Resolution in Support of Organized Labor in
Adopted by the
Executive Board of the
O Lord Jesus Christ, here
are men in their coffins, blood of my blood, bone of my bone.
I trust, O God, that these
friends will go to a better place than this mill village or any other place in
O God, we know that we are
not in high society, but we know Jesus Christ loves us.
The poor people have their
rights, too.
For the work we do in this
world, is this what we get if we demand our rights?
Jesus Christ, your son, O
God, was a working man.
If He were here to pass
under these trees to-day, He would see these cold bodies lying here before us.
O God, mend the broken
hearts of these loved ones left behind.
Dear God, do feed their children.
Drive selfishness and
cruelty out of your world.
May these weeping wives and
little children have a strong arm to lean on.
Dear God—what would Jesus do
if He were to come to
PREFACE
These heart-rending words were delivered by Cicero Queens, an “old mountain preacher, moved by sorrow”[1] at the gravesite of the six cotton mill workers killed while peacefully picketing at a Marion, NC, strike on October 21, 1929. None of the locally prominent ministers were present. The main voice of the church condemning how these unionists were shot in the back by seven local sheriff’s deputies who never were charged was a “Yankee,” James Myers of the Federal Council of Churches.
The Marion Massacre followed similar, violently suppressed
textile strikes in nearby
While particular religious leaders have stepped into the fray of company/union conflicts in our state, the church as a whole has remained distant from the controversy of collective bargaining and unionizing. Often, mainline churches are host to corporate executives who may be community leaders and major donors, whom clergy are loathe to offend. Some churches remain aloof from so-called worldly or political concerns, imagining workplace struggles as beyond the domain of the spiritual.
Most major religious denominations, however, do have
official policies and stands in favor of the right of labor to organize and
bargain collectively. In this vein, the
NC Council of Churches has also held a pro-labor stance over the years. “A Christian Perspective on Organized Labor
in
The Council’s Executive Board on June 17, 1997, endorsed the
efforts of the Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC) in its long drive to
represent the interests of eastern North Carolina farm laborers, although the
House of Delegates later declined to endorse (or to oppose) the Farmworker
Ministry Committee's support of FLOC's boycott of Mt. Olive Pickle
Company. As the farmworker struggle is
under the auspices of that committee, this statement will not concern farm
labor organizing, but rather the manufacturing, trade, and service organizing
now taking place in
A CURRENT PICTURE OF LABOR
In 2001, average weekly earnings for all unionized
workers in
Union women earn 31% more than nonunion women. African-American union members earn 29% more
than their nonunion counterparts, and for Latino workers, the union advantage
totals 53%.[6]
In 1999, 73% of union workers in private industry
participated in medical care benefits, as compared with 51% of nonunion
workers. Union workers are also more
likely to have pension and retirement benefits.[7]
National unionization rates have fallen from about
35 percent in the 1950’s to 14 percent of the workforce today. Problems of globalization, the transformation
of the economy, government policies that are hostile toward unions, and
corporate dominance threaten the future of American unions.[8]
Despite public
opinion in favor of worker rights, companies often fight union drives
A
In 2002, 3.4% of all
The
right to organize into labor unions remains under threat in
Public employees in
While always denying that they violate
the law protecting the right to organize, some companies routinely discourage
union organizing through a variety of subtle or blatant means. As one example, Human Rights Watch has
documented a range of abuses at the
Smithfield-style management suppression
of the legally guaranteed right to sign union cards and organize into labor
unions follows a long
Business owners and management interests hold vastly
more political clout in
The same power imbalance
holds for contributions to all NC General Assembly candidates. Hall’s data for the 2000 and 2002 elections
show that labor/employee political action committees (PACs) gave a total of
$364,000, of which $220,000 came from the NC Association of Educators. In contrast, contributions from
business-related PACS were $7,081,000.
The ratio of business-to-labor contributions was 19.5 to 1. For every $100 contributed
by a labor-related PAC to candidates running for the NC General Assembly,
pro-business PACs contributed nearly $2,000 to the same group of candidates.
