Printable Version
Tell a friend
Students Take to Interactive Union Education
Thursday, July 24, 2008
(Texas AFL-CIO News)Students Take to Interactive Union Education
by Ed Sills, Texas AFL-CIO News
“We’ll just let these two ladies clean the
bathroom because that’s a woman’s job,”
declared Lee Medley, president of the Galveston
Central Labor Council, with a sly glance toward
the men.
It was play-acting, but
with a purpose. In economics classes at Santa
Fe High School, high school women were
practically leaping out of their chairs at that
point to enter into negotiations for better pay
and benefits in a scenario aimed at involving
students in hands-on collective
bargaining.
Medley, a member of
the United Steel Workers who represents workers
in area refineries, uses this and other
techniques to introduce high school students to
unions during high school visits.
With the cooperation of teachers Geoff Rupp
(who describes himself as an “economic
libertarian” who wanted his students to be
exposed to another point of view) and Dustin
Dyer, Medley visits economics classes at the
school every year to explain what unions do. In
Texas, where union density is less than 6
percent of the work force, unions need
explaining, because the textbooks certainly
aren’t doing the job.
In the
classes Medley visited on May 22, the textbook
had the imprimatur of The Wall Street Journal
and limited itself to two points about unions
that might have come straight from the
right-wingers at the National Right to Work
Foundation: that “some evidence” suggests
higher union wages drive down non-union wages;
and, using the long-obsolete and inapt example
of “caboose men,” that unions have engaged
in “featherbedding,” or the creation of
unneeded jobs. There was nary a stray fact
about unions’ role in the creation of the
40-hour work week, the National Labor Relations
Act, Social Security or other programs workers
take for granted.
Quick Intro to the
Basics
“Many of you know me
because my children have gone to this
school,” Medley tells each class, “but you
probably don’t know what I actually do for a
living.”
After explaining his
role in the union movement, Medley then asks
who has a job (most hands rise) and quizzes
students on their rights. “Do you have to
have a break during the day?” (Students think
that’s the law, but it’s not the case in
Texas.) “Can you be fired because the bosses
don’t like your shirt?” (Yes, in this “at
will employment” state, unless you have a
contract.) “Can they make you sign a waiver
when you’re injured before you get medical
help?” (Yes.)
After asking a
few more questions about students’ individual
jobs – one hears that “they work you very
hard” at Discount Tire but will “take care
of you” if you’re injured – Medley gets
to the heart of the class. He starts by asking
for the most “ruthless” student. Sometimes
fingers will point; other times, he will call
up someone he knows is from a union family or
someone who might be talking to his
neighbor.
That first person is
the “owner” of a chemical company. Another
“evil” person serves as the management
attorney. Medley first gets the pair to specify
wages for workers. One owner tries to pay $3 an
hour, which becomes an opportunity to mention
minimum wage laws. One offers $16 an hour, and
immediately hears rumbles of “shareholder
discontent” and possible management shuffles.
Owners then decide whether employees will have
health care and who will pay (usually the
employees to start), who will pay for uniforms,
safety devices and boots and how much, if any,
paid vacation employees will
receive.
Four negotiable items is
enough to get rolling, but as the day
progresses, different classes raise different
issues, including retirement plans, sick pay
and holidays.
Once management’s
position is established, Medley alters the
scenario. The economy is bad. Management is
dropping pay by $2 an hour; no more
employer-provided uniforms; and, yes, while Joe
over there is a buddy of the owner and gets to
play golf with him, the women will have to take
over the cleaning of the
bathrooms.
“You want to
organize?” Medley asks. When the first hand
shoots up, Medley turns to the “owner” and
says, “Okay, she’s going to have to be
fired, right?”
“But isn’t
that illegal?” a first-period student
asks.
“It is,” says Medley,
but he goes on to explain the political
situation at the National Labor Relations
Board, the long lag time for justice and how
some employers will view any penalty as a mere
cost of doing business.
“Who
else wants to organize?” Most hands are up by
now, and Medley grants “certification” and
picks three or four students to come forward
and negotiate on behalf of workers. He also
gives the students some information on pay
levels in local refineries and chemical
plants.
What follows is a classic
back-and-forth on all of the issues on the
table. Medley has to stop “management” from
reneging on some offers, pointing out that
that’s a classic example of bad-faith
bargaining. The students recognize the
interplay of all the issues; $2 an hour in pay
might cost them a week of vacation or 10
percent of the cost of health care. When
necessary, Medley provides “leverage” by
clarifying the facts. After several minutes,
Medley suggests that management has submitted
its “last, best and final”
offer.
“Now does the union
negotiation team get to make the decision on
whether to accept the contract?” Medley asks.
“Certainly not. Every union member gets to
vote on this.”
A vote to
support the pay package occurs. Invariably, the
package is significantly better for workers
(and management has something to tell
shareholders about how it held down the initial
requests).
That is the lesson of
the class, and it’s a powerful, efficient
lesson delivered in less than 45 minutes.
When there was time at the end
of class, students asked questions, and a few
who planned to enter the work force after high
school received union materials and
instructions on how to connect with an area
apprenticeship program.
How to Expand
the Program
In Texas, school
visits occurred with regularity some 30 or 40
years ago, when the Texas AFL-CIO had a
Speaker’s Bureau for the purpose of
introducing unionism to classrooms. But over
the years, such visits have become more
haphazard, though some activists still get
calls from social studies
teachers.
Medley said he has
found the hands-on approach to be effective in
reaching teenagers.
“You can go
in and lecture on the history of the labor
movement and how unions work,” Medley said.
“But for students who aren’t in the adult
workforce, you’re not going to reach them.
It’s too abstract. This gets students
involved and sometimes gets their blood
boiling.”
Medley suggested and
has agreed to participate in a workshop at the
next Texas AFL-CIO Constitutional Convention to
demonstrate his classroom presentation and
discuss how to build access to schools in other
parts of the state.
Texas AFL-CIO
President Becky Moeller and Secretary-Treasurer
Paul Brown instructed staff to move forward
with the workshop in the hopes of
reestablishing an old program that they believe
never should have receded into the
background.
“The labor movement
recognizes the seriousness of the obstacles to
organizing and delivering our message that
accompanied the decline in the Texas curriculum
on labor unions,” Moeller said.
“Union members who visit
schools are doing important work to build the
future of labor. With polls showing that young
people are increasingly receptive to the union
message, these classroom programs are as timely
and valuable as ever.”
