unions.org
Home Union Directory

Business Directory Forum About Us
   
 FAQFAQ   SearchSearch   MemberlistMemberlist   UsergroupsUsergroups   RegisterRegister 
 ProfileProfile   Log in to check your private messagesLog in to check your private messages   Log inLog in 

Unions: A Professional Choice

 
Post new topic   Reply to topic    unions.org Forum Index -> Union Stories
Author Message
A Contributer
Guest





PostPosted: Wed Oct 05, 2005 6:01 pm    Post subject: Unions: A Professional Choice Reply with quote

[color=red:4abb3691c5][u:4abb3691c5][b:4abb3691c5][size=18:4abb3691c5]Unions: A Professional Choice
by Lauren Lazarovici, AFL-CIO [/size:4abb3691c5][/b:4abb3691c5][/u:4abb3691c5]
[/color:4abb3691c5]
The doctors and nurses who want the best for their patients, the lawyers who protect the public’s health and the engineers who ensure passengers’ safety on airplanes are all professionals who seek to contribute to society through their work while looking for opportunities to be creative and excel at their jobs. And more and more, these professionals are seeking a voice at work to help them achieve their goals.

For more than 100 years, artists and teachers have come together in unions, and other professionals have followed their lead. Already, professional workers are represented by unions at a higher rate (23 percent) than the workforce at large (about 15 percent), according to the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics. And they make up the fastest-growing occupational category in the workforce: Professionals will account for almost 27 percent of all employment growth between 1998 and 2008, according to the BLS. Listening to the needs of professionals and enabling them to gain a voice at work is a key part of activists’ efforts to strengthen the union movement.

Professionals are finding that new economic pressures–managed health care, corporate mergers, threats of privatization and outsourcing–are reducing the influence they have at their jobs and hurting their ability to maintain the quality of services, according to two new studies. "The Professional and Technical Workforce: A New Frontier for Unions," a recent report by the AFL-CIO Department for Professional Employees, finds these economic forces "threaten to undermine their professional autonomy, working conditions and dignity."

"Changes in corporate structure have professionals looking for a vehicle to protect their professional dignity, advance their training and provide them with a voice in the workplace," says DPE President Paul E. Almeida. "More and more, these professionals are looking for a union that will ensure these rights." Actors, artists and other performers long have recognized the value of unions for professionals. During recent high-profile contract negotiations, Hollywood’s best-known actors and actresses, such as Tom Hanks, have talked about the importance of their unions to them and to the thousands of professional entertainers who don’t make six- or seven-figure salaries.

Professionals say it’s getting harder to serve the best interests of their customers, clients and patients–and they no longer can count on stable employment, secure benefits, regular pay increases or upward job mobility, according to Finding Their Voices: Professionals and Workplace Representation, by the Albert Shanker Institute, a nonprofit organization founded by union leaders and named after the former president of AFT.

"Professionals feel their ability to make decisions and exercise professional judgment is diminishing and they are frustrated with their reduced control," says Richard Hurd, professor of industrial and labor relations at Cornell University.

"The challenge for unions is to show that their role will be to bring these workers a voice and to show that the union will be under the professionals’ control." As in any organizing campaign, says Hurd, the key to success is "to listen to the workers." Here’s what six professional employees have to say about why they want unions.

Treating asthma, fractures, burns, ear infections–and even child abuse–are all part of a routine day for Alice Faye Singleton, M.D., director of pediatric clinics at King/Drew Medical Center in Los Angeles.

Half of the babies in the neonatal intensive care unit in the medical center are born to drug-addicted mothers, while the medical center’s trauma unit is filled with victims of drug-related violence. The doctors and other professionals at King/Drew, which serves low-income clients south of downtown, are dedicated to channeling their professional skills to help heal their community–and Singleton says her union is essential for keeping it that way.

