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Killing the Private-Sector: What Democrats in Congress couldn’t do for union bosses, the NLRB will

As unemployment continues to rise as a result of the Obama administration’s anti-business climate, the union-controlled National Labor Relations Board is about do what a Democrat-controlled Congress could not do—give unions the ability to kill unionize more companies.

We’ve known this was coming for a while now, but after union bosses blew a few hundred million of their members’ money trying to save what Democrats they could on Tuesday, they now know that their number one legislative agenda item, the Employee Free ANTI-Choice Act is all but dead. Union bosses don’t seem to be too upset though. Why should they? After all, they’ve already engineered Plan B and, now, they’re ready to implement it.

Union leaders on Wednesday said they would focus their efforts on regulatory agencies that govern labor and union-organizing matters, and push for job-creating programs such as new infrastructure projects.

That means unions will turn their attention toward agencies such as the Department of Labor or the National Labor Relations Board, now that there’s little hope Congress will act on legislation such as the Employee Free Choice Act, a bill that would make it easier for unions to organize without secret ballot elections.

[snip]

The NLRB doesn’t have the authority to overhaul labor law, but it could make administrative changes to shorten the time between when a union files for a unionization election and when the election is held at a company, a change unions say is needed to cut down on unfair anti-union pressure tactics by employers.

Gridlock in Washington could compel unions to put more resources into organizing new members, especially low-wage laundry and restaurant workers, and those in health care where unions have had recent successes, labor experts said. They might use more campaigns to allege unfair labor practices at companies, and work more with international unions.

Who needs EFCA when unions control the NLRB?

On October 21st, though not widely reported in the media, NLRB-member Mark Pearce shocked the employer community when he indicated that the union-controlled agency is interested in Canadian-style union elections. Under the Canadian system of “snap elections,” voting takes place within 5 to 10 days once an employer is notified that a union is organizing his workforce. This process gives unions a tremendous boost in the union win rate during union elections.  The problem is, here in the U.S., unions already win the vast majority of elections anyway.

For the last several years, the union win rate of secret ballot elections has steadily increased to around 70%. During that time, the unions’ ever-increasing win rate has been accomplished when the average election time frame from petition to the actual NLRB election has been around 38 days. If the NLRB moves toward 5-10 day elections, the union win rate would likely increase to 90% or better.

As former NRLB member John Raudabaugh warned last week:

…[T]he reduced voting period would allow unions to organize in secret for weeks or months and spring last-minute elections on unknowing employers, especially when no “agitated state” to spur on unionization exists.  Most of these employers run smaller businesses without a legal department of their own, so they do not necessarily know the rules.

“Many are started really rather below the surface attracting the core interested persons and they gain momentum,” Raudabaugh said.  “It takes time sometimes if there’s not a real issue motivating people to coalesce.  They take weeks, months to develop a core constituency and the employer may not be aware.”

This lends itself to a situation where employees are only hearing one side of the unionization story.

The Union Tax.

At a time of extraordinarily high unemployment and jobs still moving overseas, the Obama administration and its union backers seem oblivious to the fact that unions simply cost jobs to be lost.  In fact, studies have indicated that unionization alone (not counting wages and benefits) can increase a company’s operating cost by as much as 25%.

As far as annual expenses for an organization with a union presence, [human resource consultant] Jim Gray estimates that the total additional operating costs (over a union-free company) range from $900,000 for a company with 100 employees to more than $4,000,000 for a company with as many as 2000 employees. These amounts do not include wages and benefits, but do include items such as additional training for managers, additional Human Resources support, attorney’s fees, cost of arbitrations and handling of grievances, plus negotiations, lost productivity, strike planning, security, and lost sales margin, as well as a number of other items.

Extending the research out to 10 years post-unionization, the Employment Policy Foundation (EPF) stated that a unionized company’s output per employee would be 2.4% less than a union-free competitor, if that unionized company experienced just a .25 percent reduction in productivity. Their conclusion was that unless the unionized company could sell their product at a higher price or other cost savings could be attained, the unionized company is likely to see 14 percent less in profits per labor hour than their non-union competitor.

