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NEWS & LETTERS, December 2001Column: Workshop Talks by Htun Lin
More dues for less
Many SEIU Local 250 members at Kaiser Hospitals where I work are enraged over a
proposed change in our dues structure much to the surprise of union officials.
The union was proposing to increase our dues by charging us 2% of all gross
wages instead of a fixed increase.They were trying to sell this as a "benefit" for low- wage workers
in nursing homes. We haven't seen such a strong negative reaction at Kaiser
since management demanded and got a two-tier wage structure back in 1986.
Rank-and-filers threw out the corrupt old union bosses who betrayed them in that
failed strike, but to this day the two-tier wage system pits one worker against
another. The new dues proposal also pits one set of workers in the local against
another. One worker said, "Union officials are using the same
divide-and-conquer corporate tactics often used by management against us."
In 1986 Kaiser tried to convince us to accept their two-tier wage system by
claiming current workers would not only continue to make more pay but would even
get an extra bonus upon ratification. Today many professional grade workers, such as X-ray techs, see the union's
scheme as a similar clever ploy. This scheme was sold to nursing home workers as
"dues relief," claiming: you make less, you pay less. Manipulating the
low-wage workers with this promise, union bureaucrats pushed this through. To ensure victory, the bureaucrats not only sent special absentee ballots to
all nursing home workers urging a "yes" vote, they even sent a convoy
of buses to take the "yes" voters to the polls. Some workers
openly wondered if these tactics were learned from Florida Republicans who
selectively counted pro-Bush absentee ballots. The "dues relief" for nursing home workers is a mirage. Even for
these low-wage workers, the new scheme means some part-timers will pay more than
the 2% advertised by the bureaucrats. In any case, nursing home workers will
still be paying too much to the union, considering what they make under the
union contract. The union bureaucrats are exposing their own failure to gain an
equitable living wage for thousands of nursing home workers. Furthermore, other
workers in higher-paying technical jobs would see their dues skyrocket. Kaiser workers overwhelmingly rejected the proposed dues changes. Four years into the top-down initiated partnership with Kaiser management which gave Local 250 a lock on organizing new jobs created through Kaiser's restructuring, workers increasingly feel that every union initiative now is to enhance the flow of dues income. Many workers are asking what could possibly justify this drastic dues increase. Despite this partnership, representation has in fact declined. Countless workers complain how hard it is to get any union help in the workplace. Many of our grievances are now channeled into a management-union committee designed to paper them over instead of giving them a traditional full hearing. RANK-AND-FILE COMMITTEE Several hundred workers met and formed a rank-and-file committee to challenge the legitimacy of the dues increase vote. Shocked SEIU bureaucrats responded by saying they will institute the new dues structure only at sites where it was approved and will hold off at Kaiser where it was overwhelmingly rejected. The rank-and-file committee wasn't impressed by this "compromise," and has started a recall campaign against top local union officials. They also called for de-authorization of the local, which means an open union
shop. This shows that workers are so alienated from their union that they
actually want the right to consent to membership. This makes sense where the
union has decided to totally collaborate with management. We don't want to get
rid of the union, but rank-and-filers want to reassert their control. One worker cited the statement placed in front of the Constitution and
by-laws in 1988 when a new administration came in office as the union came out
from under trusteeship: "Local 250 members are free to determine their own
fate now." The fraudulent practices committed by today's union bureaucrats
reveals sharply how top-down business unionism will always fail to live up to
declarations like this. The rank-and-file committee is now asserting workers' independence. We want
to think and speak for ourselves, especially on what it means to be a member.
The very creation of the labor-management partnership sidelined workers and our
concept of a union. It is important that this revolt be about more than just stopping them from
stealing more of our money. Maybe this dues revolt can signal a renewed
drive toward genuine unionism where we workers organize ourselves in the
workplace, including a drive for a living wage for nursing home workers and all
other low-paid workers. |
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