Yet only a few years ago, supervisors treated doctors with "a basic lack of respect," she says. They ignored doctors’ contributions to the medical center and were not open to solving problems. Many policies weren’t in writing and doctors received widely divergent pay and workloads. Singleton wanted to craft a fair solution, so in 1999 she became involved in a successful unionization drive with the Union of American Physicians and Dentists/AFSCME. Now she’s on the contract negotiations committee.

"There is more fairness since the union is here," says Singleton. "Managers know unions can hold them accountable. A union is a mechanism to make management listen and communicate with doctors."

Her union helps her thrive in a career she began working toward as a teenager growing up with nine brothers and sisters in Harlem. Even more, the advantages of union membership extend beyond the center. "The community benefits because doctors will stay here and work for the community," she says. "They have a sense of mission to take care of patients who are poor."

Recognizing student concern over issues ranging from campus safety to the hours the recreation center pool is open, West Lincoln High School teacher Dave Thurau harnessed that enthusiasm, assigning students a project to write letters to the mayor and other elected officials. The Cleveland students buzzed with excitement when they received responses, emblazoned with official government seals, which Thurau displayed on a classroom bulletin board.

Thurau, a government and world history teacher and member of the Cleveland Teachers Union/AFT, came up with the innovative teaching technique after earning a certification in social studies last year from the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards. The board–endorsed by AFT, the National Education Association, foundations and business groups–awards the certificates to top teachers who complete rigorous exams that measure mastery of a subject and ability to inspire students. CTU partially funds the Cleveland Teachers Academy, which sponsors coaches to help teachers prepare for the exams.

"The certificate helps bring professionalism to teaching and sets high standards," says Thurau. "It helps teachers improve our teaching by making us examine how effective we are in the classroom." Since taking the certificate course, he’s infused his classes with other innovative strategies, like assigning students to write editorials for the school newspaper on current events. "The kids are learning more, enjoying it more and are being more cooperative," he says.

The lanky father of three also regularly takes part in seminars sponsored by his union on leadership training and such professional issues as behavior management for classrooms.

Thurau is pleased that the latest contract negotiated by the union includes improved wages and health benefits and a procedure to remove disruptive students from the classroom. "Teacher unions such as AFT and NEA push to improve teacher quality," he says. "They are about better education."

As an administrative law judge at the New York City Department of Health, Ilene Shifrin hears cases involving violations of the city’s health code issued to day care centers, restaurants and other buildings. She takes pride in her work, noting that New Yorkers’ health is better protected "because the department is doing its job well," she says.

The union is a key to ensuring the quality of legal services for New York City residents, says Shifrin. The city is better able to retain and recruit attorneys interested in public service because the union fights for good salaries and benefits, she says. The union also negotiated free continuing legal education classes. "Starting lawyers have huge law school debt, and if salaries are too low, you can’t attract people who want to protect public health and protect children from child abuse."

Shifrin also knows that lawyers need unions for other reasons. As secretary of the Civil Service Bar Association/Teamsters Local 237, she has had the chance to meet many city-employed lawyers, some with "hair-raising" tales. "I’ve heard stories about managers who stand at lawyers’ desks and write them up if they are two minutes late coming back from lunch," she says. Some lawyers share phones with up to seven others because the city won’t provide them with equipment.

When she realized she was doing the work of someone with a higher job title–but not getting the extra pay–Shifrin filed a grievance and won. "The union backed me up and I saw that I could have a voice," she says.

"I never wanted to practice law in the traditional sense," she says. "I wanted to serve the public. And the union allows me to do that."

Tom McCarty, who designs radar and other communications equipment for Boeing Co. aircraft in Seattle, is among thousands of professionals helping transform an airplane from a tangle of blueprints to a dynamic, graceful tube of aluminum gliding through the sky.

"People believe in the company and take pride in their work," says McCarty. While watching successful test flights, McCarty says he’s seen "grown men with tears running down their cheeks. There’s a lot of pride in seeing that plane take off."

