ADVERTISEMENT

Scott Walker’s race to the bottom

cigaretteman

HB King
May 29, 2001
79,642
63,044
113
Scott Walker wants to take his fight against organized labor national. Today he released a plan for a new war not just on union representation, but on worker rights in general.

It’s quite a document, one we might call Scott Walker’s Race to the Bottom.

I have no doubt that Walker is sincere in his desire to see every labor union crushed and every vestige of workers’ power banished — or, in his lingo, “flexibility.” I’d also be surprised if any of the other candidates objected to any part of it. So the plan is worth understanding if you want to grasp what today’s GOP is offering today’s workers.

While he doesn’t say so explicitly, what Walker seems to hope for is really a world without any labor unions at all, or at the very least a world where unions are so weakened that they are unable to advocate for anyone. Here are the major parts of his plan:

Eliminate the National Labor Relations Board. Walker says the NLRB is “a one-sided advocate for big-labor special interests,” but the truth is that Democrats appoint pro-labor members to the board, while Republicans appoint anti-labor members to the board. Transferring the NLRB’s authority to adjudicate labor disputes to the courts would probably be a mixed bag in terms of worker rights.

“Eliminate big-government unions.” This is pretty straightforward. You don’t like unions? Get rid of ’em. Today there are around seven million Americans represented by a public sector union, and around one million of those are employed by the federal government (including the Postal Service). If Walker got his way, the latter group could kiss their representation goodbye — and given his record, it’s pretty clear he wouldn’t mind getting rid of the state and local public-sector unions as well.

Institute a national “right to work” law. The phrase “right to work” is a triumph of conservative PR, because how could anyone object to a right to work? What it means in practice, however, is that in places where unions negotiate salaries and benefits for workers, those workers can’t be required to contribute to the union that got them those salaries and benefits (no one can be required to join a union, but where there are no right to work laws, you can be required to contribute when the union negotiates on your behalf). Whenever a right to work law is being debated in a particular state, Republicans argue that because the law would weaken unions, it will draw employers who don’t want to have to bother with the high wages and good benefits those unions can negotiate.

Which, the evidence suggests, is probably true. But such laws have another effect: they pull down wages and benefits. So that’s the bargain a state makes when passes a right to work law: more jobs, but worse jobs.

Think about what would happen if you took this policy national. On a state level, it’s possible for a right to work law to draw a factory from one state to another. But if every state was a right to work state, then that incentive to move is eliminated. The decrease in union representation would spread, which drives down wages and benefits for everyone. Whether you think that’s a good thing depends on whether you are concerned with the interests of large business owners or the interests of workers.

There are a number of smaller ideas in Walker’s plan, like eliminating the requirement that federal contractors pay the “prevailing wage” (i.e. union wage) for construction projects, further reinforcing what seems to be Walker’s belief that the problem with unions is that they let workers earn too much money. And I have to highlight this bit:

“The Obama administration’s government-knows-best proposed rules will require employers to pay overtime rates to greater numbers of salaried works and require federal contractors to provide paid sick leave. Unfortunately, these rules will only reduce wages and deprive workers of the flexibility to balance work and life commitments.

“On Day One of my administration, I will repeal any regulation that reduces employee flexibility, as well as work for changes to federal law to allow time off for overtime hours worked. My changes will protect workplace flexibility by ensuring that misguided big-government mandates do not stand in the way of individuals and families.”

So Walker will roll back the Obama administration’s efforts to make more workers eligible for overtime pay and sick leave, because that would mean more “employee flexibility.” Indeed, just imagine the worker making $7.50 an hour saying to herself, “Boy, now that I have the flu I sure am glad I have to choose between dragging myself into work or staying home and losing my pay. Thanks for the flexibility, President Walker!”

Though Walker’s plan is couched in all kinds of pro-worker rhetoric like that (and endless repetition of the phrase “union bosses”), in truth it’s about as pure an expression of supply-side, trickle-down economics as you’ll find. Its basic principle is that once we eliminate workers’ ability to bargain collectively, everything will turn out great for everyone.

