A heated battle is raging in Congress between major shipping companies United Parcel Service, Inc. (UPS) and FedEx Corporation and the rights of literally tens — if not hundreds — of thousands of employees hang in the balance.
You see, UPS is regulated under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) and is heavily unionized, as 240,000 of its total 425,000 employees are required to accept union bosses’ monopoly bargaining "representation." Meanwhile, FedEx is under the jurisdiction of the Railway Labor Act (RLA) — which also gives union bosses monopoly bargaining privileges, but only if an absolute majority of workers in a given bargaining unit vote to accept union bosses as their monopoly bargaining agent — and so only 4,700 of 290,000 FedEx employees have been unionized.
So now UPS is backing legislation in Congress that would switch FedEx employees to the jurisdiction of the NLRA, making it easier for union bosses to corral FedEx’s employees into union ranks and force them to pay union dues just to keep their jobs.
ReasonTV has just released a video — parodying UPS’s famous "Whiteboard" commercials — detailing the UPS/FedEx dispute:
Unfortunately, FedEx employees’ workplace freedoms are not only in jeopardy by Congressional action, but also by federal bureaucratic fiat.
Big Labor is pushing for the National Mediation Board (NMB) — a government agency charged under the RLA with mediating labor disputes within the railroad and airline industries — to make dramatic changes to its enforcement of the RLA, greasing the skids for union organizers to force tens of thousands of non-union railway and airline industry workers into union membership.
Big labor partisans from over 30 unions, led by AFL-CIO, are pushing to change the threshold union organizers need to impose unions on workers in the railway and airline industries to just a majority of workers actually voting in a union organizing election to make that decision for the whole group.
What seems like a small procedural change is in reality a major game changer, as it makes it exceedingly difficult for independent-minded workers to resist Big Labor’s well-funded, professional organizing machine, particularly since these campaigns must be run across an entire, often-nationwide bargaining unit. Also, independent-minded FedEx employees would either have to take affirmative action to oppose union "representation" or otherwise potentially allow far less than a majority of their colleagues impose an unwanted union on them.
Unfortunately, regardless of how individual workers lose their rights — through actions of Congress or through executive branch machinations — Big Labor and Big Government are likely to be the only winners in the UPS-FedEx war.