authorization cards saying they wanted to be represented by New York State United Teachers/AFT (NYSUT/AFT). Pace University’s administration then went to enormous lengths to block them from winning recognition and a contract. (A majority of workers can sign authorization cards now—but employers are not required to recognize the union. The Employee Free Choice Act would fix that.) Why would Williams, a well-educated professional, want to join a union? Says Williams:
I would starve to death if I had to rely on my wages from Pace. I’d be homeless. The average pay for an adjunct for a three-credit course is just $2,500 for a 15-week course.
While a tenured professor might earn $100,000 per year, an adjunct faculty member in the next classroom with the same qualifications would earn subsistence pay of only $15,000 for the equivalent of a full-time workload. (What was that again from the Bush administration about lack of education behind the nation’s low-wage economy? We’ll address that canard in a future post.)
FULL article at link.