But here’s what we know: union membership has been declining for decades, while incomes have been stagnant and Americans have felt increasingly at the mercy of employers who treat them like interchangeable cogs who can be manipulated, surveilled, and tossed aside at the employer’s whim. There’s no question that Scott Walker succeeded in creating a politically beneficial showdown with public sector unions in Wisconsin. But how many Americans think that the problem with our economy is that too much power in the workplace lies in the hands of workers?

https://www.washingtonpost.com/blog...kers-race-to-the-bottom/?tid=trending_strip_6
 
Socially he's a mess, but I agree with everything he has to say about Big Labor.

They're growth killers.
 
Socially he's a mess, but I agree with everything he has to say about Big Labor.

They're growth killers.
So union membership has declined along with incomes but yet the unions are the growth killers? Did big labor have a hand in the recession that we have clawed out of? If those darn 7 million Americans would just give up their ability to bargain for wages and benefits and trust their "bosses" the economy would just be chugging along..... right....

Its hard to me to understand how anyone can be against things like collective bargaining, paid sick leave, paid overtime, paid maternity leave when everyone know these things contribute to better wages, higher worker morale, less employee turnover, etc.

This Race to the Bottom plan is probably word for word from the ALEC playbook.
 
What big labor? When is the last time we had big labor? o_O I remember the complaints in the 1970's and early 1980's about big labor. But since then unions have been shot full of holes. They are a shell of their former selves. And have things gotten better?

Wait! Before you say yes. Let me take you to Flint, Michigan. Or Detroit. Or freagin' Peoria, Illinois. And you can say it on a loudspeaker in a public park. "Aren't we all lucky that starting with Reagan we shot the heck out of Unions!!!!"

I'll be waiting a block away in the car.
 
Socially he's a mess, but I agree with everything he has to say about Big Labor.

They're growth killers.
Unions are only relevant thanks to incompetent management. So you really should put the blame where it belongs.

I don't disagree. I think a company earns a Union.

I don't agree with the forces who think that every company should have one regardless. Like the NLRB.
 
So union membership has declined along with incomes but yet the unions are the growth killers? Did big labor have a hand in the recession that we have clawed out of? If those darn 7 million Americans would just give up their ability to bargain for wages and benefits and trust their "bosses" the economy would just be chugging along..... right....

Its hard to me to understand how anyone can be against things like collective bargaining, paid sick leave, paid overtime, paid maternity leave when everyone know these things contribute to better wages, higher worker morale, less employee turnover, etc.

This Race to the Bottom plan is probably word for word from the ALEC playbook.

My company has all of those things you listed.

What we don't have is a parasitic Union taking a cut from our employees.
 
My company has all of those things you listed.

What we don't have is a parasitic Union taking a cut from our employees.
Great. I have no issues with that. I'm not even saying every company needs unionized employees. I'm saying that unions have been and will continue to be beneficial to our country and economy. They have their place.
 
Walker would send in the guys with axe handles, just like the Pullman Strike. Whats funny is him claiming its for the workers.....He can say it with a straight face too.

The straight face is what gives him away as a sociopath.
 
Your company has them because of the battles unions waged in the past and the threat of unionization today. Don't kid yourself. Its not out of the goodness of their heart.

Unions don't do membership drives out of the goodness their hearts either.

They do it to drive revenue. They are just another business and taking profits from employees is how they survive.
 
Great. I have no issues with that. I'm not even saying every company needs unionized employees. I'm saying that unions have been and will continue to be beneficial to our country and economy. They have their place.

They do.

There is a fringe that thinks every company should have them. The left-wing of the NLRB thinks every company should have one.
 
Unions don't do membership drives out of the goodness their hearts either.

They do it to drive revenue. They are just another business and taking profits from employees is how they survive.

Unions are made up of employees. Who do you think made unions? Some abstract persona? There are no owners with capital invested. Who is it that is profiting personally?

