The percentage of the city workforce that is
unionized is shrinking, though it remains double the U.S. average. And
the gap between public-sector and private-sector unionization is at an
all-time high.
Organized labor has been all over the local news lately—from an
ongoing walkout at the Central Park Boathouse, to the recent Verizon
strike, to a summer of contract squabbles in the construction industry.
By
But
while unions remain influential in the city, substantial erosion has
occurred in recent years in their membership rates, according to a new
report by City University of New York researchers.
Among workers
living in the city, 22.9% were union members in the 18 months ending in
June, down from 24.6% in January 2009 through June 2010, the report
found. Losses in union membership have been disproportionately
concentrated in the private sector.
The authors hypothesize that
employment has contracted in highly unionized areas and expanded in
sectors with low union participation. They do not point to specific
examples, but during the period studied, the heavily unionized
construction industry has been decimated and the Old London factory that
produced Melba toast took its 228 jobs to North Carolina.
Despite
the erosion, New York's unionization rate remains the highest of the 50
states and more than double the U.S. average of 11.9%, largely on the
strength of union density in the public sector. New York's count of more
than 1.9 million union members is more than any state except
California, which has a far larger population. The city has more than
750,000 union members, about 40% of the state's total.
Among
private-sector workers in the city, 14% are organized, twice the
national rate and slightly higher than the state rate. Nearly 71% of
public-sector workers in the city and state are in unions, almost double
the national public-sector rate.
The 57-point gap between public
and private sector unionization rates is an all-time high, according to
Ruth Milkman, professor of sociology at the CUNY Graduate Center and one
of the report's authors. As recently as 1986, the city's private-sector
union density was 25.3%.
“The gap is huge, and the risk is that
the public-sector union world becomes isolated socially and politically
from the rest of society,” she said.
Indeed, in many of the recent
labor battles around the country, a familiar refrain has been that
public-sector workers receive benefits that many private sector workers
don't. As the gap between public- and private-sector unionization
widens, it becomes harder for the public sector unions to hang on to
their gains.
“Like your grandmother said, ‘You don't put all your
eggs in one basket,'” said Ed Ott, a distinguished lecturer at the
Murphy Institute for Worker Education and Labor Studies and former labor
leader. “We're too heavily concentrated in the public sector.”
And
as the economy sputters, that sector’s density is now also in danger of
declining. “In the wake of the fiscal crises generated by the current
economic downturn, public-sector unions have been increasingly on the
political defensive,” the report argues. “Thus despite New York City and
State’s unusually high density levels … this is a period of profound
challenges for organized labor.”
Three predominantly public-sector
industries account for 63.2% of unionized workers in the city:
education, health care and public administration. Manufacturing accounts
for a far smaller share of union membership in the city than in the
nation, at 1.7% versus 9.9%.
Within the city, union density was
highest among residents of Staten Island, at 34%, and lowest among
residents of Manhattan, at 15%. It was also most prevalent among workers
aged 55 and older. Some 33% of those older workers belonged to unions,
versus 28% of workers 25 to 54 and just 10% of workers 16 to 24.
The
study suggested that the higher rates of unionization among older
workers reflects the limited extent of union organizing among new
entrants to the workforce.
Looking at unionization rates among
immigrants, it found that recent immigrants have low rates. Some 11% of
immigrants who arrived between 2000 and 2010 are in unions, compared
with 33% of those who arrived before 1980.
Saturday, September 3, 2011
Union membership falls in NYC, study finds
2 comments:
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What does this say about all the money we are wasting on our organizing department we have to dump the current employees at the DC and elect new progressive thinkers it saddens me when you go to a meeting and our president tells you hey guys rehabs to accept what they are giving us what happened to the leaders that would tell these contractors to go screw themselves and rile the membership up and get them going if they are not telling us to take it to the streets then they are owned by the DC and have to go time to get our balls back and push back when we are getting fucked with. Have a happy labor day everyone and remember the struggles that to place before us that got us everything we have today time to get rid of anyone that lays down to our opposition and doesn't fight back god bless America and god bless the American worker
ReplyDeleteDROP DEAD UNITY TEAM !
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