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Can the new economy be organized?

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  • Can the new economy be organized?

    Dow Jones & Company Inc.
    July 27 2005


    CAN THE NEW ECONOMY be organized?

    The splintering of the AFL-CIO this week was prompted largely by the
    fact that the U.S. economy has changed -- with the service sector
    growing and manufacturing declining -- but the labor movement hasn't.

    Andy Stern, a leader of the dissident unions and president of the
    Service Employees International Union, is betting that by targeting
    the 92% of the service-industries workers who aren't unionized and
    offering them a compelling message, he can effect that change.
    Employers -- and skeptics -- believe the infighting will make workers
    even more disenchanted with the labor groups and underscore the
    unions' declining clout.

    The climate isn't very hopeful. Union membership has fallen steadily
    in recent decades, particularly in industries that have seen rapid
    growth. Industries with a long tradition of unionization -- including
    auto manufacturing, airlines and grocery chains -- now are saddled
    with huge legacy costs for pensions and health-care benefits and are
    vulnerable to nonunion competitors. The United Auto Workers, despite
    repeated attempts, has had very little success organizing the U.S.
    auto assembly plants of foreign car manufacturers such as Honda Motor
    Co.

    For many workers today, unions seem unable to offer protection
    against the powerful forces of globalization and technology, which
    have sent many factory and even white-collar jobs overseas. At the
    same time, corporate managements with their sophisticated human-
    resources departments, employee-assistance programs and "cafeteria"
    benefit choices have successfully countered union claims that workers
    could do better if they were organized under a bargaining unit.

    High-technology industries have proven especially hard for unions to
    crack. With most manufacturing done overseas, U.S. technology workers
    generally don't think of themselves as union material. Many are
    focused on earning stock options and other rewards for performance
    instead of the wage increases and health insurance that unions
    typically seek.

    When unions have dug in, the victories often have been pyrrhic.
    Grocery-store workers used to enjoy generous benefits, including
    health-care coverage at no additional cost and wages of almost $18 an
    hour. For decades, grocers complied because their competitors had
    unionized workers that demanded the same compensation. But in the
    past decade, Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and other nonunionized discount
    chains have significantly expanded their food offerings. Traditional
    supermarket chains have rushed to cut labor costs, demanding that
    workers pay for part of their health-care premiums and top out at
    lower wages.

    The United Food and Commercial Workers International Union fought
    back in 2003; 60,000 Southern California grocery workers went on
    strike or were locked out for more than four months. Safeway Inc.,
    Kroger Co. and Albertson's Inc. suffered massive sales losses. And
    the union gained little ground. New workers lost free health-care
    coverage and the top pay scale for incoming food clerks fell to
    $15.10 an hour from $17.90. Grocers still are seeking to cut labor
    expenses, which account for about two-thirds of their operating
    costs.

    In an interview, Mr. Stern said he realizes the difficulties of
    organizing workers from disparate industries and says one of his
    goals is to create different kinds of unions. "First of all, we have
    to be sophisticated: The 1930s adversarial type unionism isn't going
    to apply to nurses and reporters and child-care workers," he said.
    "We need to create a lot of different models of unions."

    For example, white-collar contract employees who move from job to job
    are concerned with how to get and keep benefits. Nurses are worried
    about staffing and quality of care. Building security guards are more
    interested in wages.

    Among the initiatives Mr. Stern's union is studying are 401(k)-type
    retirement plans that wouldn't be tied to a particular employer and
    job-education programs, both of which could help employees as they
    move from job to job in an increasingly flexible economy.

    Labor experts say employers shouldn't underestimate Mr. Stern. The
    Teamsters, the SEIU and three of their partners in the dissident
    Change to Win Coalition have been responsible for more than half of
    the new members brought into the AFL-CIO in the past 10 years, says
    Mike Asensio, head of the national labor-relations practice at law
    firm Baker & Hostetler LLP in Columbus, Ohio. They also represented
    more than half of the petitions filed with National Labor Relations
    Board to represent employees, he said.

    "This is a wakeup call for labor and employers. Tomorrow there will
    be more organizing efforts and fights at the bargaining table," says
    Philip Rosen, chairman of the labor-practice group at Jackson-Lewis
    LLP in New York.

    "Some people think [the union split] is good for business, but not
    for us," said a Texas hotel entrepreneur who didn't want to be
    identified for fear of becoming the target of labor organizers. He
    worries that service unions now will step up organizing and that
    local unions will feel greater pressure to carve out their own power
    base.

