10 Apr 2009

A Bigger Big Labor?

Posted in Blog

To regular readers of Freedom@Work, it’s certainly no secret that Big Labor’s union bosses, in the face of greater difficulty in winning workers over voluntarily, are always working to come up with new schemes to force workers into full-dues-paying union membership.

Of course, one major way union bosses get around this inconvenient truth is to use workers’ forced dues for politics, essentially buying political power to steer our already intrusive Federal government toward coercive policy to force more workers into union ranks.

On Tuesday, Big Labor’s upper echelon announced the formation of a committee dedicated to an alliance of our nation’s 12 largest unions.   The unification committee is to be led by Big Labor front group "American Rights at Work" President David Bonior.  Their goal?  You guessed it:  wielding the power of the Federal government to coerce more workers into forced unionism.

Union bosses are prone to freely and constantly shift their associations with each other.  But every day they hypocritically infringe on workers’ own freedom of association.

9 Apr 2009

Right to Work Video: Foundation Takes Action to Expose Big Labor Operatives’ Role Within Obama Administration

Posted in Blog

In our latest Right to Work video report, Foundation President Mark Mix discusses how the Foundation is pressing the Obama Administration to disclose its entanglements with Big Labor’s top political operatives using the Freedom of Information Act. Click on the video below to watch the whole thing:

Download the National Right to Work Foundation’s Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request here.

And visit the Right to Work YouTube channel to watch all our videos.

8 Apr 2009

Laugh Test: Naive Hollywood Actors Shill for Big Labor’s «Card Check» Scheme

Posted in Blog

Recently, former West Wing actors Martin Sheen and Bradley Whitford lobbied in favor of the woefully misnamed Employee Free Choice Act (better known as the Card Check Forced Unionism Bill) at a press conference with so-called American Rights at Work, the same militant lobbying group which Labor Secretary Hilda Solis played a formal role while a member of Congress.

CNS News asked the actors why they support a bill which would effectively eliminate the secret ballot in workplace unionization drives.  Whitford responded (emphasis mine),

The notion that the labor movement is out to abolish their own members’ rights to a secret ballot just doesn’t pass the laugh test. And people who are propagating the rumor that it does, their sudden compassion for worker’s rights is just not believable.

There are so many problems with that one, incredibly misinformed sentence.  As I explained last week, the card check bill makes the secret ballot a virtual dead letter.  But Whitford’s comment shows he is willing to believe whatever union bosses tell him.  Union bosses routinely work to undermine employee freedom — it’s nothing new, except to hardcore union partisans.

But Whitford also made another error.  In a sense, he’s right that the labor movement is not "out to abolish their own members’ rights to a secret ballot" — but only because the Card Check Forced Unionism Bill doesn’t have anything to do with unions’ "own members."  The bill would eliminate the secret ballot for prospective members as well as independent-minded workers who do not want the union’s "representation."  Union bosses want to destroy the secret ballot in unionization campaigns so that they can intimidate and trick employees into signing cards.

Fortunately, Sheen and Whitford just play politicians on TV.

3 Apr 2009

Analysis: Exactly How the Card Check Bill Eliminates the Secret Ballot

Posted in Blog

In the debate over the grossly misnamed Employee Free Choice Act (more accurately called the Card Check Forced Unionism Bill), union bosses have gone out of their way to convince the media that the bill does not eliminate the secret ballot in workplace unionization drives.

But legal experts here at the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation have examined the bill and the state of the current law and come to the following conclusion:

Under the Card Check Forced Unionism Bill, the provisions of the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) that refer to the secret ballot election would be rendered a dead letter, even though they are not technically stricken from federal law.

Big Labor spin artists can claim all they want that the workers can still "choose" to have a secret ballot election, but there simply is no way by which workers can force union bosses to file for a secret ballot election — and it is union bosses, not workers, who are in possession of the cards.  Reporters who repeat this union boss talking point owe their readers a correction.

The simple fact is that professional union organizers hold tremendous power in a unionization drive. If this forced unionism power grab becomes law, workers will only be privy to the information union bosses disseminate.

The text of the bill clearly states that once union bosses collect a simple majority of signed cards, "the [National Labor Relations] Board shall not direct an election but shall certify the individual or labor organization as the representative" or monopoly bargaining agent of all employees in the unit.

As former NLRB member John Raudabaugh told U.S. Senators last year,

Were the union to come up short of 50+ percent signed cards, would it really proceed to file a petition for an election? No, the secret ballot would not remain an option under the EFCA proposal.

If union bosses can’t get a majority through card check — a process during which many workers sign cards not due to actual support for the union but due to lies and intimidation by union organizers — they obviously won’t be able to win through the more fair and private secret ballot process.  As James Sherk of the Heritage Foundation and Paul Kersey of the Mackinac Center for Public Policy note,

An election would occur only when union organizers submit cards signed by a minority of workers; but union organizers do not call for an election without signed cards from a majority of workers. They know that unions usually lose these elections. The AFL-CIO’s internal studies show that unions win only 8 percent of elections that are called after less than 40 percent of workers have signed cards.

