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Opposition in one of America's biggest unions.
Co-operation with management under pressure.
The Service Employees Internation Union in the USA has led the way in the policy of co-operation with management. It is now facing increased opposition from within its own ranks to this policy. The Service Employees International Union, SEIU,
is both one of the largest and most controversial
US trade unions. Its growing numbers go counter
to the wider trend of declining membership and
concentration of union members while its
leadership, spearheaded by Pres. Andy Stern,
carries out what they call a 'win-win' strategy
relying on cooperation with corporate management.
This spring, a reform movement within the SEIU
forced the national leadership to abandon one
such agreement with the northern California
nursing home operators on May 31st. This article
seeks to examine that agreement and the push
against it. Hopefully, there are useful lessons
for us who face the 'bottom line' pressure of
Corporate America on our jobs as well as in our
lives outside work.
Hopefully, this reform fight and its limitations
shed useful light where overly optimistic or
cynical people only see one aspect- the fight
itself did win. For one, it illustrates the
different interests of different sections of the
union hierarchy that prompted this fight. It
shows how the SEIU's collaboration with the
profit-first operators hurt both the workers and
the wider, working class public who live in these
nursing homes. It also illuminates the need for
us to develop organizations not dependent on the
feuding factions of the union management
structures- organizations founded on our common
needs and interests as part of the working class,
worldwide, faced with today's global capitalism.
To stand up to management, it's inadequate and
harmful to simply back the 'lesser of 2 evils'.
To create the networks and learn how to fight, we
need a careful examination of such struggles.
The initial Union-corporate agreement lasted
4-1/2 years of its 7-year package before the
national SEIU leadership was forced to end it as
of May 31, 2007. The initial agreement was a
tradeoff: the union agreed not to publicize or
oppose any unhealthy or harmful practices, such
as short staffing, to state regulators or the
media, except those already mandated by law. The
SEIU in CA even opposed legislation that would
have forced healthcare owners to improve patient
care and safety. To start the ball rolling, the
union led the successful fight for higher state
payments to the operators.
In exchange for all this and more, the
owners/operators agreed to allow employees to
join the union without opposition. These new
union members, some 3,000+, were then covered by
'template agreements', put into the master
agreement and not negotiated by the workers
themselves or their chosen representatives. These
template agreements gave up the right to strike
as well as the right to campaign against
mistreatment of the workers and the patients.
According to an internal analysis done after 4
years under this 'win-win' agreement by the
regional SEIU branch, United Healthcare Workers -
West (UHW), these deals "allowed for very little
power on the shop floor with no right to strike
and no clear path towards full collective
bargaining rights." (This quote and much of the
information regarding the partnership and the
reform effort come from "Internal Pressure Ends
'Sweetheart' Contract Early" by Mark
Brenner-http://labornotes.org/node/989)
This agreement with the northern CA nursing home
owners was also important since it also served as
a template for the wider international union
strategy espoused by the SEIU's Stern but also by
most national US unions- partnership with the
employers. This trend is to 'grow the union' by
such agreements while creating huge, so-called
locals as big as 100,000 members. Internally, the
SEIU is moving towards the corporate mirror
image, internally as well in its main
relationship with corporate management.
The SEIU may be the most 'advanced' example, but
it is not alone in its practice of selling out
the workers' need for actual power in exchange
for 'peaceful relations' with management. In
fact, this has been the dominant, if contested,
practice in US unions at least since the victory
of the Cold War anti communism of the late 1940s.
That victory was sealed at the 1949 CIO
convention when those who believed in working
class unity against the demands and priorities of
capitalism (sometimes referred to as
class-struggle unionism) were excluded from union
positions and whole unions from the CIO itself.
Today, Andy Stern is the most outspoken union
leader espousing this 'win-win' collaboration
(combined with judicious pressure). Thus, the
agreement, its effects, and its demise have
relevance greater than its impact upon those
workers directly.
