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Omaha Steve Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Apr-26-08 04:46 PM
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Blacks and Labor Movement Make Better Union

http://beta.afro.com/tabid/456/itemid/731/Blacks-and-Labor-Movement-Make-Better-Union.aspx

By Zenitha Prince
Washington Bureau Chief

PHILADELPHIA— The struggle for social, economic and political equality has almost always worked in tandem with the fight for organized labor. There is no better illustration of this than Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s last and fatal trip to Memphis, where he had gone to help organize garbage workers."We know that it isn't enough to integrate lunch counters,” he said in 1968, explaining his reason for going to Memphis. “What does it profit a man to be able to eat at an integrated lunch counter if he doesn't earn enough money to buy a hamburger and a cup of coffee?"

That is why plummeting African-American union membership rates are alarming so many. According to a report by the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), a Washington-D.C.-based non-profit geared towards public education on key issues, the percentage of African-Americans who are either members of or represented by unions fell by half, from 31.7 percent of all Black workers in 1983 to 16 percent in 2006. “For Black America, organized labor is absolutely essential,” said Henry Nicholas, longtime labor activist and president of the National Union of Hospital and Healthcare Employees, Local 1199 C in Philadelphia.

“We don’t own anything in America but our labor. We don’t own none of the institutions. None of them. So if the only thing you own is your labor you should let that work for you.” It’s not that Blacks don’t want to join unions. In its 2007 union report, the Bureau of Labor Statistics indicated that Black workers were more likely to be union members (14.3 percent) than Whites (11.8 percent), Asians (10.9 percent), or Hispanics (9.8 percent). And within these major groups, Black men had the highest union membership rate of 15.8 percent. So why the decline in membership numbers? “The economy,” Nicholas answered. “If you are the last hired and first to go, when the economy changes, you are at the bottom of the seniority list.” And the numbers support Nicholas’ observation. "Fifty-five percent of the union jobs lost in 2004 were held by African-American workers and Black women accounted for 70 percent of the union jobs lost by women in 2004, according to a recent study."

Not surprisingly, most of the losses were in the manufacturing sector, an industry that helped to create the middle class after World War II but has suffered because of exploding technology that accompanied the shift to a knowledge-based economy as well as weakened or unenforced trade laws that caused many jobs to be shipped overseas. Between 1979 and 2006, the share of all African-American workers who worked in manufacturing declined from 23.9 percent to 10.1 percent, the CEPR report stated. Blacks weren’t always welcomed into the unions or the trades they represented until the fierce advocacy of the civil rights movement. For example it took the Philadelphia Plan, adopted by the Nixon administration at the urging of Assistant Labor Secretary Arthur Fletcher, to assure inclusion of Blacks in the skilled building trades.

As recently as this year, the $700-million expansion of the Philadelphia Convention Center was stymied until the Philadelphia Building and Construction Trades Council promised to increase its minority membership. While the construction unions pose a challenge and the industrial unions are losing Black members because of shrinking jobs, the service sector unions like the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees and Service Employees International Union are surging with Black and other non-White members. The unions’ membership is about 16 percent Black. “It used to be the industrial unions that had the most power but with the decline of coal and steel, the service sector unions have become bigger players,” said Paul Clark, professor of labor studies and employment relations at the Pennsylvania State University.

“AFSCME and SEIU tend to organize in more urban centers like Philadelphia.” For Black workers, union membership provides considerable economic benefits as Carlotta Bishop, a home health aide now with SEIU, can attest. “It was very hard because I wasn’t getting enough jobs,” she said. “And I had to work more than 40 hours to get healthcare for me and my children.” Now she’s enjoying a great benefits package. African-American workers like Bishop earn wages that are 12 percent higher – about $2 per hour – than their non-union counterparts, according to research by CEPR’s Jon Schmitt.

Additionally, union members were 16 percentage points more likely to have employer-provided health insurance and 19 percentage points more likely to have a pension plan than non-union workers. Unions also empower their members politically.


FULL story at link.

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