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WHY UNIONS?
THE NEED TO STAND TOGETHER
Without a union, the individual employee has no voice, but is subject
to every arbitrary decision the employer makes. The employer can lay off
or fire any worker – for any reason. Where there is collective bargaining
in a healthcare facility, the individual worker has a voice and is not
subject to arbitrary decisions. That worker shares with other employees
and with the employer, the responsibility for establishing orderly
procedures for determining wages, hours of work, health and safety
procedures, promotion and layoff policies and just penalties for the
violation of necessary work rules. As a part of a union, you have the
strength that comes from numbers and through your union, the ability to
select able staff people – negotiators, lawyers, research specialists, and
others who are skilled in the art of collective bargaining .
ONLY AS PART OF A GROUP DO YOU HAVE THE ECONOMIC STRENGTH THAT PERMITS
BARGAINING WITH THE EMPLOYER ON A BASIS APPROACHING EQUALITY.
Collective bargaining is a rational, democratic and peaceful way to
resolve conflict. In recent years some 150,000 collective bargaining
agreements have been negotiated. Only two percent of them were affected by
strikes. So, in 98 percent of all cases, collective bargaining was
successful! Not a bad record! It took a lot of nerve for employees to
stand up for their rights in the days when there were fewer unions and no
laws legalizing collective bargaining. There were no job safety standards,
paid vacations, sick leaves or retirement plans. Hiring and firing,
promotion and layoff practices were under the exclusive control of the
employers. But employees did stand up for their rights, and today we are
enjoying the results. You can’t put a price tag on the human dignity
individual workers feel when they stand up for their
rights either.

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