Early American Coal Miners' Strike ~ Harpers magazine
If you’re looking for evidence of just how confident, militant,
and insufferably arrogant companies have become in recent years, look no
further than the phenomenon of the lockout.
A lockout is where a company closes its doors, refusing to allow
its union employees to return to work until they accede to company demands ~ demands
that typically call for staggering cuts in wages and benefits.
Unlike strikes ~ which, as the ultimate manifestation of
employee dissatisfaction with management, are a universally recognized form of
protest ~ lockouts are a form of extortion.
A lockout represents an unambiguous threat, an ultimatum.
Management figuratively places a gun to the employees’ heads and says take it
or leave it.
There was a time not long ago when strikes were a regular part
of the American economic landscape, and when, conversely, lockouts were about
as scarce as hen’s teeth. In fact, lockouts were practically unheard
of.
But given that the business world has been recalibrated ~ and
given the availability of replacement workers, part-timers and temps, coupled
with the weakening of state and federal labor laws ~ strikes are now relatively
uncommon, and, in a reversal, lockouts have become management’s new weapon of
choice.
One of the uglier incidents occurred recently at Caterpillars’
London, Ontario, facility.
After the membership refused company demands that they accept a
whopping 55-percent wage cut, plus the elimination of the pension plan (along
with other take-aways), the plant’s 465 production workers were abruptly locked
out.
No further negotiating, no compromises, no mediation; the
company went directly to lockout mode.
Then, after a 6-week lockout, Caterpillar announced it was
shutting the plant down for good, and that everyone had lost their jobs.
That’s what we politely meant by businesses “recalibrating.”
Strikes have always had a distinctly schizoid nature, being both
dreaded and embraced, glorified and vilified Traditionally, when workers
in a viable facility (i.e., one making a healthy profit) reached the point in
contract negotiations where the company refused to budge, they hit the
bricks.
They shut the place down, walked off the job, thereby depriving
the company of the ability to make a profit, and, very importantly, sacrificing
their own economic well-being by no longer earning a wage or receiving
benefits.
Because the stakes are so high, strikes have always been rightly
regarded as spooky, monumental undertakings. While some strikes have been
successful, many ~ perhaps most ~ have not. But successful or not,
strikes need to be recognized as labor’s only real weapon.
Depriving management of the opportunity to make money is the
only bullet in the chamber; everything else is theatrics. Other than
striking, what’s a union going to do to get the management’s attention ~ threaten
to stand on the front lawn and scream insults through a megaphone?
Here’s a true story.
In 1983 I was part of a union negotiating team that called a
strike against a major manufacturing company, an action that put more than 700
men and women out on the street. It was a chaotic scene. Even
though we got a 96-percent strike authorization vote prior to the shutdown,
once the real thing happened, and the hammer dropped, people were
understandably frightened and anxious. The strike lasted 57 days.
Looking to nip any problems in the bud, we immediately contacted
the company’s HR rep and made clear our views regarding people crossing the
picket line. Although we were a tight local, and didn’t anticipate scabs,
you never know what people will do in a crisis.
We told the company that if they allowed scabs to cross, we
would be forced to retaliate by taking out full-page ads in local newspapers,
exposing the company’s greed and stubbornness, and calling them bad names.
They didn’t take our peremptory salvo well. The strike was
barely four hours old, and tensions were already running high. They told
us to shut up, mind our own business, and not presume to lecture them on how to
run their operation. But they also informed us that they had no intention
of allowing people to cross over, believing that allowing people to cross would
create more problems than it solved. We believed them.
But within a week or two, a handful of our guys tried to do just
that. They approached at night (it was a 24-hour operation) hoping they
wouldn’t be observed, and asked to be put to work.
When the company refused, it occurred to them that being denied
entry might very well constitute a “lockout.” While it was a known fact
that strikers weren’t
entitled to unemployment benefits, wouldn’t “locked-out” employees be eligible?
They went down to the unemployment office and made their
case. They told the duty officer that even though their union had called
a strike, they themselves wished to continue working, but the company wouldn’t
let them. “Doesn’t that mean that this is a lockout and not a strike?” they asked
eagerly. The duty officer seemed puzzled. She thought about it a
moment and answered: “What’s a lockout?”
The Justice of God: Ron Paul on Liberty
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