But like many professionals at the company, McCarty, 57, grew concerned when Boeing merged with McDonnell Douglas, bought divisions of other technology companies and stopped treating engineers as allies in creating quality aircraft. Then Boeing began laying the groundwork to cut engineers’ health and pension benefits. "When the company started to treat us as a ‘cost,’ not a partner, people took great offense."

McCarty supported the drive of his independent union, the Society of Professional Engineering Employees in Aerospace, to affiliate with the International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers in the fall of 1999. In January 2000, McCarty–along with a large majority of Boeing’s 20,000 workers–walked off the job in what became the largest private-sector, white-collar strike in U.S. history. During the successful six-week strike, McCarty, a father of six who is married to his high school sweetheart, used the same engineering skills that make him a successful radar designer: He built environmentally friendly burn barrels to keep picketers warm.

Ultimately, the contract that workers and Boeing negotiated included pay increases and no benefit cutbacks. McCarty also points to another crucial clause: a labor-management "partnership" agreement that gives SPEEA/IFPTE members a voice in the company’s decisions. "Having a union is a tool for making our voice heard," he says. "We want to have a role in determining our destiny."

When San Francisco city and county officials wanted to shut down Laguna Honda Hospital two years ago, Natividad Dullas and her co-workers knew it was time to take action. Dullas and other members of SEIU Local 790, a part of SEIU’s Nurses Alliance, saw the threat as an increasing trend of government abandoning its commitment to public health for seniors and the homeless. In a spirited campaign that brought together the community and workers, Dullas and other union members knocked on voters’ doors, phoned their homes and won a ballot measure to keep the hospital open. "The union is helping the community," she says.

The desire to help others is what motivated Dullas to become a nurse. The daughter of two doctors, Dullas jokes that her parents successfully "brainwashed" her and her eight siblings into becoming medical professionals. A registered nurse at Laguna Hospital, the mother of three works in the department of education and training, teaching nurse co-workers about nutrition, fire safety, disaster preparedness, violence in the workplace and spiritual issues that patients face at the end of life. She also is getting a master’s degree at San Francisco State University in gerontological nursing, focusing on managing pain for elderly patients. "A lot of our clients suffer from dementia and can’t communicate to us when they are in pain," says Dullas. "It is a challenge for the staff to help them."

Dullas’ desire to help extends to her fellow workers. "My co-workers would come to me when they had problems with the administration," such as scheduling and being treated disrespectfully, she says. Union leaders tapped her as a shop steward. "I just couldn’t take it, seeing my co-workers being treated that way."

Her union gives nurses a voice to solve conflicts, Dullas says, and helps improve patient care by working to keep staffing levels adequate. "With the union, we have a say with the administration," she says.

When food stamp recipients call the customer service center in Houston where Communications Workers of America Local 6186 member Arnulfo "Samm" Almaguer works as an assistant supervisor, they often need immediate assistance.

If there’s a new child in the family, or some other circumstance requires more food, they need Almaguer and his co-workers to increase their benefits quickly. "When your pantry is empty, a week is a long time," he says.

If the call center is short-staffed–which it often is because low salaries lead to high turnover–clients will suffer. "Staffing levels impact our clients," says Almaguer. "They affect whether people get their food stamps in a day–or in a week."

Members of CWA Local 6186, the Texas State Employees Union, are working to boost salaries and benefits for workers at the state’s Department of Human Services. Almaguer knows that means building the union so it has more clout with state lawmakers who fund the department. "The legislature responds to big numbers," he says. "I joined the union because with numbers comes strength."

Almaguer signs up new union members when workers first arrive at the call center for training. He approaches them in the lunchroom during breaks, telling them about the importance of joining the union. He knows a strong union movement in Texas means better service for low-income people who rely on him and his co-workers for food stamps, Medicaid and other government assistance. "The legislature responds to voters," says Almaguer. "And with the union, we have people power."[/u]
Back to top
Union Reformer



Joined: 01 Sep 2005
Posts: 9
Location: San Luis Obispo, CA.

