For 7 years '84-'91 I worked at a Dana plant in Pa. that made car & truck frames. We were organised under USWA, and I was a tool & die maker. This is not a right to work state. The company had been there a long time, and the union was well established. We had good wages & benifits, as good as anybody in the area, union or non union. I feel that the union was of less benifit to the skilled trades overall than it was to the other workes, who were the majority by far. The production workers, less skilled or semi skilled, made good money, largely due to being on piecework. On most of the piecework jobs they did have to work hard physically, and earned thier money. This plant employed 3,000 in good times.
There were members to whoom the union was extremely important, as they could not have kept a job in an open shop, or would have had to improve both attitude and productivity. There were a good number of these. Fewer of these were on piecework.
The steel mill in town was not union, and they offered good wages & benifits too, but they had to, in order to keep enough people satisfied to keep the union out.
The steel mill is the only large industrial employer left in that town, and is still non union. That company has been through really rough times as well, but they survived.
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At an employer before the frame plant, We did have a union vote. This was at a much smaller company, about 30 people, that had only been in busness a few years. You could talk to the owner any time You wanted to, if You thought You needed to. He was there all day every day.
One guy, about 55 years old was behind trying to get the union in, as He had not saved much for retirement, and hoped to get a pension initiated.
INTERESTING TWIST: He tried to make it look like someone else [a pot smoking kid who cared about nothing] was behind the union movement, a$$kissing the owner while esentially stabbing Him in the back.
When the vote was counted, the union only had only a handfull of votes, and Mine was not one of them. I had vocally opposed the union to anyone who would listen.
WHY NOT ? The A$$kissing backstabber was also My foreman, and was blocking My advancement to 1st class tool & diemaker [a whopping 50 cent increase], and had NOT invited Me to the meeting with the union organiser. This A$$kissing backstabber was to be the shop steward, if the union got in. HE gave ME every reason to vote against, and I didn't feel I needed a representative, and a union.
Ok I will bite. I have four direct experiences with them and I will be to the point as I can.
Worked with Ironworkers union in a right to work state. Overall the union kept jobs rolling in, and got the guys a fair wage and some benefits. They could have had better but they competed directly against private contractors and held their own. I did not think it was a bad deal they had.
Tried to work a split union fab shop. I did not stay two weeks. First day there I was told to I had a days production in the first 3 hours and "you got to slow down!! Cmon lets go get some coffee and tour the plant". Well after seeing the population of "workers" just stop and sit down smoke, read magazines etc. anytime they felt like it. I figured there was no future for this company and left. Apparently I was right, they closed operation about two years later.
UAW plant, large employer for area, again a right to work state. Union flag waviers on the floor were like rottweilers...I mean vehement in promoting the union. At the same time they had a slave shop like production line, whatever it took balls out fast as you could go if he drops stick another body in there now kinda thing. The average there was 10-12 bux an hour no matter skilled or not....bennies were not that good. They did get a fat production bonus every month for being on time...hence why they jumped thru thier butts to get it done and you would get your butt kicked in the parking lot if you stopped that line with a mistake. Horrible environment. This place is also out of business now.
I was a contracted Maintenance Planner for a large manufacturer. They had a stone age system and I was thier to bring it up to modern standards. My "office" I shared with all the production supervisors in one big room. The UAW steward would walk in there and I would see everyone's back stiffen up, talk would stop. He would walk in and be loud crude and obnoxious, say his peace and leave. He often threatened the supervisors or whoever and nobody did a thing. I was incredulous. I had a press on one side of the plant that kept going "down" about 1:00pm everyday. After some investigation I found out it was being sabotoged by the workers...they got thier qouta and did not want to run it anymore. Well I said why can't we fire them or move them off that job....all the way to the president of the facility. Leave it alone we can't do anything about it. WHAT???? I had to keep a maintenance guy stationed at that press after lunch ever day to keep it running for production. High School dropouts running stamping presses making 50k a YEAR with benefits.....and they acted like they were being screwed by the company and constantly threatening to strike. I saw the writing on the wall before I left. I had to lay out some plans and schedule some of our 300-400 ton presses to be pulled from the line and shipped to Mexico. Well they went on strike about a year after I left. They were still marching in circles in the parking lot about 3 months after almost all the machinery was in Mexico and running.
That is just my experience, no rant, no crap.
Mike I am not taking sides on the question just wanting to point something out.
A union is made up of people and people come in all sizes, shapes and sorts and each has his/hers own agenda.
As I see it, back when unions were truly needed they served their purpose well.
But just as we working folks who worked hard to make life better for our kids (next generation) we, (a whole bunch of folks) stopped compelling them to work hard to earn an honest days pay for same.
Now they have children and they slacked up even a little more.
Now we have a large population that have no idea what it means to truly earn an honest days pay. But they know they want their share of it and the least they have to do to get it the better.
All I can say is look around at who you would be getting in to bed with before you get undressed let alone climb in.
Once upon a time being in the Union meant something. Here is what it means today. It means the Union Bosses get rich. NO One Else ! It means you will do what they say and get what they give you. NOTHING MORE ! I dont know about the rest of you but I can speak for myself and make my own deals. I can negotiate my own wages and get my own benefits. Since I left the Union, my income and my lifestyle has increased tenfold ! If you want a True opinion about the Unions. Go ask the people in Detroit from the UAW. I am sure they will give you an earfull