Chapter Twelve Dealing with Employee-Management Issues and Relationships McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. ORGANIZED LABOR • Unions -- Employee organizations whose main goal is to represent members in employee-management negotiations of job-related issues. • Labor unions were responsible for: - Minimum wage laws Overtime rules Workers’ compensation Severance pay Child-labor laws Job-safety regulations 12-2 GOALS OF ORGANIZED LABOR • To work with fair and competent management. • To be treated with human dignity. • To receive a reasonable share of wealth in the work it generates. 12-4 Labor Union History 12-5 HISTORY of ORGANIZED LABOR • Craft Union -- An organization of skilled specialists in a particular craft or trade. • As early as 1792, shoemakers in a Philadelphia craft union met to discuss fundamental work issues. • Work weeks were 60+ hours, wages were low and child labor was rampant. 12-6 The FACTORY BLAZE that FIRED UP a MOVEMENT • On March 25, 1911, 146 women were killed in a fire at the Triangle Shirtwaist Company in New York City. • The women were trapped by a door that was kept locked to prevent theft. • Today labor leaders say that the Triangle fire is proof of why labor unions are crucial to maintaining workplace balance in the U.S. 12-7 EMERGENCE of LABOR ORGANIZATIONS • Knights of Labor -- First national labor union; formed in 1869. • Knights attracted close to 800,000 members but fell from prominence after a riot in Chicago. • American Federation of Labor (AFL) -- An organization of craft unions that championed fundamental labor issues; formed in 1886. 12-8 INDUSTRIAL UNIONS • Industrial Unions -- Labor unions of unskilled or semiskilled workers in mass production industries. • Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) -- Union organization of unskilled workers; broke away from the AFL in 1935 and rejoined in 1955. 12-9 Labor Legislation 12-10 EFFECTS of LAWS on LABOR UNIONS • Labor unions’ growth and influence has been very dependent on public opinion and law. 12-11 EFFECTS of LAWS on LABOR UNIONS Pro-Labor Legislation 12-12 EFFECTS of LAWS on LABOR UNIONS Norris-La Guardia Act Paved way for union growth • The Norris-LaGuardia Act helped unions by prohibiting the use of Yellow-Dog Contracts - A type of contract that required employees to agree to NOT join a union. 12-13 EFFECTS of LAWS on LABOR UNIONS National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) Wagner Act Legal justification for union activities Collective Bargaining National Labor Relations Board Certification and Decertification 12-14 EFFECTS of LAWS on LABOR UNIONS • Collective Bargaining -- The process whereby union and management representatives form an agreement, or contract, for employees. 12-15 FORMING a UNION in the WORKPLACE • The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) was created to oversee labor-management issues and provide guidelines for unionization. 12-16 FORMING a UNION in the WORKPLACE • Certification -- The formal process by which a union is recognized by the NLRB as the bargaining agent for a group of employees. • Decertification -- The process whereby employees take away a union’s right to represent them. 12-17 EFFECTS of LAWS on LABOR UNIONS Pro-Management Legislation 12-18 EFFECTS of LAWS on LABOR UNIONS Labor-Management Relations Act Taft-Hartley Act (1947) 12-19 LABOR/MANAGEMENT AGREEMENTS • Union Security Clauses -- Stipulate workers who reap union benefits must either join the union or pay dues to the union. 12-20 UNION SECURITY AGREEMENTS • Closed Shop Agreement -- Specified workers had to be members of a union before being hired for a job. 12-21 UNION SECURITY AGREEMENTS • Union Shop Agreement -- Declares workers don’t have to be members of a union to be hired but must agree to join the union within a specific time period. However… 12-22 UNION SECURITY AGREEMENTS The Taft-Hartley Act also granted states the power to outlaw union shop agreements. This led to the creation of the Agency Shop Agreement 12-23 UNION SECURITY AGREEMENTS • Agency Shop Agreement -- Allows employers to hire nonunion workers who don’t have to join the union, but must pay fees. 12-24 UNION SECURITY AGREEMENTS Also, because the Taft-Hartley Act granted states the power to outlaw union shop agreements, some states passed… 12-25 RIGHT-to-WORK LAWS • Right-to-Work Laws -- Legislation that gives workers the right, under an open shop, to join or not to join a union, which created the… • Open Shop Agreement -- Agreement in right-towork states that gives workers the right to join or not join a union, if one exists in their workplace. 12-26 STATES with RIGHT-to-WORK LAWS 12-27 LABOR / MANAGEMENT AGREEMENTS 12-28 LABOR/MANAGEMENT AGREEMENTS Negotiated Labor-Management Agreement (Labor Contract) -- Sets the terms under which labor and management will function over a period of time. The CBA 12-29 Using Mediation and Arbitration 12-30 USING MEDIATION and ARBITRATION • Bargaining Zone -- The range of options labor and management have between initial and final contract offers that each side will consider before an impasse is reached. 12-31 USING MEDIATION and ARBITRATION • Mediation -- The use of a third party to encourage both sides to keep negotiating to resolve key contract issues. • Arbitration -- An agreement to bring in a third party to render a binding agreement. 