This disproportionate influence in our lawmaking
body shows up in everyday lives of workers:
Since 1947, NC has been a “right-to-work”
state. (See footnote #4.)
Bills introduced each session to raise our minimum
wage from $5.15 to $8.50/hour, which is still less than the statewide average
Living Income Standard of $10.60/hour, are never even assigned for a committee
hearing. NC Citizens for Business and
Industry and similar business lobbying groups always oppose wage hikes.
Labor unions brought Americans the weekend (the
40-hour work week), health insurance as an employment benefit, workplace safety
regulation, paid sick leave, and many more protections for workers that we find
commonplace. Labor unions consistently
champion the causes of health care for all, living wages, unemployment benefits
and workers compensation, investment in training, and other family friendly
policies. The lack of union strength in
Chartered in 1957, the North
Carolina AFL-CIO oversees seven Central Labor Councils, each of which
coordinates activities between local unions in a geographic area. It has several purposes, including
legislative and political activity, union coordinating, organizing support, and
affiliate education and service. The NC
AFL-CIO now has its own workplace-giving charity, called the NC Union Community
Fund. The economic justice program of
the Council received one of their first grant awards.
In addition to AFL-CIO-affiliated unions, Black Workers for Justice and United Electrical Workers #150 organize in the state, primarily with local government employees and state university and hospital workers who are among the lowest paid state employees. Black Workers for Justice has a statewide campaign asking legislators and faith and community groups to sign on to Workers Fairness Principles. (The Executive Board of the Council signed a resolution supporting these Principles in 2003.) And there are unions not affiliated with the AFL-CIO, and emerging groups such as a new union for employees of nonprofit organizations.
Hear Our Public Employees (HOPE) is a new
collaboration comprised of state employees, fire fighters, police, service
workers, teamsters, AFL-CIO, and the American Federation of Teachers. The goal of HOPE is to repeal NC General Statute
95-98 and give public employees the same legal right to organize and
collectively bargain that private sector workers have.
Unions do win elections and make progress
in our state. As one example, The United
Steel Workers Union has signed on the requisite majority of workers at Goodyear
plants in
THE PENDULUM HAS SWUNG AWAY FROM WORKER RIGHTS
The context for organized labor has swung back and forth
from oppression to free expression over the past 150 years in
In
Popular agitation about massive poverty during the Great Depression led to a series of landmark labor laws. The National Labor Relations Act of 1935 (the Wagner Act) established the right of workers to organize and required employers to accept collective bargaining as a ruling principle in industry.
Strong anti-labor sentiment after World War II resulted in the Taft-Hartley Labor Act, which was passed over the veto of President Truman in 1947. It made secondary boycott and closed shops illegal and gave the President the power to secure an injunction to postpone for 80 days any strike that might affect the national security. Under the act, officers of unions were required to file affidavits that they were not members of the Communist party. It was part of the red-baiting that painted unionists as somehow un-American.
The union movement saw legislative support in 1959 with the Landrum-Griffin Act, which among other things guaranteed freedom of speech and of assembly for union members.
In the 1980s the pendulum swung back again, producing laws and legal decisions that limited labor and the power of labor unions. Cutbacks in federal agencies reduced federal enforcement of many work safety rules; officials appointed by the Reagan and Bush administrations attempted to reduce labor regulations, arguing that they made US industry less competitive in the world market.[15]
Now, the most powerful undercurrent in the American public
discussion about jobs is that worker needs are secondary to competitiveness in
a global marketplace. When you read your
newspaper you see a Business section, not a Labor section. Children are taught little if any labor
history in the schools. TV business news
is exclusively brought from the corporate executive and Wall Street financier’s
point of view. The massive job loss from
trade agreements is treated as a minor blip in the transition from an
industrial and farm economy to an information and service economy in
Corporate campaign contributions are the lifeblood of political campaigns. Politicians must seek this largesse, until we have a publicly financed elections system. When our elected officials at all levels are beholden to the wealthy and to major corporations for their very existence, the views of these purchasers of influence become normative.
When we add to this the increasing concentration of media in the hands of a few giants, all of whom paint a skewed picture of American triumphalism, the actual world of suffering working families is virtually erased from public view.