Less obvious, however, is that union bosses don’t think they can win secret ballot elections even if they collect a simple majority of cards.  Sherk and Kersey explain (emphasis mine):

Consequently union guidelines call for organizers to collect cards from 60 to 70 percent of workers in a company before going to the polls. Unions openly state that they do not go to an election without a supermajority of cards:

1. International Brotherhood of Teamsters: "The general policy of the Airline Division is to file for a representation election only after receiving a 65 percent card return from the eligible voters in a group."

2. New England Nurses Association: "Have 70-75 percent of members sign cards; if unable to reach this goal, review plan."

3. Service Employees International Union (SEIU): "[T]he rule of thumb in the SEIU is that it’s unwise to file for an election when fewer than 70 percent of the workforce has signed interest cards."

The secret ballot is much better than the alternative in workplace unionization drives because of what monopoly unionization actually means in practice under the law. Once a union is in place, it is virtually impossible to remove it. More importantly, independent-minded workers who would prefer to represent themselves, or even workers who would prefer a different union’s representation, are forced to accept the certified union as their monopoly bargaining agent. And unless those workers live in one of 22 states with Right to Work protections, they will be forced to pay dues to an unwanted union.

In other words, an individual worker’s desire to belong to a particular union — or indeed the collective desire of a simple majority of workers in a unit — is different from an individual’s desire to belong to any other private organization. The decision forces one’s coworkers — current and future — to also accept the "representation" of this particular union. A secret ballot can’t overcome this fundamental violation of individual rights, but at the very least, the secret ballot provides workers with a degree of protection against intimidation. And that protection will be lost under EFCA.

3 Apr 2009

Right to Work on CNN: Ugly SEIU «Corporate Campaign» Targets Bank of America Tellers

Posted in TV & Radio

Big Labor’s leverage over American businesses and their employees is reaching new levels.

The powerful Service Employees International Union is flexing its political muscles, demanding the Obama Administration remove the CEO of Bank of America as part of a campaign to impose unionization on its unsuspecting bank tellers. Check out the full video report from CNN’s Lou Dobbs, which includes a segment with National Right to Work President Mark Mix:

3 Apr 2009

Court Upholds Racketeering Case against Union Officials and Yellow Page Company, Trial Planned

Posted in News Releases

Phoenix, AZ (April 2, 2009) – A United States District Court has given the green light to a precedent-setting union racketeering lawsuit filed by National Right to Work Foundation attorneys for several Phoenix-based employees against Dex Media and International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) Local 1269 union officials.

Judge Mary Muguia denied significant parts of the defendants’ motions for summary judgment and held that union officials and the company should stand trial for giving preferential treatment to union agents through a skewed performance-based pay system.

The employees’ lawsuit alleges that union officials also employed by Qwest Communications subsidiary Dex Media manipulated company procedures to receive greater compensation at the expense of the nonunion plaintiffs.

The lawsuit also alleges that Dex Media colluded with union officials to implement this scheme, violating the Labor Management Relations Act (LMRA) and the Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO).

Some of the methods used to increase the union agents’ compensation included reassigning accounts from nonunion employees to union officials, giving union agents “double commissions” for sales made by other workers, and allowing union officials to regularly sell lucrative “group ads” while denying similar opportunities to nonmember employees. By knowingly aiding union agents as they stage-managed company rules to increase their performance-based pay, Dex Media is accused of bribing union officials to act against workers’ interests.

Although the judge ruled there was insufficient evidence to try the RICO claims filed against IBEW Local 1269, the lawsuit against union officials and Dex Media will proceed. The court scheduled a status hearing for April 27, at which time a date will be set for trial of the LMRA and RICO conspiracy claims against the corporate defendants and the union agents.

“Union officials colluded with their employer to sell out the very workers they claim to represent,” said Stefan Gleason, vice president of the National Right to Work Foundation. “We anticipate a successful legal resolution, but the only way to permanently stop this type of abuse is to get rid of union officials’ monopoly bargaining privileges and make union representation truly voluntary.”

3 Apr 2009

Federal Labor Board to Prosecute Tenet Healthcare for Scheme to Sweep Nurses into Unionization

Posted in News Releases

News Release

Federal Labor Board to Prosecute Tenet Healthcare for Scheme to Sweep Nurses into Unionization

Employees seek to throw out union after union bosses’ ugly campaign of harassment and coercion

Houston, Texas (April 3, 2009) — National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) prosecutors have filed a complaint this week against Tenet Healthcare Corporation after it entered into a backroom deal with union officials designed to force nurses into union ranks at multiple Houston-area hospitals.

With free legal assistance from the National Right to Work Foundation, two Houston-area nurses, Esther Marissa Cuellar, a nurse at Tenet’s Cypress Fairbanks Medical Center, and Linda D. Bertrand, a nurse at Tenet’s Park Plaza Hospital and Medical Center, filed unfair labor practice charges alleging that an “Election Procedures Arrangement” (EPA) Tenet and California Nurses Association (CNA) union officials secretly established violates employees’ rights.

