For Immediate Release Contact:
Alison Omens 202-637-5018
Univ. of Ill. Study Finds No Cases of Union Intimidation from Majority Sign Up
Study analyzed
Illinois public sector over six year period
(Washington,
May 4) Majority sign up does not cause union or employer
intimidation, according to a new report released by University of Illinois
Professor Robert Bruno. Bruno analyzed data from public sector workers
in Illinois for six years and found that out of more than 21,000 people
who joined unions through majority sign up, a process sometimes referred
to as “card check,” there was not a single proven case of union
or employer intimidation.
The report states:
In brief, from 2003-2009, 21,197 public sector
workers employed in state, county, municipal and educational institutions
voluntarily joined a union. Most importantly, contrary to business
claims, in nearly eight hundred petition cases, there was not a single
confirmed incidence of union coercion.
The report comes as Congress
considers the Employee Free Choice Act, legislation that will give workers
back the freedom to bargain with corporations for better wages and benefits.
It includes a majority sign up provision which gives workers the choice
of how to form a union rather than leaving that choice in employer’s
hands, as it is under current law. Opponents claim this will lead to
intimidation and coercion from unions, but according to today’s report,
that simply isn’t true.
“Today’s report shows that
corporations are throwing more lies to keep workers from forming unions,”
said AFL-CIO President John Sweeney. “Workers form unions to bargain
for a better life, not because of outside intimidation. Workers need
the majority sign up provision because it gives workers the choice of
how to form a union, not corporations.”
According to the findings,
the lack of intimidation on either side also shows that when there is
a clear path to forming a union, the workplace as a whole functions
more smoothly with no friction.
The report concludes:
As is true in so many other
policy areas, on the subject of union representation the states are
incubators for new ideas and practices. Illinois has demonstrated
that a majority authorization petition can genuinely determine the will
of the employees to be unionized and provides a functional, largely
non-adversarial and event-less process for insuring a fair work environment
for everyone.
According to Bruno, the Illinois
state law is very similar to the proposed Employee Free Choice Act majority
sign up provision. The report, commissioned by the United Association
for Labor Education is the first part of a nationwide report which analyzes
similar state laws.
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