The UHW elected leadership, staff members and
local stewards began a campaign to change or
scrap the operating agreement several months
before the national leadership gave in and
dropped it. The UHW leaders made a study of the
agreement, mentioned earlier, and sent out a
letter to all members which said, in part, "
Some in the national SEIU are negotiating an
agreement with nursing home employers-in
California and nationally- and have repeatedly
excluded UHW nursing home members and elected
representatives from the process."
Of course, the newly organized members had always
been excluded, from the first day of the
agreement. So, what was new? Why did the local
leadership only organize opposition after over 4
years? After all, this deal had excluded the
workers themselves from negotiating their
'template' agreements which gave up the right to
strike and the right to campaign for their own
and patients' safety. What was new? "Why Now?"
is always a timely question.
One reason appears to have been the growing
exclusion of UHW leaders from negotiating the
follow-up agreements. This is part of the SEIU's
super-centralization whereby most 'local' unions
are organized in 'efficient' organizations of
20,000- 200.000, often encompassing entire states
or even geographical regions. This
super-centralization also happens to minimize the
ability of local work groups to impact their own
'local' union unless they develop wider networks
and organizations. Thus, the growing exclusion of
local leaders and workers from negotiations flows
from the extreme version of collaboration and
'corporatizing' the union itself. This
development indicates the actual necessity of
developing working class, I would argue,
socialist organizations based on common class
needs and opposed to this widespread
subordination of workers' interests to corporate
and Union management.
Instead of developing the natural affinity and
unity over working and health conditions, this
agreement actually pit the healthcare workers and
the union against the patients and their
families. It illustrates perfectly the contrast
between class collaboration and class struggle
unionism. This development also shows how the
different and competing interests within the
union structures can and did lead to greater
worker involvement, opening the door to concerned
workers seeing and helping develop their own
collective potential to force change.
Once the UHW leaders did initiate open and
internal struggle against the agreements and the
negotiations that froze them out, over 20,000 UHW
members signed the petition within a few weeks.
This response shows some potential for a real
fight, not a sham fight run by a group which
itself actively pressures workers to serve
profiteering management against their own and
their class's real needs. As a shop steward
Brenner talked with put it, "We've signed up over
half the members where I work. What really got
people upset was this idea that guys in suits,
sitting in Washington, D, C,, will bargain our
contracts.
These are people who have never worked in a
hospital and who don't know anything about our
jobs. Then, to top it off, we won't even have a
right to vote on the contract they negotiate."
The UHW
workers were very much against the SEIU's
extending that agreement covering new workers
onto them. They showed no trust in the national
leadership to 'look out for them'. Quite the
contrary. These testify to the lie that workers
are passive and trust their leadership. It shows
the potential for a powerful working class fight,
but only if an alternative develops to challenge
the strategy of 'win-win' collaboration.
In other words, when the SEIU leadership froze
out the local leaders from negotiations, those
leaders took the initiative to fight, for their
own reasons. When it was 'just the workers' who
were frozen out, they did nothing. The local
leaders had their own reasons for fighting; that
fight then illuminated the level of discontent of
most members. It opened the door to workers'
organizing and talking amongst themselves over
what this would mean. It created an opening which
will need to go beyond this limited resistance if
they're to realize the potential for expanding
their own networks not dependent upon the
initiatives of the local leaders.
I don't write this to denigrate those UHW
leaders. Far from it: in fact, they undertook a
fight, which could have put them out of a job.
The SEIU, like most national unions, including my
own, AFSCME, has constitutional, vague provisions
allowing the national leaders to place local
unions under trusteeship, wherein the national
leaders take over the local and appoint officers
who make decisions for the local. The fact that
the UHW-W leaders started this internal fight
shows how threatened they (and others in such
positions) must have felt by this totally
centralized, corporatized setup pushed by Stern
and his allies.
You might recall the original "Justice for
Janitors" campaign in Los Angeles back in the
early '90s. There was even a movie based upon it.
