Beyond the lunch bucket
Labor discovers community issues
May/June 1996
Monika Baurelein Utne Reader
These days, even talking about a labor 'movement' sounds like whistling past the graveyard. Just over 10 percent of American non-agricultural private-sector workers belonged to unions in 1995, according to the Department of Labor--down from more than 30 percent in the 1950s. The service sector, the fastest-growing in the economy, has the smallest share of unionized employees. Transnational corporations need only to pack up shop--or threaten to--if they're tired of uppity workers. Economists are proclaiming the end of the job as we know it. And in public opinion polls, union officials rank right down there with journalists and used-car salespeople in popularity.
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And yet there's this interesting little poll, conducted for the AFL-CIO by Peter D. Hart Associates and cited by David Moberg in Dissent (Winter 1996): While 'only a slim plurality of those polled sided with unions over management . . . a solid majority (52 to 17 percent) said they supported workers against management.' Add the obvious but little-noticed fact that 'worker rights represent a claim by the vast majority against a relatively small minority of managers and property owners,' and you'd think there still was power in a union--if, that is, a union means more than a distant bureaucracy indistinguishable from the managers and politicians with whom it negotiates. In other words, if unions could be important to American communities again.
There are, it turns out, signs that in some sectors of American labor, activists are exploring the boundaries between unionism and wider community issues. In California, notes Pacific News Service's David Bacon, farmworkers of the Cesar Chavez era always referred to their union as la causa; their younger counterparts, Bacon writes, are tapping that tradition to explore new avenues for labor. The most high-profile result was union participation in the movement against immigrant-bashing Proposition 187, in direct opposition to anti-immigrant groups' appeal to native-born workers' disaffection. Taking the same concept a step further are growing efforts at 'cross-border organizing' that consider workers in low-wage countries allies rather than competitors. A similar rapprochement occasionally is found between unions and environmental groups--which, after all, fight the same toxic chemicals that account for disproportionate rates of illness among workers who handle them.