Today, while many larger companies have human resource departments whose job it is to measure and address employee satisfaction, thereby making them less vulnerable to unionization, many smaller companies do not. As a result, small businesses are more likely to be targeted and picked off by union organizers which will likely result in more jobs being lost in the one area where job creation is usually more robust when there is an economic recovery.

As Democrats (and unions) learned earlier this week, America is tired of anti-business forces like unions whose policies are killing job creation. If the Obama NLRB intends to cater to its union bosses’ wishes and further destroy more jobs by making unionization easier, it will only anger an already angry electorate as unemployment stays unacceptably high for years to come.

__________________

“I bring reason to your ears, and, in language as plain as ABC, hold up truth to your eyes.”  Thomas Paine, December 23, 1776

X-posted.

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COMMENTS

  • originalist

    I haven’t seen any coverage of the Props that passed here in AZ on Tuesday, 2 of which are clear pokes in the eye to this administration.

    Our Prop 113 was a constitutional amendment to “guarantee the fundamental right to vote by secret ballot when a local, state or federal law permits or requires an election, designation or Authorization For Employee Representation”

    Our Prop 106 also passed, which again is a constitutional amendment basically to BAR any requirements or fines for failing to join any health care system, not only for persons, but also Health Care Providers.

    I’m bummed about McAmnesty getting another term, but at least we turned out several Dems this cycle.

    • http://908StraightSt.wordpress.com/ mbecker908

      that Federal Law and the US Labor Department will make mincemeat of the AZ Law. Rule of Thumb: Federal Law trumps State Law. Plus, the Feds have a bazillion regulators, the State of Arizona has just about zero.

      Same for Prop 106.

    • http://www.laborunionreport.com LaborUnionReport

      The “save our secret ballot” campaigns that have gone on around the country over the last couple of years are good from the standpoint that it measures public sentiment. However, the reality is, the NLRA would supercede these state laws.

      That said, at the federal level, there had been the Secret Ballot Protection Act that was introduced some years ago. It may be time to dust it back off and get it re-introduced.

  • pubbing

    where many skilled and experienced workers are out of work, I don’t see how small businesses would put up with unionization.

    It seems that there are enough qualified workers out there that a small business can just fire employees once union threats start flying around and hire new skilled workers who won’t buy on to the union thing.

  • cbrossette

    Olin just announced moving jobs to MS from IL due to a union contract which could not be agreed upon. Keep up the buzz on the unions and more companies will look for more favorable locations in the US….and MS is one of them…along with AL and LA….

    • izoneguy

      http://www.thetelegraph.com/news/mississippi-46874-olin-medley.html

      Besides the chance to pay its employees lower wages, Olin Corp. got a $25 million agreement for a new facility in its bid to move south.

      Olin Corp. made the announcement one day after members of District 9 of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers rejected a contract that would have frozen wages of its members working at the East Alton facility for seven years.

      The Mississippi Industry Incentive Financing Revolving Fund passed in the state’s spring legislative session. The legislation puts aside money for large economic development projects. Some that were under way at the time and came to fruition afterward are Twin Creeks, Soladigm, KiOR and McKesson. Two of the companies are relocations from Silicon Valley, Calif., and KiOR is a biomass company to make oil, Medley said. McKesson is one of the largest U.S. pharmaceutical companies.

      “All four of these companies all located in Mississippi because of the legislation, and we helped fund the incentive package for these companies through the legislation,” Medley explained. “The legislation gave us the flexibility to be able to develop appropriate packages for these companie

      • izoneguy

        http://www.1-888-no-union.com/home.html

        We realize that your first instinct in visiting a site that is opposed to today’s unions may be shock, anger or, perhaps, mere curiosity. However, you need to know that being opposed to today’s unions is not anti-worker. You see, unfortunately, there is a huge difference between unions (and what they were founded for) versus today’s unions

  • mutantone

    What with the recent election where the union maintained machines produced a vote along a set line I am willing to bet that the unions votes have the same issues and results. And now we are relegated to bailing out the pension funds of various Unions, after their monumental splurge of donations to the democrats during the election cycle. All in all they got what they paid for with interest. I would ask where all the pension funds went that they needed to be bailed out by the government? And where did the

  • mdd1956

    Indirect union greed shows up in the EPA for example, where the unions support the left wing in return for nourishment (not really crumbs anymore) but who