Saturday, 8 October 2011

BABY NEEDS A NEW PAIR OF SHOES



By David Macaray
October 7th, 2011

How many stockbrokers, lawyers, bankers, accountants, aluminum siding salesmen or rodeo clowns would turn down a big, fat pay raise if it came with strings attached? 
What if accepting that pay raise was contingent upon all future new-hires being denied the opportunity to earn those same wages? 
Would they make a personal sacrifice for these unsuspecting, future employees ~ reject a pay raise as a matter of principle ~ or would they take the money without giving it a second thought? 

My guess is that most would accept the money.

And yet we hear the pejorative term “sell-out” applied to union negotiators who agree to two-tier arrangements.  Under a two-tier wage/benefit schedule, new-hires can never receive the same compensation as those employees already on the payroll.  

We hear “sell-out” applied to the UAW.  And, unfortunately, we hear it applied with little or no understanding of how ferociously the union resisted it, or how forcefully the two-tier configuration was crammed down their throats.

Look at the record. 
1. First of all, no one but organized labor categorically opposes the two-tier system.  That’s because no one but organized labor has the ideological and institutional solidarity to generate that opposition.  

2. Second, the record will show that many union locals have risked their own economic well-being by designating the two-tier as a “strike issue.”  

3. And third, even a cursory look at the history of collective bargaining will show that those unions who’ve accepted two-tier arrangements have been dragged to that decision, pissing and moaning, kicking and screaming.
I’ve sat at the bargaining table when the two-tier was broached.  It’s an insidious negotiating device.  

To begin with, the company comes at you with a steamroller.  They paint a dreadful economic picture, one colored with dire scenarios of massive takeaways, lay-offs, even plant closures.  

In the case of the UAW, the companies’ woes were already public knowledge.  Everyone knew Detroit was getting creamed by Japan, and that the UAW had lost over a million members, reducing it to a shell of its former self.
Management tells you that they’re sinking, that they need help, that they need a lifeline.  

It’s terrible news.  

The picture is dark; prospects are dark; the meeting room itself seems to grow palpably darker.  

Then, suddenly, a ray of light….when they announce that there’s a way out of this mess, a way that won’t require pay cuts, or furloughs, or layoffs, or increased medical premiums.
If the union will allow the company to low-ball all future employees, the company will promise not to penalize any existing employees.  

Simple as that.  

Everyone not only gets to keep all the goodies they currently have, but there might even be a modest pay raise in the piece.  

All they have to do is allow the company to change the way they compensate new-hires.  

But the company also somberly warns the union:  If we reject this two-tier proposal, those necessary cost savings will have to come out of our own hide.

When we present our standard objections ~ that these draconian steps aren’t necessary, that they aren’t fair, that they’re un-American, that they’ll be resented and despised, etc. ~ the company reminds us that no one presently on the payroll, not one single person, will be affected by this arrangement, that it only applies to hypothetical workers, to fictional workers, to workers who don’t technically even “exist.”

They make it sound eminently reasonable.  

For example, if any potential new-hire examines the contract and doesn’t like what he sees in the two-tier arrangement, he’s free to walk away and find work elsewhere.  No one’s going to be forced to do anything that doesn’t make absolute sense to them.  In other words, it’s your classic win-win situation.

But make no mistake.  By acknowledging that the beleaguered UAW had its back against the wall, we’re not suggesting the two-tier is defensible, because it’s not.  Indeed, it’s unfair, it’s extortionate, it kills morale, it erodes solidarity, and, ultimately, it betrays you, because even after you agree to it (against your better judgment), the company continues to chip away at your wages and benefits ~ as if you never agreed to anything.

The two-tier is an abomination.  The problem isn’t how to identify it; the problem is how to stop it from finding its way into a union contract.

The job declension that exists today resembles something like this (listed in declining order):
~ Full-time, fully paid and fully benefited workers

~ Two-tier workers (lesser pay, lesser benefits)

~ Common jobs (mediocre pay, occasional benefits; Walmart)

~ Perma-temps (sufficient hours, no benefits)

~ Temps (spotty work, no benefits)

~ Undocumented workers (less than federal min. wage, no benefits, victimization)

~ Part-time workers (supplemental income, no bennies)

~ Day-laborers (low pay, no bennies, no guaranteed work)

~ Panhandlers
Clearly, those who have it best are the men and women employed in full-time jobs at decent pay with good benefits (e.g., union workers in a big-time manufacturing plant).  

Correspondingly, those who have it the worst are the guys, usually Spanish-speakers, who hang out at Home Depot looking for pick-up jobs.

That top category, where people make decent wages and enjoy good benefits, used to be considered standard procedure in America.  

No one really felt it was that big a deal.  After all, good jobs were what this country was supposed to be all about.  

Today those “regular” jobs are considered a luxury.  

That’s how far we’ve fallen.

David Macaray, a Los Angeles playwright and author (It’s Never Been Easy: Essays on Modern Labor), was a former union rep. He can be reached at: dmacaray@earthlink.net. Read other articles by David.

2 comments:

  1. I full-time job with a living wage and full benefits is a dinosaur. I know... I'm a panhandler now.

    Ever since I entered the workforce, a long time ago, American workers have had their benefits chipped away. Every year a little bit less.

    The piggy republicans call it free market, free from union contracts and restrictions.

    Yes you'll be free, free to compete with the rest of growing numbers of panhandlers. What? You haven't noticed? Get in line buster.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for your time Rick.

    In the mid 1960's my father, employed by Sun Oil Company, was told to move to an inner city to clean up a mess. He turned down the "offer" because our family was settled in a lovely small town in a beautiful area and he did not want to mess with that. He was with the company for decades and had done a lot of good work for them.

    Suddenly, he was let go for some obscure reason but, face it, we knew the truth of it. They did it a WEEK before he was to move up on the pension scale. Fortunately he has picked up enough assets over the year to survive selling them off one by one.

    But as you say, I have watched the union busting and the decimation of workers' rights all my life. This is one reason I boycott places like walmart because they played a HUGE role in the current situation.

    I watched our recently retired PM come into power 15 years ago and immediately cancel ALL union contracts including doctors and teachers. Just, slashed them up and I watched our people end up on the street unless they accepted half wages and worse conditions. The Doctors got back just fine, nurses not so much. As a result our medical system began to fail, hospitals became grungy and the food nauseating.

    I live in the warmest part of Canada. What was once the rare sight of someone panhandling is now commonplace and every day the local rag has stories about "illegal campers" and their litter or whatever. The growth industry seems to be helping the street people and providing them with safe injection sites.

    It is criminal. And it is bad here because my country, Canada, is fully into pushing the NWO agenda of weeding out the "unfit". "Unfit" meaning the useless eaters, non survivors etc that are the result to a great degree of these union bashing actions.

    ReplyDelete

If your comment is not posted, it was deemed offensive.