Boeing Controversy Surrounding NLRB vs Boeing: Analysis and Opinions

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The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) is suing Boeing over its decision to build a new plant in South Carolina, alleging violations of labor laws related to union retaliation. Discussions highlight the complexity of the situation, with some arguing that if Boeing breached a contract, the blame lies with them, while others express concern about government overreach in corporate operations. The case's outcome hinges on whether Boeing's decision was primarily motivated by past strikes against union workers or purely business considerations. Critics note that the lawsuit may be more about the power dynamics between unions and companies rather than a straightforward legal violation. Ultimately, the implications of this case could affect Boeing's reputation and future hiring practices.
CAC1001
So many have probably heard by now how the National Labor Relations Board is suing Boeing over its plan to build a plant in South Carolina, a right-to-work state, saying it broke labor laws. Was wondering people's thoughts on this? On the one hand, I can understand it is wrong for a company to violate labor laws if that's what they did, on the other, I find it really uncomforting that the government can tell a private company where it can move its operations.
 
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CAC1001 said:
So many have probably heard by now how the National Labor Relations Board is suing Boeing over its plan to build a plant in South Carolina, a right-to-work state, saying it broke labor laws. Was wondering people's thoughts on this? On the one hand, I can understand it is wrong for a company to violate labor laws if that's what they did, on the other, I find it really uncomforting that the government can tell a private company where it can move its operations.

If Boeing violated contract, I blame Boeing. Sorry, but if Boeing violated contract, then this isn't "the government telling a private company where it can move its operations". This is "a private company agreeing to certain terms and then breaking them".

If this was never in a contract, then the lawsuit will fall through.
 
The lawsuit aside, it speaks to the power of unions to dictate (using contracts) how a company can do business. Screw 20,000 non-union jobs being created if 10,000 union jobs are saved. The media coverage on this has been very light, suprisingly. That tells me that Boeing is likely in the right and this won't turn out good for the NLRB.

Lawsuit aside, again, even the minor publicity of Boeing 'union dodging' states has a chance to hurt it. If the lawsuit is baseless, just the accusation can stick with a company and may affect their incoming newhires in the near future.
 
IMO>
It's time to wake up and smell the coffee. This is not a new cycle - how many companies fled the "Rust Belt" to relocate in the Southern US since the late 1960's? Fortunately, those jobs stayed in the US and quite a few people migrated south to places like Atlanta, Houston, and Tampa.

As per Boeing, the existing union workers are unaffected by the construction of the new plant. Next, the obvious solution is for Boeing to build the plant off-shore. It's doubtful many US workers will be able to relocate to foreign soil.
Again - IMO
 
mege said:
The lawsuit aside, it speaks to the power of unions to dictate (using contracts) how a company can do business.
In principle, a contract is a mutually beneficial agreement between two willing parties: it is not a forceful coercion of one party by another. I'd rather see companies not bend over and sign these contracts with unions than sign them and then complain later.
 
Gokul43201 said:
In principle, a contract is a mutually beneficial agreement between two willing parties: it is not a forceful coercion of one party by another. I'd rather see companies not bend over and sign these contracts with unions than sign them and then complain later.
That's a good point, strictly as a response to unions supposedly "dictating" via contract how a company does business, but as far as I can tell, that's not applicable in this case. This is not a case of a union suing Boeing for breach of contract. They are being sued by the NLRB, and I haven't seen any evidence that Boeing ever signed a contract with the NLRB.
 
Boeing says it isn't true that they are retaliating against the union for strikes, that they have increased their plant operations in Washington state since the last strike.

EDIT: Another thing to remember is that if it was retaliation, then that would hurt the workers in Washington state. But this doesn't hurt them at all. Boeing isn't trying to relocate the plant to South Carolina, they just want to build a new plant in South Carolina.

Gokul43201 said:
In principle, a contract is a mutually beneficial agreement between two willing parties: it is not a forceful coercion of one party by another. I'd rather see companies not bend over and sign these contracts with unions than sign them and then complain later.