    Leading the way is likely to be SEIU, whose rise parallels that of
    Mr. Stern, who became one of the youngest local presidents in the
    movement in 1977, when at age 27 he was elected to head the SEIU's
    Pennsylvania Local 668.

    Under Mr. Stern, unions have had some luck organizing janitors and
    home health-care workers, particularly on the coasts. His union in
    particular has had success using a combination of community-based,
    political and public-relations tactics to sign up workers.

    Among Mr. Stern's efforts to modernize union organizing has been his
    move to tap the power of the Internet through the Web site
    purpleocean.org. There, SEIU tries to reach out to members and
    nonmembers alike, preaching the need to expand health-care coverage
    and other protection for 21st-century workers.

    The SEIU also has shown a willingness to use some unorthodox tactics.
    In one instance, a group of janitors in Washington, D.C., attempting
    to organize, wore red T-shirts and whipped out Coke cans filled with
    ball bearings just across the street from a popular restaurant not
    far from the White House.

    Mr. Stern also has had success organizing fragmented industries. The
    union had only about 1,000 janitors in the Newark, N.J., area and had
    done little to keep pace as corporate flight from Manhattan led to a
    boom of new offices in New Jersey. Mr. Stern knew he couldn't run a
    typical recruitment drive, targeting one janitorial contracting
    company at a time: In this fragmented industry, any that agreed to
    higher pay would be quickly undercut by nonunion rivals. So SEIU
    tackled whole markets at once.

    In 11 New Jersey counties, it told contractors that they wouldn't
    have to raise pay until the SEIU got 55% of those in their area to go
    along. The union then mounted strikes and rallies by would-be members
    and took other actions to try to force contractors to comply. The
    first 55% trigger point was reached in 2001, and the union contracts
    took effect. By the end of this year, the SEIU will represent about
    70% of northern New Jersey janitors, whose pay now ranges up to
    $11.75 an hour, plus benefits.

    To bolster recruiting, Mr. Stern has moved many headquarters staff
    members out to the field. He has focused on recruiting immigrants,
    including those from Russia, Armenia and South America.

    In 1999, the SEIU organized 74,000 home health-care workers in Los
    Angeles County, Calif., alone. The majority of physicians that have
    affiliated with unions have done so with the SEIU. As part of that
    campaign, it pushed for legislation to protect health-care workers
    from being exposed to AIDS or hepatitis from needle sticks and
    organized meetings with members of Congress to protest the long hours
    worked by nurses and their lagging pay. One proposal was that
    hospitals would be required to consult with nurses in setting
    staffing levels and would be forbidden from making overtime
    mandatory.

    One of its locals in Ohio, which is driving the unionization of
    nonprofit hospitals, recently released a study challenging Ohio's
    nonprofit hospitals to justify their tax-exempt status, saying they
    have grown hugely profitable. The move was aimed at indirectly
    benefitting workers by giving them a stronger bargaining stance.

    "What you see today is pockets of workers in various industries that
    have been difficult to organize, from retail to health care, despite
    the fact that there seems to be a strong case that can be made for
    union representation in those industries," said Marick F. Masters, a
    professor of business administration at the University of Pittsburgh.

    To gain more clout, some experts say the union needs to offer
    affiliate memberships, which would give members all union benefits
    except for collective bargaining or grievance protections. The
    American Federation of Teachers has done so for years, offering
    associate members publications and insurance and union credit-card
    programs, inviting them to meetings and to participate in lobbying.

    Indeed, Lawrence Katz, a Harvard University labor economist, says
    surveys show there is "a pent up demand for unions among workers," a
    suggestion that either unions are failing to capitalize on potential
    demand or the combination of government policy and employer
    resistance is taking its toll. "There is a view," he adds, "that
    people want something that looks more like a voice in the workplace
    -- and less like collective bargaining and conflict with management."

    Back at the Chicago convention hall yesterday, minus the delegates
    and officers from the SEIU and Teamsters, AFL-CIO's executive council
    tried to put on a good face on the situation as they sat on a two-
    tiered dais before a royal blue background. "I think these guys
    realize they've been dealt a serious blow," said George Spence, an
    aircraft mechanic with American Airlines in Chicago and member of the
    Transport Workers Union, Local 563. "I think they're trying to remain
    upbeat." One delegate from Kansas City approached the microphone and
    said, "As dysfunctional as we may be right now, we're a family."
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