Thursday, August 29, 2013

Union Bosses Draw Large Salaries, Huge Benefits While Businesses Flee Illinois and New Businesses Open Elsewhere

Unions exist to give workers greater leverage in negotiating over compensation and working conditions, and to give them some protection from unfair treatment at the hands of management. If union officials are doing their jobs well, workers should be receiving better wages and benefits, and should be more secure in their jobs.

But that’s not always what workers get.

People and institutions change. Old strategies and alliances do not always match up with new challenges or goals.

The same is true for labor unions.

A string of mass layoffs has given rank-and-file union members reason to question their blind faith in union bosses — and the movement behind big labor in general.


So what are rank-and-file workers getting for their thousands in annual union dues?

At best, unions have proved incapable of providing job protection for thousands of workers throughout the country, Illinois included. The last 10 years indicate that unionization puts members’ jobs at risk.


Over the last year, 760 workers represented by the United Auto Workers were laid off at one Caterpillar Inc. facility in Peoria. Hostess Inc., the iconic snack maker, was forced to shut its bakeries, including one in Schiller Park that employed 1,400 Illinoisans represented by several unions, among them the Bakers, Confectionary, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers union, and the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. (That plant was reopened when new owners took over Hostess, but most of the workforce was replaced — those jobs are now non-union.) And when Chicago Public Schools started the new school year, they did so with about 3,000 fewer Chicago Teachers Union members.

While rank-and-file workers are facing pink slips, union bosses are raking in big salaries.

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