I agree, but IMO contracts between unions and companies I would not say are necessarilly "mutually beneficial agreements between two willing parties," for two reasons:

1) The union doesn't benefit the company
2) The union engages in bullying tactics (do what we want or strike), so the company isn't per se willing
 
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http://www.manufacturing.net/News/Feeds/2011/05/mnet-mnet-industry-focus-facilities-and-operations-after-boeing-complaint-nlrb-plans-even-more-aggre/
 
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This isn't about violating any contract between Boeing and unions. It's about violating labor law. Specifically, you can't retalitate against workers for engaging in a strike, no more than you retaliate against a worker for lodging a sexual discrimination complaint, etc.

The case hinges on whether Boeing opened a new plant in South Carolina to retaliate against Washington workers that engaged in strikes or whether Boeing opened a new plant in South Carolina because it made business sense.

In other words, the NLRB is on real shaky ground and surely they'll lose. To win, they have to prove that Boeing's decision was primarily made directly because of past strikes, specifically to punish union workers for striking. Just proving South Carolina's right to work laws played a part in Boeing's decision shouldn't be enough.

The migration of factories from the rust belt provide a good precedent.

Labor unions have one advantage: factory owners can't very well move their factory. Somebody has to work in those factories where they're located and the company can't fire union workers and replace them with non-union workers, since that would be retaliation against workers for engaging in a strike.

None the less, labor's advantage is limited in time. Eventually, the factory will become so old that it makes more economical sense to rebuild than continually repairing and upgrading a building that's outlived its designed lifetime. The company is free to choose the location of its new factory(s) based on sound business decisions, including tax rates, labor rates, transportation costs, etc. Choosing to build a new factory somewhere cheaper generally isn't considered retaliation against striking workers even if cheaper labor is one of the factors considered when choosing a new location.

In fact, cheap labor and low tax rates may turn out to be only short term advantages. Once a company has built its new factory, it's trapped itself and will have a hard time relocating if the state decides to raise tax rates and to change its labor laws. So, South Carolina's labor laws may be an attractive benefit of building there, but it would be bordering on mismanagement if that's the only reason they have for building there.

Basically, the NLRB will have to have some type of internal memos, etc, that show that retaliating against striking workers was the main motivation for opening the new plant. Without that, it's just going to be too easy for Boeing to show why opening a new plant in South Carolina makes perfect business sense regardless of whether Washington workers had strikes or not.
 
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  • #10
The timeline is in Boeing's favor - they bought the plant in March, 2008, but their 2008 strike was in September. They would have to argue that this was in retaliation for the 2005 strike.

Of course, the NLRB doesn't intend to win. They intend to settle.
 
  • #11
IMO - if a union wants a seat on the Board - they should make an investment in the companies they represent - buy some stock - share in the profits of their work.
 
  • #12
WhoWee said:
IMO - if a union wants a seat on the Board - they should make an investment in the companies they represent - buy some stock - share in the profits of their work.

Hmm...is that ever done, I wonder?
 
  • #13
CAC1001 said:
I agree, but IMO contracts between unions and companies I would not say are necessarilly "mutually beneficial agreements between two willing parties," for two reasons:

1) The union doesn't benefit the company
2) The union engages in bullying tactics (do what we want or strike), so the company isn't per se willing
How is that a bullying tactic? If I tell my employer that I will not work if they continue to undervalue my worth, is that a bullying tactic? No, I consider that a free market force. The employer is fully free to fire my *** if it thinks it can replace me with a better worker. If I can convince a half dozen other people in a similar situation to join me, it is still a free market force, isn't it?

PS: We should be more mindful that this side-discussion on unions is somewhat off-topic to this thread.
 
  • #14
lisab said:
Hmm...is that ever done, I wonder?

Union pension funds are are widely placed.
 
  • #15
WhoWee said:
IMO - if a union wants a seat on the Board - they should make an investment in the companies they represent - buy some stock - share in the profits of their work.

lisab said:
Hmm...is that ever done, I wonder?

Is what ever done? Unions invest in the company or get a seat on the board.

The board of directors consists of whoever is elected and it should represent the corporation's stakeholders (at least according to modern corporate philosophy). The workers (and their union) are a stakeholder in the company, even if not a stockholder, and many corporations do have union representation on their board of directors, along with major creditors, major stockholders, etc, and perhaps a person or two completely independent of the corporation (that way there's at least a person or two who is theoretically unbiased and can consider the corporation's health independent of the impact it has on any particular stakeholder).

