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eridani

(51,907 posts)
Sun Jun 2, 2013, 01:41 AM Jun 2013

Labor and the co-op movement


http://www.nationofchange.org/can-unions-and-cooperatives-join-forces-interview-united-steelworkers-president-leo-gerard-137009815

As someone who loves to see organized labor on the move in any form, I am interested in the role that unions can play in promoting co-ops - and I have been excited to see the United Steelworkers take an especially proactive role in bolstering the cooperative movement. I spoke with Steelworkers President Leo Gerard about how union/co-op hybrids could change the experience of work for those who clock in every day and about the depth of vision it will take to make union co-ops a serious part of the American economy.

Given that cooperatives currently make up only a tiny percentage of our economy, I first asked Gerard whether he thought co-ops could be viable at a larger scale.

"People don't realize there are millions of people in the United States and Canada that are already members of co-ops," he said. "When I was a kid growing up in northern Ontario, my parents used to shop at a food co-op. I think that there are already a lot of these businesses; people just don't know it."

Gerard next discussed the structure of "union co-ops" that the Steelworkers have begun, in partnership with Spain's Mondragon cooperatives. Here’s how it works: Employees can join the union of their choice, and they are guaranteed a living wage, benefits and a collective bargaining agreement. In some of the new union co-ops, workers get ownership shares in the enterprise, which they pay for a little at a time out of their paychecks and which accrue equity over a period of six or eight or 10 years. Workers vote on the composition of the management team and collectively bargain with that team to set workers' wages, benefits, and procedures for handling disputes.
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Labor and the co-op movement (Original Post) eridani Jun 2013 OP
Just checking in... MAD Dave Jun 2013 #1
K&R Teamster Jeff Jun 2013 #2
k&r for labor. n/t Laelth Jun 2013 #3
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