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October 25th, 2008 Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
If you Google “Employee Free Choice Act”, you get something like 275,000 hits. Most of the postings (the vast majority) are posted by organizations singing the praise of this proposed ammendment to the National Labor Relations Act, and claiming how it will revive the labor movement in the United States. Some talk about how it will “level the playing field”; some talk about how it’s way past time to help the labor movement get back into the business of helping people. Let’s spend a couple of minutes talking about what it really does.
First, it takes away a person’s right to a secret ballot election. Now for those of you who have never been through a union campaign and don’t understand the intensity, the peer pressure, the intimidation, the arm-wrenching that can occur, this may sound good. By the way, some of these things do come from both sides of the campaign. But when the company commits these acts, organized labor has the ability to step in and file unfair labor practices and even get an election set aside and earn a bargaining order - if the behavior is aggregious enough. But what happens when organized labor behaves this way? Basically nothing. So, back to the secret ballot election. If you’re in a campaign and are being pressured to sign a union card today, you can do it to alleviate the pressure from the organizing team. But, you still have the right to decide if you want to be represented by the union in the privacy of your voting booth. No one looking over your shoulder; not the company, not the union. Just you. The Employee Free Choice Act will take that away. Once this change is made, there’s no way to really stop the pressure and intimidation from the organizer - except to sign one of his cards. The problem is once you sign it, your decision-making opportunity is over. When they get a majority of the employees to sign cards, the union is recognized. End of story.
Let’s look at another aspect of this change to the National Labor Relations Act, and one of the key ingredients that is not being discussed fully. EFCA also implements financial penalties on the company for committing “unfair labor practices”. It does this by permitting the National Labor Relations Board to fine the company for committing the acts that are illegal (threats, promises, intimidation, etc…). Charges of this type are frequently filed when a representative of the company is talking with employees about the reasons not to sign a card and vote for union representation. The company may be communicating in good faith, but in the act of answering questions or trying to get a point across, a supervisor or manager screws up and says something that shouldn’t be said - or worse yet, is accused of saying something “illegal”. Under EFCA, the Board has the ability to fine the company up to $20,000 for each violation! Let’s think about this. A worksite with 1,000 people may have 50 supervisors or first line managers. If only 20% of these (10 supervisors) have one charge filed against them, it can amount to as much as $200,000 in fines. Now, don’t get me wrong, this shouldn’t happen. But most companies can’t afford to face the risk of this kind of expense, especially in today’s environment. In another example, you could end up with one bad apple in the management ranks who puts the company’s future in jeopardy out of pure stupidity before it is known and corrective action by the company can be taken. So, under EFCA what does the company do? They shut off communication during the campaign to prevent the exposure to this kind of expense. When that happens, the only people doing the talking are the organizing team, and like in any argument there are two sides but employees only get to hear from one. Sounds like it creates a one-sided debate, doesn’t it? As my blog title says, this legislation is designed to “cut off the flow” of communication. Not what anyone needs. It doesn’t help the employee and it doesn’t help the company. What it does is increase the adversarial relationship in the workplace. It will definitely help increase the union’s win-rate in its campaigns. And by definition, the EFCA is legislation written to help increase unionization in America. In life, COMMUNICATION is what it’s all about. Reduce it and nothing improves.
I mentioned increasing the union’s win-rate in the paragraph above. Do you realize that the union is currently winning over 60% of its elections? Don’t believe me? CLICK HERE to view a link to the most recent report from the NLRB for the month of August 2008. The problem is they can’t get enough campaigns to go to election, because under current rules the company has the ability to communicate freely with employees during the campaign. They can’t threaten, intimidate, promise or spy on employees (the old TIPS rule), but they can talk without fear of a discussion costing the farm.
I’m sorry that organized labor can’t get more campaigns to reach an election, but there’s a reason for that. The reason is that when people have time to think through the problem and hear both sides of the argument, they’ll usually make the right decision. Many times the right decision is to work in an open environment free of any adversarial behaviors. Other times, the company’s management is “just plain dumb”, and the right decision is to have a third party represent employees. But most importantly, without EFCA there is a private ballot election where the employee can go into that private booth and make a decision free of anyone’s pressure.
I can’t honestly say I’m a union proponent. I tend to lean the other way. I can say I agree there are companies who deserve to have to deal with a third party representing their employees. But I can also say that I believe people deserve to hear the full story, not a one-sided version. I believe people should be free to vote in private, and not decide on union representation by signing an authorization card because of pressure and intimidation.
The Employee Free Choice Act is serious. Sure it can result in increasing the membership roles of labor organizations nationwide. But there are downsides. We’ll talk about those over the next couple of days.