The make-up of the board of directors and what the make-up should be is more relevant to things such as who's speech is really protected by giving corporations First Amendment protection, etc.
 
  • #16
Gokul43201 said:
How is that a bullying tactic? If I tell my employer that I will not work if they continue to undervalue my worth, is that a bullying tactic? No, I consider that a free market force. The employer is fully free to fire my *** if it thinks it can replace me with a better worker. If I can convince a half dozen other people in a similar situation to join me, it is still a free market force, isn't it?

A union is a legalized worker cartel that let's workers artificially increase the price of their labor to a business, beyond the market rate. Your worth is decided by the market. If the business keeps paying you below the norm the market has set for your profession, then yeah, you are free to tell them to go shove it unless they pay you the proper amount. The business will likely do this because if not, they will lose talent to other companies that are competing for the same labor.

What a union allows is for when workers feel they should be paid more, paid say a "living wage" and thus seek to bully the company into doing this, and if it tries to balk, then strikes. If your industry as a whole pays you and the half-dozen other people a certain amount and you think that is "wrong," and form a union to get more money, that isn't free-market. If on the other hand, you and the half-dozen others discover that the company is paying you half what the industry norm is, then that is different.
 
  • #17
As Gokul said, calling unions bullies does a real disservice to labor and industry in general. I was in management with a construction company and with a pulp and paper company before managing to cross the line (first ever in the company!) to become a unionized hourly laborer. I was the top operator on a brand new paper machine, my shift's shop steward, and the paper machine's representative in contract negotiations. I have seen both sides of the management/labor divide and participated in both.

Regardless of what the corporate types tell you. companies get some real tangible benefits from dealing with unions. They get a stable workforce that is committed to work at a specified wage and benefit level over a specified period of time. They also get work rules that can be applied uniformly and that are agreed to by both sides and are legally binding.

The paper machine that I ran seemed to outsiders to have really cream-of-the-crop jobs compared to other jobs in the area. The truth is that many of the people that came for the pay and benefits washed out over work-rules relating to absenteeism and other problematic behavior. No problem and no friction with the union, because we had agreed to those work rules and abided by them ourselves. Painting either side of a labor issue as the "bad guy" without any experience in that work-place is short-sighted, at best.
 
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  • #18
WhoWee said:
IMO>
It's time to wake up and smell the coffee. This is not a new cycle - how many companies fled the "Rust Belt" to relocate in the Southern US since the late 1960's? Fortunately, those jobs stayed in the US and quite a few people migrated south to places like Atlanta, Houston, and Tampa.

As per Boeing, the existing union workers are unaffected by the construction of the new plant. Next, the obvious solution is for Boeing to build the plant off-shore. It's doubtful many US workers will be able to relocate to foreign soil.
Again - IMO

hey, i live in the South. and i say, good for us, too bad for you.
 
  • #19
Proton Soup said:
hey, i live in the South. and i say, good for us, too bad for you.
Yep! You guys got Maine's shoe-shops and textile factories decades ago, until they all moved off-shore. Then it was bad for you.

My wife works for New Balance Athletic Shoe - the only company that can "afford" to make running shoes, court shoes, basketball shoes, etc in the US. They have some components (and perhaps even some entire shoes) made overseas, but the three plants in Maine and a couple in Mass are busy. Decent wages, decent benefits, including dental, medical insurance and eye exams and subsidized eyewear purchases.
 
  • #20
turbo-1 said:
As Gokul said, calling unions bullies does a real disservice to labor and industry in general.

Not all unions no.

Regardless of what the corporate types tell you. companies get some real tangible benefits from dealing with unions. They get a stable workforce that is committed to work at a specified wage and benefit level over a specified period of time. They also get work rules that can be applied uniformly and that are agreed to by both sides and are legally binding.

They can get much of that without a union as well (stable workforce, uniform work rules that are of good quality b/c of competing with other companies). The only time a union is really needed is when the company is abusing the workers in some fashion, which still happens in certain industries.