The national SEIU paid local activists to
organize mostly Central American and Mexican
immigrant communities for militant confrontations
and mass marches in solidarity with the union
organizing drive for downtown janitors. After the
workers and SEIU forced the corporate employers
to sign a decent contract, the militant activists
formed a slate and won local union election. To
show that they didn't mean to threaten the union
establishment, this solidarity slate chose not to
run a candidate for president. The SEIU
leadership responded quickly; they took over that
local, dissolved it into a statewide SEIU 'local'
and bought off one or two of the original local
leaders. Who were the chief SEIU officers at he
time? John Sweeney, current AFL-CIO president,
was then the SEIU president while Andy Stern was
his loyal VP. It took courage and shrewd
judgement for those UHW leaders to make this
fight; make no mistake. But it's also important
not to lionize them and their initiative.
In fact, like most unions committed to such
'junior partnerships', the UHW-W has consistently
promoted corporate interests over workers' for
many years. A recent article by Charles Andrews,
"Who's Right about Kaiser-Michael Moore or SEIU?"
gives us several examples and insights based on
their, SEIU's, junior partnership with Kaiser
Permanente.
(http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/andrews050907.html)
While Moore's recent movie SiCKO refers to Kaiser
as an example of profiteering health exploiters.
It ran tape where Nixon approves the Kaiser
practice of using healthcare premiums as their
money, essentially for profits and not to provide
healthcare. In fact, Kaiser was the poster child
for the HMO Act of 1973. As Andrews puts it, "
Erlichman assured Nixon that the incentives at
Kaiser run toward less medical are. The less care
provided to members paying a flat premium, the
more money Kaiser makes."
A document supplied by Kaiser, responding to
SiCKO, was a Feb. 6, 1971 letter from chairman
Edgar Kaiser to Erlichman in which " Mr. Kaiser
explained that Kaiser physicians, organized as
the Permanente Group, receive both a salary and a
share in any surplus left over from the
contractual payments by the Kaiser Heath Plan to
the Permanente Group." According to Andrews, "The
incentive is to minimize the number of physicians
in ratio to Kaiser members." In other words,
these doctors got a piece of the pie in exchange
for short-changing patients, for increasing the
ration of patients to doctors.
That's not all. According to Andrews' report,
UHW-W actively helped Kaiser Permanente train and
" award bonuses to call-center clerks who spent
the least amount of time on the phone with each
patient and limited the number of doctors'
appointments." ( Los Angeles Times, May 17,
2002) As Andrews puts it, "UHW-W officials
served as straw bosses, working with Kaiser
bosses urging clerks to get with the program."
This gives workers a small payoff for helping
management screw over and exploit everyone else.
This is poison to the solidarity of workers with
those we impact or serve. It pits some against
all. That's what this 'win-win' junior
partnership means, in daily life.
How did the UHW-W leaders respond to Moore's
charges and Kaiser's defense? Andrews puts it
this way: "UHW-W attacked Michael Moore for
'smearing the reputation of one of our nation's
most progressive, reform-minded, pro-worker
health-care organizations: American's premier
not-for-profit, pre-paid, integrated health-care
delivery system, Kaiser Permanente.' "
Is this just a war of words or part of a war
against the working class, playing divide and
rule with payoffs for those who collaborate and
hard time for those who don't?
From what I can see, they only stepped up after
the national leadership was freezing them out and
marking them as expendable. The UHW-W
leadership's letter and petition was coupled with
an intense internal SEIU fight. It apparently
caused the end of the northern CA agreement
within days of the petition. That internal union
fight is not over, altho this particular battle
is. One thing is clear: contradictions exist
between the national leadership and local
leaders. The strategy to centralize everything
has and will create more such. So far, this
internal fight appears to be between two wings
that essentially agree on the overall jr.
partnership relationship with capitalist
management and priorities.
Brenner illustrates this with the case of Jerome
Brown, former president of SEIU's massive 1199
New England health care regional union. According
to Brenner, Brown exemplifies a dissenting voice
within the national SEIU, one who recognizes that
"only after a period of open conflict can 'strong
unions and engaged members enter into mature,
cooperative relationships' with their employers."