Finally, we are now in a closed loop of government-big business collusion, where our war incursions enrich corporate profiteers, and drain the budget of funds to enforce labor laws. Transnational corporations violate with impunity the hard-won right to organize, and union demands that workers be free to exercise their rights get caught in long legal loops of company appeals.
Where is the voice of the wage worker? Where is her power? Only in respected, empowered, organized
labor.
CHRISTIANITY AND ORGANIZED
LABOR
Scripture shows us that Jesus aligned with the least, the last. He held the privileged to account for how they treated the poor. James reflected this Jesus ethic when he warned profiteers how God hears how they do harm. “Behold, the wages of the laborers who mowed your fields, which you kept back by fraud, cry out; and the cries of the harvesters have reached the ears of the Lord of hosts.” (James 5:4). As he entered public life, Jesus chose in his debut message to recall the Torah’s jubilee ethic of fair distribution of wealth. “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to bring good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release of the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.” (Luke 4:18-19) Who are the oppressed in today’s workplace? Who are the working poor who deserve good news? Who are the ones enriched by the work of others, the blind ones who need recovery of sight to see the damage done by allegiance to greed over dignity for the working man?
Standing on scripture, Christian denominations as a whole have joined with the call of unionists for justice.
The Council’s 1980 policy statement on organized labor provides excerpts from several Christian denominations’ proclamations in support of workers’ rights to form labor unions and bargain collectively with management. These positions remain constant. A flyer called “What Faith Groups Say About the Right to Organize”[16] gives current labor statements from a range of religious faiths and denominations. Two excerpts below exemplify the position of many Council member bodies:
The Christian
Methodist Episcopal Church (CME)
"Free
collective bargaining has proved its values in our free society whenever the
parties engaged in collective bargaining have acted in good faith to reach
equitable and moral solutions of problems dealing with wages and working
conditions. We do not support the opinion voiced in some quarrels that strikes
should be made illegal. To declare strikes illegal would be to deprive workers
of their right to collective action and, even more seriously, would place in
the hands of government the power to force workers to remain on the
job." (Discipline of the CME
Church, 1982)
Evangelical
Lutheran Church of America (ELCA)
"[The
ELCA] commits itself to advocacy with corporations, businesses, congregations,
and church-related institutions to protect the rights of workers, support the
collective bargaining process, and protect the right to strike." (Resolution of the ELCA Church-wide Assembly,
1991)
Similar statements abound in the Roman Catholic body of social teaching. American Baptists, the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), the Episcopal Church, the Presbyterian Church (U. S. A.), the United Church of Christ, and the United Methodist Church are among other Christian denominations that urge members to learn more about labor unions and support workers’ rights to organize and bargain with management. Most of these denominations have educational materials to help members of congregations understand how scripture calls us to support dignity for all working people. Faith groups other than Christians also stand with organized labor; the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, The Central Conference of American Rabbis, and Muslims are among others that hold positions in favor of unions and worker rights.
The National Interfaith Committee for Worker Justice serves as a clearinghouse for information, resources, and liturgical materials that help religious communities become more knowledgeable about worker concerns and to engage in pro-labor action.
The call is clear. The need is here. At this time, the Council again speaks out
for labor in
RESOLUTION:
Whereas the message of Jesus Christ is that all humans have worth as children of God; and
Whereas North Carolina is now suffering tremendously from job loss due to globalization and trade agreements that favor international investors over the workers who produce the goods we buy and sell; and
Whereas decisions by political leaders at state and national level are guided by the campaign contributions of wealthy individuals and corporations, drowning out concerns of employees; and
Whereas corporate management has many forms of associations for collective action in service of their goals (Chambers of Commerce, NC Citizens for Business and Industry, trade associations and the like); and
Whereas the only collective voice of wage workers is a labor association or union with enforced legal rights:
The Executive Board of the NC
Council of Churches hereby reaffirms our historic support of organized labor in
We call on our member judicatories and congregations to become more aware about unions in our state, and to heed the requests of workers and union members for increased public support for their efforts from the religious community.