The paper machine that I ran seemed to outsiders to have really cream-of-the-crop jobs compared to other jobs in the area. The truth is that many of the people that came for the pay and benefits washed out over work-rules relating to absenteeism and other problematic behavior. No problem and no friction with the union, because we had agreed to those work rules and abided by them ourselves. Painting either side of a labor issue as the "bad guy" without any experience in that work-place is short-sighted, at best.

Not saying unions are "the bad guy" just saying that in trying to form a cartel to raise prices and theatening strikes elsewise, is a bullying tactic.
 
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  • #21
Proton Soup said:
hey, i live in the South. and i say, good for us, too bad for you.

"Up North", we've already lost our manufacturing base - now the rest of the country faces the same problem.

To turbo's point of modern facilities - I don't think Boeing will change the plant design any whether unionized or not - sans some plusher break rooms, maybe some union offices, and other union associated investment requirements?
 
  • #22
turbo-1 said:
Yep! You guys got Maine's shoe-shops and textile factories decades ago, until they all moved off-shore. Then it was bad for you.

My wife works for New Balance Athletic Shoe - the only company that can "afford" to make running shoes, court shoes, basketball shoes, etc in the US. They have some components (and perhaps even some entire shoes) made overseas, but the three plants in Maine and a couple in Mass are busy. Decent wages, decent benefits, including dental, medical insurance and eye exams and subsidized eyewear purchases.

New Balance shoes are one of my favorite brands, didn't know that they are made in America.
 
  • #23
CAC1001 said:
New Balance shoes are one of my favorite brands, didn't know that they are made in America.
Yep! Their walking shoes were endorsed by the USPS, and they actually made a special walking shoe featured a USPS tag on the innersole for a few years, too. I don't know that they still have that, but the shoes are great!

The plant that my wife works for has been trialing training shoes for the Navy, Army, Air Force, and Coast Guard, too - each with their own color-code and branch-specific embroidery.
 
  • #24
WhoWee said:
"Up North", we've already lost our manufacturing base - now the rest of the country faces the same problem.

To turbo's point of modern facilities - I don't think Boeing will change the plant design any whether unionized or not - sans some plusher break rooms, maybe some union offices, and other union associated investment requirements?

same problems? i dunno, here in alabama the last several years, we've acquired a mercedes plant, and honda. and thyssenkrupp steel is coming our way.
 
  • #25
Proton Soup said:
same problems? i dunno, here in alabama the last several years, we've acquired a mercedes plant, and honda. and thyssenkrupp steel is coming our way.

Are they all union shops?
 
  • #26
WhoWee said:
"Up North", we've already lost our manufacturing base - now the rest of the country faces the same problem.

Remember America still manufactures about 19.4% of global manufacturing. Up until recently, we were the global leader, but China just edged us out recently to output 19.8% of global manufacturing. However, we do our 19.4% using about 10 million people, whereas the Chinese need around 100 million. A good amount of the consumer products, stuff you buy at Wal-Mart and Target, are made in China. But a lot of other things, ranging from industrial equipment and machinery to forms of electronics, computer chips, medical devices, things like automobiles, aircraft, jet engines, etc...are made in America.

China is also going to lose its benefit of cheap labor if it expects to create a solid middle-class in that country, because wages and incomes for the overall population are going to have to go up.
 
  • #27
CAC1001 said:
Remember America still manufactures about 19.4% of global manufacturing. Up until recently, we were the global leader, but China just edged us out recently to output 19.8% of global manufacturing. However, we do our 19.4% using about 10 million people, whereas the Chinese need around 100 million. A good amount of the consumer products, stuff you buy at Wal-Mart and Target, are made in China. But a lot of other things, ranging from industrial equipment and machinery to forms of electronics, computer chips, medical devices, things like automobiles, aircraft, jet engines, etc...are made in America.

I wonder how long it takes to reverse-engineer a complex machine?
 
  • #28
CAC1001 said:
A union is a legalized worker cartel that let's workers artificially increase the price of their labor to a business, beyond the market rate. Your worth is decided by the market. If the business keeps paying you below the norm the market has set for your profession, then yeah, you are free to tell them to go shove it unless they pay you the proper amount. The business will likely do this because if not, they will lose talent to other companies that are competing for the same labor.