PostPosted: Sat Oct 08, 2005 6:05 am    Post subject: Excellent Article Reply with quote

Thanks for your contribution Shocked
Back to top
Employee
Guest





PostPosted: Sun Mar 19, 2006 1:41 am    Post subject: Roots Reply with quote

Unions use same tactics as mafia organizations. Also corruption is on their roots. In other words is a pest to society.
Prove me I'm wrong.
Anything you could say or justify in favor of unions leads to mafia modus operandis.
They want this? They'll get it... by any means!!!
Lawyers and even members of the congress know that unions manage a large amount of money...that's a good income under the table.
Remember the film The Godfather? HIS ORGANIZATION WAS A UNION ITSELF!!! and still it is.
You have to be blind not to recognize all this.
Back to top
Guest






PostPosted: Sun Mar 19, 2006 4:51 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

How about you stop watching so much TV, and take a look see who is in Washington fighting new laws to protect workers, and fighting even harder to keep the ones already in place. If you must base so much f your opinion on TV, try CSPAN instead of so much HBO.
Back to top
Guest






PostPosted: Sat Mar 25, 2006 7:01 pm    Post subject: Re: Roots Reply with quote

[quote:56573c8523="Employee"]Unions use same tactics as mafia organizations. Also corruption is on their roots. In other words is a pest to society.
Prove me I'm wrong.
Anything you could say or justify in favor of unions leads to mafia modus operandis.
They want this? They'll get it... by any means!!!
Lawyers and even members of the congress know that unions manage a large amount of money...that's a good income under the table.
Remember the film The Godfather? HIS ORGANIZATION WAS A UNION ITSELF!!! and still it is.
You have to be blind not to recognize all this.[/quote:56573c8523]

Your comment is blatantly ignorant and stereotypical. Saying that Unions are somehow Mafia related is as broad a generalization as saying anyone who is Italian-American is in the "Mob." You should attempt to educate yourself before sticking your foot in your mouth.
Back to top
MattClarkIUECWA



Joined: 25 Mar 2006
Posts: 3
Location: Dayton, OH

PostPosted: Sat Mar 25, 2006 7:03 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I apologize, I forgot to log in above.
Back to top
wondermite



Joined: 25 Feb 2006
Posts: 27

PostPosted: Sun Mar 26, 2006 2:34 pm    Post subject: guest is wrong Reply with quote

The guest that said unions are corrupt probally has forgotten that his vacation time was mostly founded by unions or that the family leave he may ned to take off work to care for his family was brought about with the help of union's. no matter what job he does unions have made their presence known for helping the employee's. labor union's are out their busting their butt trying to get congress and employee's to fix health care and keep the rights of older american's on the job. the u.s. along with some bad union's has insider trading, illegall gambling between team players in most sports, we have corrupt police dept.s. bad judge's and politican's. all n all unions have helped make this country what it is today. the reason we are going backwards fast is because our gop controlled congress has stripped away so much from union's, osha etc.. that we are almost powerless aginst these big corporation's. you may not believe how many doctor's and lawyer's are joining union's and it is not all about money. it is sad to see that some european countrie's have union's that have more worker's rights than u.s. union's has. how much money and power does these big ceo's have to gain and how many pension plan's and job lay off's do we have to look at before people realize that union's are just about all we have to help us agains billion dollar company's. everytime employer's find wats to save some money it goes to the big ceo's or they give it to politians to pass laws aginst worker's rights. union's spend time asking politians to help fix worker's right's. i don't see why i have to wait 14 days to get a workman compensation check if im injured on the job or my job making hammer's go to mexico and they send the hammer's back here to sell and then a person may have to go to walmart to work and walmart pay politian's lots of money to be able to pay their worker's less. if anybody is corrupt look up facts on walmart at www.ufcw.org.
Back to top
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   Reply to topic    unions.org Forum Index -> Union Stories All times are GMT
Page 1 of 1

 



| Candidates 2008 | Construction Injury Attorney | Email Login | Online Bingo |
| Privacy | Reverse Mortgages | Sitemap | Towing |
| Treatment Solutions | Union Sitemap |