They are not a business.
 
  • Like
Reactions: cigaretteman
Unions are made up of employees. Who do you think made unions? Some abstract persona? There are no owners with capital invested. Who is it that is profiting personally?

They are not a business.

The UAW is completely a business.

It has executives and org. chart profit and loss statements and margin expectations. They need revenue like any other business. However, they get it from their members. Their job security is at risk if their membership drops.

They are no different from any other business that needs top of the line cash flow to survive.

They manipulate and use scare tactics to drive membership. Anything to get their foot in the door and get a piece of the action. Even if there is no legitimate need.
 
Its not a business. Its an organization. Its mission is totally different and their members have decent pay and benefits, which they would not have if not for the UAW.

You seem to really take your benefits for granted.
 
Its not a business. Its an organization. Its mission is totally different and their members have decent pay and benefits, which they would not have if not for the UAW.

You seem to really take your benefits for granted.

They compare themselves to corporations. So I think I'll take their word for it.

There can be riches in standing up for the working class: The Boilermakers union president earned $506,000, plus hundreds of thousands of dollars more for travel expenses, while the Laborers union president made $441,000. The Transportation Communications Union leader made $300,000, bumped up to $750,000 with business expenses.

Patrick W. Flynn makes $435,000 a year in his capacity as treasurer of a 13,600-member Teamsters union local, and the $30,000 in business expenses he collects on top of costs associated with carrying out his duties around Mokena, Ill., approach that of a typical worker’s entire salary.

The average union member has no idea how much the leaders make, said Stanley Oubre, a retired Boilermaker in Louisiana — and can hardly relate.

“It sounds like we’re getting robbed,” Mr. Oubre said of the money earned by International Brotherhood of Boilermakers President Newton B. Jones. “I was a boilermaker for 35 years, and oh, my goodness, what we made was pennies” compared with that.

Joseph V. Senese was paid $591,346 last year for his role in running the National Production Workers Union, based in the golf course-lined Chicago suburbs, which reported 600 members in 2006 and none in 2007, according to union disclosures.

Tax records confirm a pattern of high salaries, with base compensation of $583,000 in 2008, and show that Mr. Senese, in turn, issued hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash loans back to the union.

For decades, the union spent “large sums of money” to provide Mr. Senese with around-the-clock security after his brother and father, also union honchos, survived assassination attempts and federal authorities barred his father from union activity for life, alleging mob ties, according to a 1993 Chicago Tribune article.

“We don’t talk to newspaper reporters. Don’t call back here,” a staffer at the union’s full-time office said last week before hanging up the phone.

Michael, as an organizer, and his cousin, Vallie, as secretary, and a Brennan Lazzaretto as janitor.

“A big portion of that final salary was a retirement package. My salary probably averaged about $250,000, which for a business manager, I was probably top three or four. There’s probably three or four people in the Chicago area making more than $300,000. Of course, times have changed; people get rid of the heavy earners,” Mr. Lazzaretto said.

“I was the only trustee left after the feds came in, when the government put a consent decree over the whole international union alleging there was ties to organized crime,” he said. “I came out with a clean bill of health.”

Despite unions’ focus on income equality, the division between the highest-paid and lowest-paid union employees has grown over time, and the rank-and-file workers toiling in factories and construction sites that the union officers represent especially pale in comparison with the top officials tasked with representing them.

In 2000, the bottom quarter of full-time employees at union offices, such as administrative assistants at headquarters, made less than $33,900, while the top quarter made more than $65,400. In 2011, the bottom quarter made $45,000 compared with $89,800 for the top quarter.

Among reports for fiscal 2012 submitted so far, the bottom quarter made $49,700 compared with $103,100 for the top quarter, an analysis of union disclosures by The Washington Times indicated.

Don Loos, a former Department of Labor official who is now an adviser at the National Right to Work Committee, said labor leaders with compensation that is worlds apart from those they are representing make it difficult for them to empathize with life in the trenches.