What a union allows is for when workers feel they should be paid more, paid say a "living wage" and thus seek to bully the company into doing this, and if it tries to balk, then strikes.
I can't say I see a substantive difference between these two cases, yet.

If your industry as a whole pays you and the half-dozen other people a certain amount and you think that is "wrong," and form a union to get more money, that isn't free-market.
While this sentence raises one point of difference (industry vs single employer), I can't understand your contention that this is not a free market situation. After all, if there is no intervention by the state, any peaceful negotiations between employers and employees ought to constitute workings of a free market.

If on the other hand, you and the half-dozen others discover that the company is paying you half what the industry norm is, then that is different.
I see the difference, but I do not see that it is as bad a thing as forbidding free association of the people.
 
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  • #29
WhoWee said:
Are they all union shops?

i really don't know, but i believe alabama is what you call a "right to work" state. I'm just happy that we're finally getting some industry here.
 
  • #30
Gokul43201 said:
While this sentence raises one point of difference (industry vs single employer), I can't understand your contention that this is not a free market situation. After all, if there is no intervention by the state, any peaceful negotiations between employers and employees ought to constitute workings of a free market.
I agree with this completely. "Bullying" is a common, legal, and completely ethical tactic used routinely in negotiations by other types of agents, why not for unions?

But that doesn't really apply to this case. In this case, the NLRB is trying to use government force, not peaceful negotiation, to get their way.
 
  • #31
Gokul43201 said:
While this sentence raises one point of difference (industry vs single employer), I can't understand your contention that this is not a free market situation.
I see it as unions thwarting the free market by being labor monopolies.
 
  • #32
russ_watters said:
I see it as unions thwarting the free market by being labor monopolies.
Of course you do. Do you see mega-corporations as thwarting the free market in labor by dwarfing the influence of small groups of laborers? US history is rife with examples of corporations hiring goons to break strikes. Here in Maine, that has involved violence, dynamiting, and personal intimidation, often targeting immigrants that came here to work in physically demanding industries.
 
  • #33
turbo-1 said:
Of course you do. Do you see mega-corporations as thwarting the free market in labor by dwarfing the influence of small groups of laborers? US history is rife with examples of corporations hiring goons to break strikes. Here in Maine, that has involved violence, dynamiting, and personal intimidation, often targeting immigrants that came here to work in physically demanding industries.

Did any of that happen in the past 50 years? Those sound more like modern-day union tactics to me.
 
  • #34
WhoWee said:
Did any of that happen in the past 50 years? Those sound more like modern-day union tactics to me.
Where is your support? Where is the factual reporting to support your claims? I can play this stupid game, too.
 
  • #35
turbo-1 said:
Where is your support? Where is the factual reporting to support your claims? I can play this stupid game, too.

Where is my support for asking you if any of the claims you made happened in the past 50 years? None needed there - please answer.

As for "union tactics" - you can't be serious?

http://www.unionfacts.com/articles/crimeViolence.cfm
"West Virginia miner shot dead for working during a strike
On the orders of the United Mine Workers (UMW), 16,000 miners went on strike in 1993. One subcontractor, Eddie York (who was not a UMW member), decided it was important to support his wife and three children and crossed picket lines to get to his job. He was shot in the head as he left the job site to go home. "


http://npri.org/publications/incidental-union-violence
"Seems like every Teamster strike since the dawn of time has been “accompanied by violence.” What a surprise that, this month, it happened once again."

http://www.thenewamerican.com/history/american/6487-labor-unions-a-history-of-murder-and-sabotage

It's your turn turbo - anything in the past 50 years?
 
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  • #36
russ_watters said:
I see it as unions thwarting the free market by being labor monopolies.

turbo-1 said:
Of course you do. Do you see mega-corporations as thwarting the free market in labor by dwarfing the influence of small groups of laborers? US history is rife with examples of corporations hiring goons to break strikes. Here in Maine, that has involved violence, dynamiting, and personal intimidation, often targeting immigrants that came here to work in physically demanding industries.

Actually, both of these posts are citing ancient history.

Because of transportation and other reasons, particular industries tended to locate in the same region - rubber companies being the perfect example with Goodyear, Firestone, Goodrich, and General Tire all having their manufacturing centers in Akron. That set up a vulnerability in that all of the workers were located in the same place and found it very easy to band together in a single union that controlled workers for all the major tire companies.