The unfair labor practice charges also allege that Tenet officials provided CNA union operatives with unlawful organizing assistance in violation of federal statutes: In Tenet healthcare facilities, outside union organizers are given free reign to aggressively push for a union presence; but Tenet nurses who oppose unionization, on the other hand, are forbidden from using Tenet facilities to express their views.

(Continue reading this news release…)

3 Apr 2009

Federal Labor Board to Prosecute Tenet Healthcare for Scheme to Sweep Nurses into Unionization

Posted in News Releases

Houston, Texas (April 3, 2009) – National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) prosecutors have filed a complaint this week against Tenet Healthcare Corporation after it entered into a backroom deal with union officials designed to force nurses into union ranks at multiple Houston-area hospitals.

With free legal assistance from the National Right to Work Foundation, two Houston-area nurses, Esther Marissa Cuellar, a nurse at Tenet’s Cypress Fairbanks Medical Center, and Linda D. Bertrand, a nurse at Tenet’s Park Plaza Hospital and Medical Center, filed unfair labor practice charges alleging that an “Election Procedures Arrangement” (EPA) Tenet and California Nurses Association (CNA) union officials secretly established violates employees’ rights.

The unfair labor practice charges also allege that Tenet officials provided CNA union operatives with unlawful organizing assistance in violation of federal statutes: In Tenet healthcare facilities, outside union organizers are given free reign to aggressively push for a union presence; but Tenet nurses who oppose unionization, on the other hand, are forbidden from using Tenet facilities to express their views.

The NLRB regional office in Fort Worth consolidated the two nurses’ charges and filed a formal complaint against Tenet Healthcare Corporation. Trial proceedings in the case are scheduled to take place before an NLRB Administrative Law Judge at the NLRB Courtroom in Houston on May 26.

“CNA union bosses and complicit Tenet Corporation officials must be held accountable for this scheme to push nurses into union ranks,” said Stefan Gleason, vice president of the National Right to Work Foundation. “CNA union bosses are pursuing a coercive organizing campaign – making it more difficult for employees to resist the CNA’s professional union organizers – to force unwilling nurses across the state of Texas and our country into forced-dues-paying union ranks.”

To date, CNA union organizers have successfully obtained monopoly bargaining privileges at one Houston-area Tenet healthcare facility under similarly controversial circumstances and have expanded their coercive organizing efforts in Tenet facilities nationwide. Recently a Philadelphia, Pennsylvania-area registered nurse, with help from National Right to Work Foundation attorneys, filed similar unfair labor practice charges against Tenet and CNA union officials.

2 Apr 2009

Hospital Employee Challenges Employer’s Backroom Deal with Union Operatives

Posted in Blog

Regular Freedom@Work readers may remember the Foundation’s ongoing efforts helping nurses fight back against the California Nurses Association (CNA) union’s coercive organizing drives at Houston and Philadelphia-area healthcare facilities.

Now an employee at Hahnemann University Hospital in Philadelphia has again stepped forward, filing unfair labor practice charges against Tenet Healthcare Corporation for giving CNA operatives preferential access to company property for the purposes of union organizing. Previous Foundation unfair labor practice charges also allege union organizers are engaging in illegal prerecognition bargaining: in exchange for company assistance, union officials may have agreed to terms and conditions of employment on behalf of workers they don’t even have the power to represent yet.

Here’s a copy of the Foundation’s unfair labor practice charges (.pdf). And here’s a link to the Foundation’s video on coercive CNA organizing in Houston. 

1 Apr 2009

Statement: Washington State Court Blocks Compulsory Unionism Power Grab at FedEx Ground

Posted in Blog, News Releases

The following is a statement from Stefan Gleason, Vice President of the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation, regarding today’s Washington Superior Court ruling in Anfinson v. FedEx Ground. The court ruled the plaintiffs are independent contractors and are not therefore "employees."

"This case is nothing more than a Trojan Horse — a union organizing tactic brought by lawyers allied with UPS and organized labor. The real goal of this litigation is to force FedEx Ground independent contractors out of business and instead turn them into ‘employees’ for purposes of forced unionization.

"Union bosses are desperately grabbing for more forced union dues — and meanwhile UPS is buckling under pressure from its non-union competition.

"But they know that federal forced unionism laws do not give union bosses the ability to shove independent contractors into union ranks, so this case was simply brought to impose a change in the drivers’ status.

"We’re pleased that the court ruling will have the effect of protecting drivers who may wish to refrain from union affiliation from being compelled by federal labor laws to join or support a union."

The National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation is a nonprofit, charitable organization providing free legal aid to employees whose human or civil rights have been violated by compulsory unionism abuses. The Foundation, which can be contacted toll-free at 1-800-336-3600, is assisting thousands of employees in close to 200 cases nationwide.