RESOURCES
Black Workers for Justice,
NC AFL-CIO,
HOPE (Hear Our Public Employees)
Coalition,
National Interfaith Committee for Worker Justice, 1020 W. Bryn Mawr Ave., 4th floor, Chicago, IL 60660-4627, 773-728-8400; info@nicwj.org; www.nicwj.org.
UE #150, NC’s public workers union, focusing especially for the lowest-paid state university and hospital employees. For information, speakers, and a copy of the resolution for faith community support of the Workers Fairness Principles, call 1-800-815-4946; organize@ue150.org; www.ue150.org.
“Witness: Justice at
[1]
“When Southern Labor
Stirs, Part IV, The Strike at
[2] “Cheap and Contented Labor,” Sinclair Lewis, reprinted by the Marion Tragedy Memorial fund, Asheville, NC, Merkle Press, Glenn Dale, MD, 1980.
[3] Data provided by NCSU
Professor of Sociology, Dr. Jeff Leiter, a specialist in work, industry,
organizations, and labor unions.
[4] A right-to-work law is a state law that prevents labor-management agreements from requiring a person to join a union as a condition of employment. This kind of law greatly reduces the ability of labor unions to attract members. In 1980, there were 11 right-to-work states and now there are 21; this anti-union trend is growing.
[5] Bureau of Labor Statistics
news release,
[6] US Department of Labor, Employment and Earnings, January 2003.
[7] Bureau of Labor Statistics,
Employee Benefits in Private Industry, 1999; USDL 01-473,
[8] Daily Bruin Online, www.dailybruin.ucla.edu.
[9] Kate Bronfenbrenner, “Uneasy
Terrain: The Impact of Global Mobility
on Workers, Wages, and Union Organizing,” Cornell University, September 6,
2000, and Institute for Southern Studies, Facing South e-mail report, Issue 72,
February 17, 2004.
[10]
Bureau of Labor Statistics website.
[11] “Unfair Advantage, Workers
Freedom of Association in the
[12] Bob Hall, Democracy-NC,
[13] American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE); American Flint Glass Workers Union (AFGWU); American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME); American Federation of Teachers (AFT); Aluminum Workers (Aluminum); American Federation of Musicians of the United States and Canada (AFM); American Postal Workers Union (APWU); Amalgamated Transit Union (ATU); Association of Flight Attendants (AFA); Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers International Union (BCTGM); Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees (BMWE); International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Iron Ship Builders, Blacksmiths, Forgers and helpers (IBB); Communication Workers of America (CWA/IUE); Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC); International Union of Graphic Communications (GCIU); International Union of Glass, Molders, Pottery, Plastics & Allied Workers (GMP); Hotel Employees & Restaurant Employees International Union (HERE) International Association of Fire Fighters (IAFF); International Association of Machinists & Aerospace Workers (IAM); International Alliance of Theatrical, Stage Employees and Moving Picture Technicians And Allied Crafts of the United States and Canada (IATSE); International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW); International Brotherhood of Teamsters (IBT); International Longshoremen's Association (ILA); International Association of Bridge, Structural & Ornamental Iron Workers (Iron Workers); International Union of Electronic, Electrical, Salaried, Machine & Furniture Workers (IUE); International Union of Elevator Constructors (IUEC); International Union of Operating Engineers (IUOE); International Association of Police Associations (IUPA); Laborers' International Union of North America (LIUNA); National Association of Letter Carriers (NALC); National Football League Players Association (NFLPA); Office and Professional Employees International Union (OPEIU); International Brotherhood of Painters & Allied Trades of the US and Canada (Painters); United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices of the Plumbing and Pipe Fitting Industry of the United States and Canada (Plumbers); Sheet Metal Workers International Association (SMWIA); Transport Workers Union of American (TWU); United Automobile, Aerospace & Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW); United Food and Commercial Workers International Union (UFCW); Union of Needletrades, Industrial and Textile Employees (UNITE); PACE International Union (PACE); United Steelworkers of America (USWA).
[14]
[16] National Interfaith
Committee for Worker Justice,