BlahBlahYouToo
Lifer
- Jul 10, 2007
- 12,041
- 3
- 0
Even in states that do not have right-to-work laws, you may still not be forced to join the union in any official manner. However, even if you aren't forced to join the union officially, you will almost certainly still have to pay dues since even without "officially" joining the union you would be covered under the same collective bargaining agreement. This was how it worked a long time ago when I had a job in a union shop in Ohio. Even though I never officially joined the union, they still took dues out of my paycheck because I supposedly "benefited" from their negotiations. (Never mind the fact that when the store was bought out by a competitor in the same industry that used the same union the union did absolutely nothing for existing employees; people with 30 years experience at the old store had to re-apply for the exact same position with the new store and even if they were hired they'd still lose all union seniority despite it being the exact same job in the exact same industry represented by the exact same union.) Friggin' UFCW is worthless. Did absolutely nothing to help people who had been dues-paying members for decades.
ZV
Yeah, they actually do. Maybe not $75k in most instances, but wages are obviously grossly inflated due to unions.
What experience do you have in the matter?
With unions, you can easily end up with numerous overpaid, underperforming workers who cannot be let go.
i have nothing to add to this thread other than FUCK UNIONS.
Haha, I swear my dad logged into your account and posted this.You will be chastised for not joining the union. I fucking HATE unions. The original point of them has been completely lost on the large scale industries. I know each union is different, but in my experience unions give an "us vs. them" mentality with salary/management folk and union folk. It's awful for workplace morale. It also seems to bring out the laziest SOBs on the planet. Fuckers know they don't have to do shit because the union will have to fight for their job in case of being let go. I haven't seen many positives where I've worked.
Again, its funny how people who arent apart of Union say they suck. Union Electricians in Utah make 27.84 an hour which in my opinion is underpaid. Non union makes around 22 and have to pay 275 a paycheck for medical and no retirement. The company I work for made over 55 million profit last year, and its not a public company. Thats one guy who made $55 million. Income for millionaires has triple in the past 3 decades, has it for the middle class? Fuck no. People deserve what they earn, and people need to live. Trying to raise a family on 27.84 an hour for 40 hours a week and afford a house is fucking hard...too hard. And this is why unions are needed. I could only imagine trying to do it for 22 an hour.
Nonsense. I have gotten plenty of union workers shitcanned or done it personally. You have to be extremely calm, patient, and 'professional' but you can make it happen in less than six months if you put your mind to it.
You will be chastised for not joining the union. I fucking HATE unions. The original point of them has been completely lost on the large scale industries.
6 months for an underperforming slacker is good? I can get rid of someone in under a month and promote who I see as the best fit for the job, not who has the most seniority.
Again, its funny how people who arent apart of Union say they suck. Union Electricians in Utah make 27.84 an hour which in my opinion is underpaid. Non union makes around 22 and have to pay 275 a paycheck for medical and no retirement. The company I work for made over 55 million profit last year, and its not a public company. Thats one guy who made $55 million. Income for millionaires has triple in the past 3 decades, has it for the middle class? Fuck no. People deserve what they earn, and people need to live. Trying to raise a family on 27.84 an hour for 40 hours a week and afford a house is fucking hard...too hard. And this is why unions are needed. I could only imagine trying to do it for 22 an hour.
Where, exactly, did I say it was good? I said it was possible. If you're going to quote someone, please only refer to what they actually write.
In regards to the role seniority plays in promotion and/or termination it varies by contract. While unions generally favor seniority playing a large part in an employee's promotion all contracts are different. Personally I have never been under a contract that used seniority as a formal criteria for promotion but from what I hear it is common in other larger unions like the UAW and the airline unions.
For the record, I personally am against seniority being used as anything more than an informal criteria for promotion.
There's a mix where I am, and I don't like it. Say a job opens up... it's either a craft (electrician/mechanic) or non-craft. If a craft job opens up then other qualified people bid on it, and it goes to the highest seniority. If nobody bids, it trickles down to non-craft folk who want to take the craft test. They bid and it goes to highest seniority. If that falls through then they start looking outside the current workforce.
And that, my friend, is Shitty with a capital S. Don't like it one bit.
The company I work for is non-union and is paid higher and more productive than all the union ones in the country, so that counters your point. The company I work for made nearly a billion in profit last year.
But guess what? Anecdotal evidence doesn't matter, it's the company itself that matters on what they pay and what benefits they provide. You can get the same pay and same benefits in a non-union company and not pay a cent in retarded union dues.
6 months for an underperforming slacker is good? I can get rid of someone in under a month and promote who I see as the best fit for the job, not who has the most seniority.
You will be chastised for not joining the union. I fucking HATE unions. The original point of them has been completely lost on the large scale industries. I know each union is different, but in my experience unions give an "us vs. them" mentality with salary/management folk and union folk. It's awful for workplace morale. It also seems to bring out the laziest SOBs on the planet. Fuckers know they don't have to do shit because the union will have to fight for their job in case of being let go. I haven't seen many positives where I've worked.
The Collective Agreement between [employer] and UFCW, local [xxx], as negotiated will be a closed shop, meaning that those individuals who hold positions within the scope of the bargaining unit will be required to be union members. Therefore, if you will not be completing a Union membership application you will not be able to continue in your current capacity with [employer]. Members will have thirty (30) days from date of ratification to complete this obligation.
UPDATE:
I wrote to the union and this is what I was told:
WOW!!!UPDATE:
I wrote to the union and this is what I was told:
Ask them about "Fair Share".UPDATE:
I wrote to the union and this is what I was told:
Still haven't told us which state you are in.
I really don't get how unions are not charged with extortion.