In other words, Brown is all for these
'cooperative relationships', but only after
establishing and then taming an 'engaged'
membership. Same goals, different tactics. Still,
here's yet another example of contradictions
within the same structures, more conflicts that
can and do open more doors to similar
developments. You can see the contradictions when
Brown wrote, in a review of Andy Stern's latest
book, "A Country That Works" (which I plan to
review here soon),
"We have to ask ourselves if these methods
(referring to practices like the northern CA
nursing home agreement) can produce a real,
democratic workers' organization or if it is more
likely that they will produce a 'membership' that
sees itself, correctly, as a third party in a
relationship with union brokers and employers-the
very antithesis of true rank-and-file unionism."
We might also ask, "how does pursing 'mature'
collaboration of once-militant unions help
workers? Should we take a close look at how this
has played out in the airlines, in steel, or in
auto where pay, conditions, pensions and
healthcare are all being sacrificed on the same
alter?
Still, that process of inner-union conflicts
opens the door to a deeper development- one where
the active workers can break free to pursue their
own interests as workers, unlimited by what's
acceptable to various layers of union officials
who are 'on board' for the collaboration strategy
embodied by Andy Stern and the current SEIU
national leadership.
For the recently- activated northern CA
healthcare workers in UHW, this means more a
chance to develop local and regional networks and
groups to discuss and possibly fight for their
own working conditions. This then means they can
take up the direct and public fight for better
healthcare conditions for the patients and
through them with the wider working class. This
would no longer depend upon the local leaders,
altho it doesn't have to be against them where
they're willing to support and help lead such a
fight. The parallel with education and other
public sector workers seems clear: we are the
largest unionized sector of the workforce. Our
working conditions are usually other people's
care or 'service'. For teachers, our working
conditions are students' learning conditions.
And that can encourage those who are also
discontented with their/our own union leaders,
most of whom practice the same 'win-win'
partnership as the SEIU, even if not always taken
to Stern's extreme. Clearly, the growing
pressures of corporate capitalism are tilling and
preparing the ground for resistance. The question
then is, "What kind of resistance?" We can sit
back and feel good about this victory in CA, or
we can take heart and use it to build on, towards
a working class movement that organizes around
our common good and living links, rejecting the
'win-win' collaboration strategy which is really
a 'lose-lose' for us. In my experience, those who
reject capitalist priorities and work for a
different society have special contributions to
make.
To fight effectively, the internal opponents,
like in UHW-W, must sometimes mobilize and try to
steer the workers affected. This opens the door
to workers to fight for things like good
staffing, providing quality healthcare, defending
pensions, et.al. To fight within such a context,
it is necessary to reject the ideas that guide
collaboration and have ideas and goals- like
providing quality health care for all by building
worker-patient or teacher-student-family unity.
Ideas and strategy/tactics, which make sense and
can inspire others to stand up and face attacks.
Since most unions oppose this outlook, in daily
life, we must develop organizations working
towards working class solidarity, of
one-for-all-and-all-for-one, and against this
dog-eat-dog, illustrated by even the 'reform'
leaders of UHW-W in this case.
The deepest expression of and the goal of
creating solidarity requires overturning the
capitalist system and creating a socialism that
Marx saw as inherent in our struggle with the
domination of capital. He saw and worked for a
world free of class or other forms of oppression.
For those of us who're either convinced of Marx's
analysis or just engaging his ideas, this
successful fight inside the SEIU points towards
the living class struggle as the organic, natural
grounds for developing class awareness,
independent organization, and greater
understanding of how the system works and how we
can all 'work it' for our common good and future.
Earl Silbar is a lifelong socialist activist who
has been a Teamster, a member of Laborer's
International, the IBEW, part of an in-plant IAM
organizing committee, and a founding member,
activist and citywide elected officer, delegate
to state and national AFSCME conventions, Local
3506 delegate to the Chicago Fed. of Labor, and
as chief steward of AFSCME 3506. He recently
retired after teaching GED for 27 years in
Chicago's City Colleges. Red1pearl@aol.com
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