IBEW

FACT SHEET

Why Employers Oppose Unions. . . The Facts

Why do employers fight the legal right of employees to organize? Without a Union, employees are employed at will. What this means is legally, employees have no rights other than those expressed in state        and federal laws. Laws are only as good as their enforcement. If an employer  violates the rights of employees, employees are usually unwilling to expend the expense and time to fight the charge and clear their good name. Employers have a whole cadre of attorneys and consultants to protect the company. The  duty of these attorneys and consultants is to represent the interests of management.

With a union, employees gain additional rights, enforceable in a court of law. The IBEW has its own cadre of attorneys and  representatives whose sole purpose is to represent the rights of employees. Employees gain   further legal rights just with their union representation. The law gives rights to employees organized collectively that individual  employees do not enjoy.

What about employer claims that they will lose flexibility with a union? Employers do lose flexibility          in certain circumstances with a union, because the rights of both employer and employee are spelled out in            a legal, binding contract. For example, employers lose flexibility in doing the following under most union     contracts:

  • Set wages where they want, without input or review by employees;
  • To layoff employees without recourse and employee input;
  • Utilize subcontractors on an unlimited basis to reduce costs of full-time employees;
  • Change benefits whenever management wants without any say by employees;
  • Absolve actions by supervisors or managers without a hearing or review of such actions;
  • Hold a grievance meeting with peer and/or management review that has no legal recourse by                  the employee filing the grievance, and is unenforceable in a court of law;
  • Discipline an employee and refuse to allow the employee's right to a fair hearing, and further,                    to deny the employee the right to review by an impartial arbitrator.

Are there economic considerations that prompt management's opposition? Yes. Employers make          no qualms about their desire to maximize profits and minimize costs. If unorganized employers compete with surrounding organized employers (which are limited in their ability to cut wages of employees or subcontract     jobs at a cheaper rate) the unorganized employer can be very successful in reducing costs by holding or       reducing employee wages and benefits. If all employers are organized, however, employee wages and         benefits are taken out of competition, and employers must then compete on improving productivity or        innovative methods.

Without a union, management is free to use employee wages and benefits to reduce its costs, thereby            driving down the wages and benefits of the organized employees of other utilities. The unorganized           employer then must  cut its employee costs further, and on and on. The cycle never ends.

Are organized companies competitive? Yes, most definitely. The IBEW has worked hard with its         employers to insure the employers are productive and competitive. Employees have the same desire to              make a company successful as management does. However, the methods are different in organized       companies. In organized companies, workers and management are equal partners in addressing the              needs of employees, shareholders, and customers.

Are there any other reasons employers oppose our right to organize? The ultimate reason is that employers lose total control over the working lives of its employees. When employees organize a Union, employers must, by law, bargain with employees and their union over terms and conditions of employment, and that right is enforced by Federal Law. This is the primary reason employers expend so much time, effort, and money preventing employees from finding out the truth about union organization.

Industrial democracy provided by our Union limits the dictatorial power of management. Only then can we as employees have an equal, effective           voice in our own affairs.