I don't think too many large companies locate all of their own factories in the same region, let alone all of the major companies of a given industry (unless the industry is restricted by the location of natural resources). If the factory in Washington strikes, the non-union factory in South Carolina can work overtime to pick some of the slack. Just diversifying the location of Boeing's factories eliminates the monopoly that union workers used to have, which reduces the impact of a strike, even if it doesn't completely prevent a strike from having any impact.

Even with diversified locations, you still have the possibility of a single union encompassing all of the workers in a given industry - especially in a world made smaller by better communications - but it just makes it harder because of cultural differences, different cost of living, etc. It's harder to find common interests that union workers can gather around.

Even in a favorable labor market, spreading out the locations of your factories makes sense. In an industry where your potential locations are limited (oil refineries, for example), a natural disaster could be even more devastating than a labor strike.
 
  • #37
Are you incapable of Googling anti-union violence? Let me Google that for you and put up a few links.

http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/6466/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1912_Lawrence_Textile_Strike
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Union_violence
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/08/08/unions-receive-increasing_n_254704.html

Only takes a few seconds and an open mind... I hope you have both. Currently, the most deadly places for a labor organizer to live is in Latin America, and Columbia seems to be the worst at this time. Still, the creeps educated by the School of the Americas (US-trained terrorists) seem to be very effective.
 
  • #38
turbo-1 said:
Are you incapable of Googling anti-union violence? Let me Google that for you and put up a few links.

http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/6466/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1912_Lawrence_Textile_Strike
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Union_violence
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/08/08/unions-receive-increasing_n_254704.html

Only takes a few seconds and an open mind... I hope you have both. Currently, the most deadly places for a labor organizer to live is in Latin America, and Columbia seems to be the worst at this time. Still, the creeps educated by the School of the Americas (US-trained terrorists) seem to be very effective.

I asked you about the past 50 years - not the 1940's or 1912 - and now you're talking about Latin America and Columbia?
 
  • #39
turbo-1 said:
Of course you do. Do you see mega-corporations as thwarting the free market in labor by dwarfing the influence of small groups of laborers?
When big companies become monopolies, I see them as monopolies. We have laws against monpolistic businesses and they work very well. We don't have laws against labor monopolies and we should.
US history is rife with examples of corporations hiring goons to break strikes. Here in Maine, that has involved violence, dynamiting, and personal intimidation, often targeting immigrants that came here to work in physically demanding industries.
What's your point? Labor unions sometimes hire/act as "goons" to do such illegal things too. I'm not even talking about those illegal things - I'm talking about what is considered legal!
 
  • #40
BobG said:
Actually, both of these posts are citing ancient history...

Just diversifying the location of Boeing's factories eliminates the monopoly that union workers used to have, which reduces the impact of a strike, even if it doesn't completely prevent a strike from having any impact.

Even with diversified locations, you still have the possibility of a single union encompassing all of the workers in a given industry - especially in a world made smaller by better communications - but it just makes it harder because of cultural differences, different cost of living, etc.
It's not so much a problem with businesses because, as you say, they can just pick up and move. Yes, you're right, the power of unions has decreased due to globalization -- not to mention the failure of the many strongly-union companies (and I don't consider that a coincidence)!

But it is a big problem with governments and government services. An infamous example from philly:
Labor pricing and inefficiency become major issues in Philly three years later when the East Coast Volleyball Association, a nonprofit organization, documents that it took six union laborers and a couple plumbers two hours to set up a volleyball court. The association notes that the job takes eight 14-year-old girls one hour in any other facility. It costs the volleyball group $135,000 to hold an event in Philadelphia that usually averages $15,000 in other cities. They won't be coming back.
http://www.philadelphiaweekly.com/news-and-opinion/sorry_its_not_my_job-38365189.html#ixzz1MkoXZFs2

Not ancient history.

Now whether that's due to true monopoly power or just political power is an open question.
 
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  • #41
WhoWee said:
I asked you about the past 50 years - not the 1940's or 1912 - and now you're talking about Latin America and Columbia?
I think that's turbo-1's way of acknowledging that anti-union violence is, for the most part, ancient history.
 
