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Is minority bargaining the next big thing?

Participants in the August 2, 2007 webinar “After EFCA – What’s Next?” (Co-sponsored by the National Association of Manufacturers and the law firms of Kilpatrick Stockton LLP and Kreitzman, Mortensen & Borden) were not surprised by the report in yesterday’s New York Times that the Steelworkers Union and others have petitioned the National Labor Relations Board to use its rulemaking authority to mandate members-only minority-union collective bargaining . The webinar included a brief discussion of the efforts of Southern Methodist University Professor Emeritus Charles J. Morris to bring this issue to a head.

For those who missed the webinar, Professor Morris, one of the nation’s most highly-respected labor scholars, has been advocating minority union recognition for several years. In 2002, he presented a paper entitled “ Members-Only Collective Bargaining: A Back-to-Basics Approach to Union Organizing” at a conference co-hosted by the AFL-CIO and Michigan State University. His 2004 book, The Blue Eagle At Work: Reclaiming Democratic Rights In The American Workplace, further documented the detailed research that he believes supports his theory that Congress intended the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) to protect the right of employees to engage in members-only collective bargaining even a majority of their co-workers did not share their desire to do so.

Section 7 of the NLRA provides: “ Employees shall have the right . . . to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing.” Professor Morris asserts that this language can be traced to pre NLRA sources, including the Norris-LaGuardia Act of 1932, and to the Depression-era National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA) of 1933,. According to Professor Morris, minority unions were commonplace during this era and, he argues, the incorporation of this language into the 1935 NLRA reveals that Congress never intended to abolish the practice. He admits, as he must, that the practice quickly faded from usage and:

In due time, the interplay of employer self-interest and union acquiescence in relying on elections effectively repressed all institutional memory of and reliance on minority-union bargaining.

Professor Morris’s efforts to revive that “institutional memory” were given a boost when, in 2005, the Steelworkers Union formed what it called an “Employee Council” for workers at a Dick’s Sporting Goods Distribution Center in Smithton, Pennsylvania. The council charged members dues of $4 per month and promised to bargain on their behalf over regarding wages, benefits and working conditions at the facility. It also offered members:

Posted on Thursday, August 16, 2007 at 08:44AM by Registered CommenterEFCA Updates | Comments Off