America's Hidden Human Rights Problem:
Freedom of Association

 
Washington - Friday, December 12, 2003 - by: Mark Weisbrot

 

 

weekends

"Unions -- the Folks Who Brought You the Weekend," reads a popular union T-shirt. It's true enough -- and we could add a sizeable list of other benefits that most people associate with social progress: employer-sponsored health insurance, pensions, and paid vacations.

 

 

right to
organise

But unions in the United States find themselves increasingly having to fight for their very existence. This week, on International Human Rights Day (December 10) thousands of union members and their allies around the country demonstrated for the right to organise.

 

 

hardly
exists

This is something that was supposedly established here in 1935 during the New Deal. But this right has been so eroded in recent decades that -- to the disgrace of the world's richest democracy -- it hardly exists at all.

 

 

fired for
joining

That was the conclusion of a 213-page report by Human Rights Watch, one of the world's largest human rights organizations, written three years ago. And it keeps getting worse. Tens of thousands of workers are fired each year for joining or attempting to organize a union, in violation of U.S. law. But the penalties for employers are so slight that they have what Human Rights Watch calls "a culture of near impunity."

 

 

refusal
to bargain

Employers can also refuse to negotiate for years with a union even after it is recognized, effectively negating their legal obligation to bargain. And while they can't legally fire workers for striking, they can hire "permanent replacements" -- a distinction without much difference.

 

 

denied

From high-tech computer programmers in Redmond, Washington, to minimum wage employees in South Florida Nursing Homes, Human Rights Watch found that workers' rights to organise and bargain collectively were routinely denied.

 

 

no universal
medicare

Abandoning this basic right to freedom of association has had enormous economic consequences. It is no coincidence that the United States, with one of the lowest rates of unionisation in the developed world, is the only high-income country without a national health insurance system. Or, that Europeans enjoy five weeks of vacation on average as compared to less than three for Americans.

 

 

productivity
and wages

Perhaps more drastically, the decline of organised labour -- from 30 percent of the labour force in the 1960s to 13 percent today -- has contributed greatly to the most massive upward redistribution of income in American history. The majority of the U.S. labour force has barely seen any of the enormous productivity gains of the last thirty years reflected in their wages.

 

 

downward
slump

This is in sharp contrast to the first half of the post-World War II period (1946-1973), during which productivity gains were broadly shared and the median wage rose by nearly 80 percent. The United States is each year becoming more like Latin America and other much poorer countries in its economic and social division into haves and have-nots.

 

 

legislation

Legislative reform is long overdue, and there is currently a bill in Congress (S. 1925 in the Senate and H.R. 3619 in the House) that could make a big difference. The "Employee Free Choice Act" would allow for unions to be certified on the basis of member signatures, or "card check." In other words, if the National Labour Relations Board certifies that a majority of employees have signed up to join a union, this would be sufficient.

 

 

coercion

Under the current system, signature gathering is followed by a vote on whether to approve the union. Very often a large majority of employees does indeed sign up for the union, but the employer then uses coercion (firings, warnings of re-location and other threats, "captive audience" meetings) to force a "no" vote.

 

 

prevent
stalling

The bill would also attempt to enforce workers' rights to organize by allowing the courts to use injunctions and fines against employers who break the law. It also provides for mediation and, if that fails, binding arbitration in negotiations for a first contract. This is necessary to prevent employers from stalling for as long as 12 years after a union is certified.

 

 

47%
non-union
want unions

The right to freedom of association is a fundamental human right, and it is a national embarrassment that American society and its legal system do not recognise this right for American employees. A recent Peter Hart poll found that 47 percent of non-union workers -- about 50 million people -- would opt for a union in their workplace if they could. This legislation won't make their wish come true overnight, but it's a good start.
   

Mark Weisbrot

 

Co-Directors
Center for Economic and Policy Research
1621 Connecticut Ave NW, Suite 500
Washington, DC
20009-1052

 

distributed to newspapers by Knight-Ridder/Tribune Information

References:  
  Unfair Advantage: Workers' Freedom of Association in the United States under International Human Rights Standards, August 2000, Human Rights Watch
   
  United States: Congress Should Protect Workers' Rights, December 10, 2003, Human Rights News, Human Rights Watch
 
 
  Compa, Lance, U.S. Workers' Rights Are Being Abused, October 30, 2000, Washington Post
   
  ,Anderson, Porter, AFL-CIO releases 'workers' rights' study, August 30, 2001, CNN
   

   

 

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