  • #42
Gokul43201 said:
I can't say I see a substantive difference between these two cases, yet.

The difference is in the one case, the company is actually paying you below what your value is, whereas in the other case, the company is paying you what the market values your services at, but not at what yourself might think you should be valued at.

While this sentence raises one point of difference (industry vs single employer), I can't understand your contention that this is not a free market situation. After all, if there is no intervention by the state, any peaceful negotiations between employers and employees ought to constitute workings of a free market.

It's not a free-market because the forces of the market are no longer deciding the price of the workers. Instead, the workers have formed a cartel, which allows them to artificially increase their prices (wages and incomes). Now if all the local gas station owners decided to try doing the same thing, form a cartel so that they can yank up their prices beyond what the market sets them at, well they'd end up either sued or in jail. Worker cartels (unions) are permitted by law however.

Peaceful negotiations between employer and employee are not quite the same.

I see the difference, but I do not see that it is as bad a thing as forbidding free association of the people.

Forming a cartel I wouldn't call free association of the people. I mean "yeah," but that would be like a cartel of businesses saying, "Hey, all we are doing is engaging in free association of private businesses, and that is perfectly free-market." Free association of the people is if they form a union because the company is forcing them to work in unsafe conditions let's say. But in a free market, where the incomes are set by the market, workers will generally will be paid what they are worth.
 
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  • #43
turbo-1 said:
Of course you do. Do you see mega-corporations as thwarting the free market in labor by dwarfing the influence of small groups of laborers? US history is rife with examples of corporations hiring goons to break strikes. Here in Maine, that has involved violence, dynamiting, and personal intimidation, often targeting immigrants that came here to work in physically demanding industries.

That kind of stuff occurred back during the 1900s and the early to mid twentieth century, much of it before there were labor laws and regulations, what few labors laws/regulations there were were not enforced, corporations could literally buy politicians, trusts were legal, etc...by the 1920s, unions were engaging in much of the same thuggery, much of organized labor being tied in with organized crime at the time. Not saying all organized labor was, just I mean both (organized labor and corporations) are subject to corruption. But I don't know of any cases in modern times of a corporation hiring thugs to go and bust up a labor demonstration.
 
  • #44
CAC1001 said:
But I don't know of any cases in modern times of a corporation hiring thugs to go and bust up a labor demonstration.
While at the same time, union thuggery is still pretty much standard operating procedure.
 
  • #45
russ_watters said:
But it is a big problem with governments and government services. An infamous example from philly: http://www.philadelphiaweekly.com/news-and-opinion/sorry_its_not_my_job-38365189.html#ixzz1MkoXZFs2

Not ancient history.
Everybody I know who has seen the assembly facilities at both Boeing and Airbus wa struck by the same thing: It appears to take about 10 times as many Boeing people to put an aircraft together as it does Airbus people. Or at the very least, you see lots of the Boeing people running around like a nest of ants poked by a stick, and the Airbus people are quietly getting on with doing some work, and so are much less visible.

I have no idea whether or not this is due to the unions. But strikes at Boeing (which don't just disrupt the assembly lines, but the whole of the engineering operation) seem to come round every few years for as long as I can remember.
 
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  • #46
AlephZero said:
Everybody I know who has seen the assembly facilities at both Boeing and Airbus wa struck by the same thing: It appears to take about 10 times as many Boeing people to put an aircraft together as it does Airbus people. Or at the very least, you see lots of the Boeing people running around like a nest of ants poked by a stick, and the Airbus people are quietly getting on with doing some work, and so are much less visible.

Keep in mind that Boeing has *many* different facilities; I assume Airbus does too.

More important, at neither company are people allowed to simply wander around observing what they wish. What visitors are allowed to see at Boeing, and I assume at Airbus too, is tightly controlled.

This makes it extremely difficult to draw any conclusions about any similarities or differences between the two companies based on such observations.
 
  • #47
So it seems this could drag on for awhile, apparently whatever decision is made at the hearing could then be voted on by the NLRB itself, then that decision could be appealed to a federal circuit court. Wonder if it might go all the way to the SCOTUS?
 
  • #48
While at the same time, union thuggery is still pretty much standard operating procedure.

