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Unions: We’re Better Off Without Them

How the Obama administration's push for the Employee Free Choice Act could cripple the backbone of the economy: small businesses.

 

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I got the call from my assistant just as I was getting seated on a plane with my family heading to Dallas for Thanksgiving. "I thought you better know this," she said with pain in her voice, "OSHA is here." Three words that would chill any business owner. Because if an Occupational Safety and Health Administration inspector shows up unannounced it means someone in your company—or outside it—has complained to them about a possible safety problem. Often a union is trying to find some fuel for a campaign. Tearfully I kissed my wife and kids and got off the plane—United actually held the flight so I could exit—and headed back to our family-owned bag manufacturing factory to find out what was going on.

My family thought I should have just gone to Dallas. But my paranoia runs too deep. With the Obama Administration pushing the Employee Free Choice Act, a bill that would end elections and force companies to recognize a union if over half its employees signed cards requesting one, something called a "card check," I'm worried by anything that looks like possible organizing. And an OSHA visit fits the bill.

 
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My concern isn't simply paranoia. Union campaigns are exhausting, deeply distracting events, and even though EFCA, as it has come to be known, promises to do away with campaigns, I'm willing to bet that the likely compromise will keep some sort of campaign in place, while making it easier for unions to organize. We've been through two campaigns, and know all about their ability to disrupt. About 13 years ago our company's employees voted to get rid of the union they'd had for nearly 30 years. But the six weeks before the vote were horrible. Union organizers, including one flown in from headquarters, descended on our company, pigeonholing employees on the plant floor. Production crashed, and our scrap rate tripled. Determined to stay neutral, we finally had to speak up once rumors began to spread that we'd close the plant if the union won.

Then three years later our company fought off an organizing drive by the Graphic Communications International Union. Truthfully, we hadn't been prepared for life without a union. We didn't build a human resources department, failed to craft a wage scale to guarantee timely increases, and didn't reach out enough to hear employee concerns. Again, the campaign hammered our business. Production fell 30 percent during the month and a half campaign as we conducted employee meetings explaining the downsides of belonging to a union, including paying dues and uncertainity about how contract negotiations might go. My siblings and I logged 20 hour days talking one-on-one with employees and leading meetings where I pointed out that unions had not saved local jobs at 10 factories that had recently closed. Employees spontaneously came forward to state their grievances, and while we could make no promises of change during an election period, we let them know we understood. The union mounted no counterattack. In the end, our employees petitioned the union to go away, and they heeded that call.

Why go through all this effort? Like most businesspeople, we don't want a union coming between us and our employees. We worry that a union might attempt to drive up wages higher than we can afford, or foist a health care plan on us more expensive than our thin margins can handle. Our past experience with a union taught us—and many of employees said as much—that too often the union protected employees with the lowest production or worst quality. We also know that some union contracts strictly limit the ability of managers to help run or setup machinery, something that would deeply hurt our company, where supervisor's often wield wrenches.

The mere thought of new labor law has inspired some companies to react. One business in my city has started to pay more attention to employee communication, publishing a monthly newsletter and holding meetings with shifts to explain how the company is doing. "We hope by opening lines of communication that folks will feel better about the company," the owner told me. "And, of course, less likely to embrace a union." Another business owner has gone so far to hire a firm to conduct an employee survey so he can identify and resolve any festering problems. Another, a local printer, has quietly begun moving more work to their Mexican facility.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: reckiw @ 09/24/2009 9:25:55 PM

    Unions, the new capitalist landlords! Now that is ironic!

    If it wasn't that Kelly is so spot on, this would be funny.

  • Posted By: Gregory10031 @ 07/13/2009 11:22:07 PM

    So, Newsweek - you don' t mind renting office space from a union - mine, to be specific - the New York City District Council of Carpenters, that's where you recently moved your New York offices to - but you write hatchet job articles attacking unions?

    I helped renovate your offices on the 3rd and 4th floors of 395 Hudson St - a building that has a big District Council of Carpenters sign on the front - I was a union shop steward on my crew, as a matter of fact!

    The desk you sit at to write your anti union bile was installed by a union member - me to be exact!

    Can you stand the irony?

  • Posted By: tm80401 @ 07/10/2009 10:30:07 AM

    Kelly is a liar. Read the bill. The EFCA does not 'do away with elections'. It does away with the power of the company to require them. If the employees decide they want an election instead of a card check, they get an election. It places the power of HOW to decide on a union in the hands of the employees, not managers.

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