http://www.projo.com/projojobs/content/projo_20060903_junion3.13e4931.htmlUnions have work cut out for them
Recruiting members gets more difficult as demographics, job market change
01:00 AM EDT on Sunday, September 3, 2006
BY ARTHUR KIMBALL-STANLEY
Journal Staff Writer
Luis Da Silva used to work nights cleaning the Turk's Head Building in downtown Providence. Like many janitorial workers, Da Silva, who was born in Brazil, moved to the United States only a few years ago and speaks little English.
Da Silva said he would often see organizers from Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Local 615 outside the building, trying to talk to the janitors about Martin's Maintenance, the company used by the property owners to clean the building. The union wanted to learn about the company's staffing practices, including how much employees were paid.
"Every day I saw them outside my building," said Da Silva, 25. "I wanted to know what was the benefit of having a union."
SEIU organizers are trying to prove that Martin's Maintenance is not compensating workers properly. To research that claim, the union needed a copy of a worker's paycheck. Da Silva decided to give a copy of one of his paychecks to a union representative.
"I was beginning to believe that a union could come to my workplace," he explained. "Any worker would like to have a union. I wanted more job security. With Martin's Maintenance there was no security. You have a job today, and tomorrow they fire you."
When his supervisor at Martin's Maintenance heard he had given a copy of his check to the SEIU, Da Silva was not only fired but was also assaulted, he said in an affidavit to the National Labor Relations Board. Da Silva told the board that he was confronted while on the job by his supervisor and was repeatedly pushed and threatened for cooperating with the union. Da Silva claims he lost his job because the company wanted to intimidate other employees from dealing with the union.
Martin's Maintenance has stated that Da Silva's story is little more than union propaganda. The company claims that Da Silva was never even an employee, but was an independent contractor.
The SEIU has rallied to Da Silva's defense, saying that the incident is indicative of the situation service workers find themselves faced with and the intimidation workers face in Rhode Island when attempting to unionize. The National Labor Relations Board has taken up Da Silva's case and will hold hearings starting next month.
Many unions in Rhode Island say that stories such as Da Silva's are not uncommon and are indicative of the current state of the labor movement.
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