“Look at SEIU: That’s a union of janitors, and you’ve got people at the top making $500,000 a year, plus a lot of them have their hands in more than one till — they’re making additional money from the pension funds. A lot of these groups were a part of the Occupy Wall Street movement, and they really pushed the notion of ‘fat cats,’ but union bosses have always been fat cats,” he said.

Luxury items

Union dues sometimes finance seemingly luxury items for officers.

The Internal Brotherhood of Teamsters held its annual Employee Benefits Program conference in Hawaii in 2010, while in 2008, the American Postal Workers Union sent its secretary-treasurersto Puerto Rico for training.

In 2007, the Teamsters spent $55,000 on gourmet steaks for stewards, while the Ohio Association of Public School Employees held an executive board meeting at Morton’s Steakhouse at a cost of $9,400 in 2008.

The International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers has yearly “golf outings,” often at a cost of $30,000. In 2005, the Pennsylvania Public Employees Union paid $15,000 for “education of officers” at Fernwood Resort and Country Club.

Last year, the United Steelworkers spent $1.1 million on catering on top of $1 million for lodging and other costs at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas for its annual convention in August, for which 3,000 officials flew out.

In 2009, the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union spent $574,000 on “ex[ecutive] board meeting/lodging” at Buena Vista Palace, a Disney World golf resort.

Until recent years, a handful of unions had private jets to ferry officials to meetings in style.

The International Union of Bricklayers, until at least 2011, owned a plane, but “shortly after James Boland became president in February 2010, the international executive board grounded the plane and put it on the market, where it remained for a number of months owing to an excess of similar planes for sale. It was sold in February 2012,” Connie Lambert, the Bricklayers’ communications director, said in an email.

J. Justin Wilson, managing director of the Center for Union Facts, a union-watchdog group, said spending of members’ dues on officers’ perks represented a conflict of interest because “the board of the union has the fiduciary responsibility.”

“There have been more than a few instances of labor leaders living high on the hog at the expense of their members,” he said. Those excesses occur in the corporate world, too, but as nonprofits, “technically they are beholden to the taxpayers. In exchange for not paying taxes, there’s a greater degree of responsibility.”

Beefed-up staff

Even as memberships dropped, union overhead became more bulky, with the number of organizers and other employees working in private-sector union offices rising from 41,000 in 2000 to 47,000 in 2011, after peaking at 51,000 in 2008. Total salaries, adjusted to 2011 dollars, rose from $4.4 billion to $4.7 billion over the past decade.

The Air Line Pilots Association spent more than $36 million on wages in 2011 for 324 staffers, or $617 for each of its 58,874 members.The California Nurses Association has 86,000 members and spent $25 million on 338 staffers, 124 of whom have six-figure incomes.

The United Auto Workers, with 380,000 members, spent $83 million on salaries for 886 employees, 508 of whom made six figures.

No union had more members working in the home office, rather than in the factories, than the Steelworkers, which employs 974 people, half at six figures, in its national headquarters. The Steelworkers union has 600,000 members. Yet its president, Leo Gerard, made only $195,000 — meaning officials like Mr. Anderson, Mr. Black and Mr. Lazzaretto made more for running unions a fraction of the size.

Dues and perks

Those salaries are financed largely, of course, by dues paid by members, and the average dues paid to a local by each member rose to $401 in 2011, up from $272 in 2000, or $355 in inflation-adjusted dollars. But some dues were far steeper than others. Boilermakers Local 154 raised its dues from 4 percent to 7 percent of wages over the past five years, for example.

They are old hands and long-accustomed to such pay. In 2005, tax records show, Mr. Gleason was making $430,000, Mr. Daggett was making $303,000 as an organizer and Mr. Holland was making $287,000. All estimated that they worked only 20 hours a week.

Many Longshoremen’s Associations deduct 10 percent of workers’ pay, as do many Iron Workers locals. Some chapters of the International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators and Asbestos Workers deduct up to $4.17 per hour, while locals within the International Union of Elevator Constructors take up to $626 a quarter.