Support this. What unions routinely employ "thuggery"? The largest union related protest I can recall recently was the Wisconsin teachers union protests, which were extraordinarily well behaved large crowds.

Also, at least where I live, unions have been declining for decades.
 
  • #49
ParticleGrl said:
Support this. What unions routinely employ "thuggery"? The largest union related protest I can recall recently was the Wisconsin teachers union protests, which were extraordinarily well behaved large crowds.

Also, at least where I live, unions have been declining for decades.

Thuggery is subjective. Personally, I think work stoppages, sit-ins, and strikes count as 'thuggery'. They're equivalent to a child throwing a temper tantrum to get their way, unfortunately the parents (businesses) cave in far too often to extreme demands. Skipping work and forcing a school district to totally reschedule their school year is thuggery. The amount of extra security called in for the WI protests cost various entities in the state several million dollars over the course of the month and half and all the state got from the protest-organizing unions was a note saying 'well worth it'.

Aside from 'normal union business' (as above) the glaring example from the recent Madison issues are several different reports of union members threatening Wisconsin businesses with boycots if they did not display support for their cause. It's not enough to let the opinionated 'duke it out' - these union members are of the mind 'if you're not with us, you're against us.' In some areas these boycott threats were not just a few disgruntled individuals - there was letters from union local lawyers and an organized movement for support. Unfortunately, this practice comes from the strong arm tactics that were used when the teamsters were closely associated with some of the mob familys. It's in the 'everyman's playbook' now to threaten another's livelyhood to push their own goals.

There are also several other protests which disrupted businesses this spring unrelated to the WI stuff. A mob of union workers, mid week mind you, shut down downtown Detroit for a whole day to protest... a policy that had been in effect for 2 years? Several bank-sit-ins were reported in April, and there was the Chase Bank board meeting crash last weekend. In the latter's case, several were arrested for trespassing and disobeying restraining orders.

Democracy is not chants, singing and pulling at emotional strings with children as human shields. Democracy is a leveled debate where policy is decided for the betterment of the whole society, and unionized workers are just a small part of that society. Unfortunately, organized labor, in the form of unions, have become the bad guys to many because of their tactics and extreme power grabs in politics and in business. If unions operated more closely to Germany's guild system (someone mentioned that earlier this thread) there wouldn't be the dissent. Instead, unions become self-serving and seek to protect the weak (ie: their dues paying members) rather than act in fairness for the betterment of their craft. Yes, organized labor in the past has gotten lots of good advances and worker protections, but what have unions done since WW2 except grab power?
 
  • #50
ParticleGrl said:
Support this. What unions routinely employ "thuggery"? The largest union related protest I can recall recently was the Wisconsin teachers union protests, which were extraordinarily well behaved large crowds.
WhoWee already provided some examples. IMO, the fact that there are a lot of examples out there implies that it's accepted practice or, at least, a systemic problem.

I realize this is anecdotal, but I'm an engineer in the construction industry and union mischeif is an ever-present concern on all construction projects I've been associated with. As big of a problem as physical intimidation is sabbotage. It's easy to throw a handful of gravel into a pipe and impossible to tell who did it. I've seen it and more honest/upstanding union members are willing to talk about it off the record.

Here's a pretty ridiculous example of sabbotage:
Two striking Philadelphia Gas Works employees were charged yesterday with sabotaging two underground natural gas pipes, causing potentially explosive leaks similar to one that forced the evacuation of a South Philadelphia neighborhood on Sunday.

Patrick Vogelei, 39, of Annebella Street, Havertown, Delaware County, and William Williamson, 41, of Chelwynde Avenue near 69th Street, were each charged with two counts of risking a catastrophe, resklessly endangering another person, criminal mischief and interfering with public utilities in connection with the two separate gas leaks, police said.
http://articles.philly.com/1989-04-29/news/26144984_1_gas-leak-gas-line-pgw

Also, at least where I live, unions have been declining for decades.
They've been declining for the reasons Bob stated. That doesn't have much to do with their tactics.

And in certain industries like construction (specifically, on government work), they are fully entrenched and legally protected, so they aren't in decline there. They have they eliminated the competition by getting laws passed that require their labor - could you imagine Boeing getting a law passed that says the government must use only their planes? It's absurd.
 
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