12-32 Resolving Contract Disagreements • Labor contracts outline labor and management’s rights and serves as a guide to workplace relations. • Grievances -- A charge by employees that management isn’t abiding by the terms of the negotiated agreement. • Shop Stewards -- Union officials who work permanently in an organization and represent employee interests on a daily basis. 12-33 The GRIEVANCE RESOLUTION PROCESS 12-34 TACTICS USED in CONFLICTS • Tactics used by labor unions include: - Strikes - Pickets - Work Slowdowns - Boycotts - Sickouts 12-35 STRIKES and BOYCOTTS • Strikes -- A strategy in which workers refuse to go to work. • Pickets • Primary Boycott -- When a union encourages both its members and the general public to not buy the products of a firm in a labor dispute. • Secondary Boycott -- An attempt by labor to convince others to stop doing business with a firm that’s not the subject of a primary boycott. 12-36 UNION TACTICS USED in CONFLICTS - Sickouts 12-37 TACTICS USED in CONFLICTS • Tactics used by management include: - Lockouts - Injunctions - Strikebreakers 12-38 LOCKOUTS, INJUNCTIONS and STRIKEBREAKERS • Lockout -- An attempt by management to put pressure on workers by closing the business thus cutting off workers’ pay. • Injunction -- A court order directing someone to do something or refrain from doing something. • Strikebreakers -- Workers hired to do the work of striking workers until the labor dispute is resolved; called scabs by unions. 12-39 CHALLENGES FACING LABOR UNIONS • The percentage of union workers is falling. • Many workers (like airline employees) have agreed to Givebacks -- Gains from labor negotiations are given back to management to help save jobs. 12-40 LABOR UNIONS in the FUTURE • Union membership will include more white-collar, female and foreign-born workers than in the past. • Unions will take on a greater role in training workers, redesigning jobs and assimilating the changing workforce. • Unions will seek more job security, profit sharing and increased wages. 12-41 LABOR UNIONS BY STATE 12-42 UNION MEMBERSHIP by STATE LO 12-4 12-43 COMPENSATING EXECUTIVES • CEO compensation used to be determined by a firm’s profitability or increase in stock price. • Now, executives receive stock options and restricted stock that’s awarded even if the company performs poorly. 12-44 COMPENSATING EXECUTIVES in the FUTURE • Government and shareholders are putting pressure to overhaul executive compensation. • Boards of directors are being challenged concerning executive contracts. • Workers serve on the boards of directors of European companies 12-45 EQUAL PAY for EQUAL WORK Equal Pay Act Factors that Justify Pay Differences • Skill • Effort • Responsibility • Working Conditions 12-46 The QUESTION of PAY EQUITY • Women earn 81% of what men earn. • This disparity varies by profession, experience and level of education. 12-47 The QUESTION of PAY EQUITY • Comparable Worth • Legislative proposal requiring that people in jobs requiring similar levels of education, training, or skills should receive equal pay 12-48 WHAT’S SEXUAL HARASSMENT • Sexual Harassment -- Unwelcomed sexual advances, requests for sexual favors or other verbal or physical conduct that creates a hostile work environment. 12-49 KINDS of SEXUAL HARASSMENT • Quid pro quo sexual harassment involves threats like “Go out with me or you’re fired.” An employee’s job is based on submission. • Hostile work environment sexual harassment is conduct that interferes with a worker’s performance or creates an intimidating or offensive work environment. 12-50 CHILDCARE ISSUES • The number of women in the workforce with children under three-years-old has increased. • Childcare related absences cost businesses billions of dollars each year. 12-52 BUSINESSES RESPONSE to CHILD CARE • Benefits can include: - Discounts with childcare providers. - Vouchers that offer payment for childcare. - Referral services identify high-quality childcare facilities. - On-site childcare centers - Sick-child centers. 12-53 FACING CHILDCARE ISSUES • Who should pay for the cost of childcare - a dividing issue among employees and businesses, and in the workplace 12-54 INCREASING ELDER CARE CHALLENGES • 29% of the adult population are providing some care to an elderly person. • Care giving obligations cause employees to miss about 15 million days of work per year. • Costs could rise up to $35 billion annually. 12-55 ELDER CARE in the MODERN HOUSEHOLD • More and more boomers are taking care of their parents while still working. - 31% say that may delay their retirement. - The average cost of taking care of an aging parent is $5,534. - 76% say they enjoy taking care of their parents. - 54% say it made them closer. Source: Money, June 2010. 12-56 DRUG USE in the WORKPLACE • Alcohol is the most widely used drug - 6.5% of full time employees are considered heavy drinkers. • Over 8% of workers aged 18-49 use illegal drugs and are more likely to be in workplace accidents. • Drug abuse costs the U.S. economy $414 billion in lost work, healthcare costs and crime. • Over 80% of major companies drug test workers. 12-57 VIOLENCE in the WORKPLACE • OSHA reports homicides account for 16% of workplace deaths. • Violence is the number one cause of death for women in the workplace. • Companies have taken action to deal with potential problems by using focus groups and other interactions. 12-58