Bill Butler, corporate communications executive of the Sheet Metal Workers International Association, said a $1 million payout to retiring official
Michael J. Sullivan was a one-time thing. “When he retired, he got a lump sum. That was part of a payment he was entitled to, and no one else is going to receive it,” he said.

Other unions justified high salaries for officers by likening them to CEOs of large corporations.

Galen Munroe, a spokesman for the Teamsters union, said it was on the members to take action if they deem salaries too high.

“This is public information, and it’s the members’ prerogative with this information in hand to vote officers in or out,” Mr. Munroe said.

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news...osses-salaries-put-big-in-big-labor/?page=all
 
Your company has them because of the battles unions waged in the past and the threat of unionization today. Don't kid yourself. Its not out of the goodness of their heart.


Classic!!
You didn't build that!!!
Keep it up JR - you're priceless when it counts.
Walkers biggest battle is to make the US right to work. That is a butt hurt for gov't unions and most of the radical ones.
 
Wow look at those wages! Compared to CEO's today why would anyone call that a BUSINESS!!?!? o_O Aren't there charities out there paying their top dogs more?
 
Wow look at those wages! Compared to CEO's today why would anyone call that a BUSINESS!!?!? o_O Aren't there charities out there paying their top dogs more?

Why should they be comparable?

Why should it be equal?

One executive has the ability to generate revenue. The other executive knows how to sap the ability of his host.

Union's are profit centers feeding off of both the companies they suckle and on the hard working employees they "represent".
 
I can't tell if you're being sarcastic or not.....

Being completely sarcastic. Any argument that can be made for paying CEO's in eight and I presume by now close to if not nine figures can be made about paying Union leaders in seven figures. To get the best person.

The shame of it is that yes, to the regular guy this seems outrageous.
 
Being completely sarcastic. Any argument that can be made for paying CEO's in eight and I presume by now close to if not nine figures can be made about paying Union leaders in seven figures. To get the best person.

The shame of it is that yes, to the regular guy this seems outrageous.

Well then. Be brave enough to have the same ire for Union corporate executives,as you do for the rest of their peers.
 
Well then. Be brave enough to have the same ire for Union corporate executives,as you do for the rest of their peers.

Do you people honestly believe companies would pay decent wages with benefits without what the unions did and the threat of unions now?

You just ignore history. Those wages you claim they take from workers wouldn't even be that high without the union in the first place. The workplace before unions is not a place you would want to work. Child Labor. terrible worker safety.
 
  • Like
Reactions: cigaretteman
Do you people honestly believe companies would pay decent wages with benefits without what the unions did and the threat of unions now?

You just ignore history. Those wages you claim they take from workers wouldn't even be that high without the union in the first place. The workplace before unions is not a place you would want to work. Child Labor. terrible worker safety.

The threat is necessary; I agree.

But, the UAW employing over 500 six figure executives is corrupt.
 
I am probably the only one here who has negotiated on the other side against a union and in arbitration. I have dealt with some real a-hole reps. I still recognize why they are important and if people like Walker have their way the standard of living for a lot people would be eroded over time.

I am not saying there isn't corruption in unions. There has been mob involvement, etc. over time. If its transparent that they have 500 six figure employees, its not corruption. I am not going to claim they are perfect, far from it, but the alternative is worse and we saw the alternative in this country in the late 19th century. No thanks.
 
Walker represents checks and balances. Union corruption needs to be held at bay. There is no way a guy like
Walker, or any other candidate will kill CB. They do offer a deterrent for unchecked labor policy.

Unions do need to come into the 21st century and move away from company, community and Sate killing policies.
 
Walker represents the Pullman rail car company and would send in the axe handles if he could. He is out to end CB. Make no mistake.

Yes he is, but he won't get it done. No one will.

Maybe he can end fixed contracts in a variable economy. That is where CB makes no dollars, or sense. That is why they hurt/kill their host(be it company, community, state, or country)
 
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT