Who Are The
Teamsters?
We are Working People-- Just Like You
The Teamsters: Fighting For Good Jobs
and A Better Future
The Teamsters Union is the most powerful Union
in North America, made up of working men
and women just like you -- 1.4 million of us from all across the United
States and Canada. We are truck drivers, public employees, school bus
drivers, mechanics, firefighters, nurses, police officers and food workers and
literally hundreds of other
occupations.
We speak many languages. We come in all races
and nationalities. We join together in a common goal-- to build a better
future for ourselves, for our families, and for our country.
What Makes Teamsters Different From
You?
We are organized. We join together to negotiate
with our employers. That makes our voice stronger.
We have legally binding contracts with our
employers. We decide what to negotiate in our contracts and we win better
wages and benefits and improved working conditions. We win respect and
dignity on the job. We gain protections against unfair treatment by our
employers.
We run our union as a democracy -- from top to
bottom. We elect our negotiating committee, our local union officers and our
national union president. They work for us and with us to win a better deal
for Teamster working men and women.
How Can the Teamsters Help You?
As Teamsters, we have power and a voice on the
job. Voting to become a Teamster is the first step in winning a legally
binding union contract. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics Report
for 2004, union workers in private industry make 39 percent more than
nonunion workers and receive 55 percent more in benefits.
We participate by:
- Working with our fellow employees to find out
what issues should be addressed in the first contract.
- Electing a negotiating committee to represent
and assist the union in negotiations with the employer.
- Secret ballot voting on the terms of a first contract.
- We decide what should be in our contract
and we vote on it.
Our Local Union and our national Teamsters Union
team back us up with independent research on our employer and our industry,
with lawyers when necessary, to assist in negotiations and to represent us in the workplace
and with expert assistance on health and safety issues.
Plus, we'll have the help of 1.4 million working
men and women just like us -- fighting to protect our jobs and our families'
futures and fighting to build an America that works for working people --
not just for the special interests.
Are you satisfied with the way things are? Do
you need the better wages and benefits, the job security, and the respect on
the job that a Teamster contract can bring?
Join Teamsters Local 1205
246 Conklin Street
Farmingdale, New York 11735
516-501-1205
fax 516-501-1208
or send e-mail to:
Teamsters Local 1205
All correspondence will be kept confidential!
Basic Labor Law
The government protects the right of workers to
organize in order to address issues of wages, benefits, and working
conditions. The body of laws that protect this right is known as the
National Labor Relations Act, sometimes referred to as the Wagner act. Of
course, you may have many questions regarding labor law , but the following is a list of the basics:
- Any group of workers can organize or help
organize a union, except managers (supervisors) and security guards.
(security guards can form their own union - they just can't be in a union
with other employees.)
- Workers have the right to strike. (At
Local 1205 it is only by secret ballot and a majority vote.)
- Workers have the right to join a union.
The Wagner Act prohibits the employer from
certain acts, known as unfair labor practices. If you feel you are the
victim of an unfair labor practice, contact us, or the NLRB, which will assign an
agent to look into your case or consult a lawyer.
Unfair labor practices include management:
- Threatening to fire a worker for union
activity.
- Threatening a worker in any way, implicitly
or explicitly, because of union activities. This can include demotions,
reprimands, etc.
- Asking workers about union activities.
- Threatening cuts in pay or benefits.
- Promising increases in pay or benefits,
beyond those normally scheduled. (Of course, this only applies until the
election.)
- Spying on union activity.
Also of interest: management can
be held accountable for anyone acting as an agent, even if management didn't
know about or approve of the agent's actions. In other words, if an
anti-union worker threatens you ("You'll lose your job if you vote yes.")
management can be held accountable for that threat. This is to prevent
management from using workers to deliver threats and thereby get around the
law.
Companies do have the right to make predictions
as to what will happen if a union wins. It becomes a threat, however,
anytime the "prediction" is something that can be controlled by the
employer. For example, saying that a major client might withdraw its
contracts with the employer if a union wins is within the bounds of free
speech. The employer has little or no control over what the client chooses
to do. However, saying that a union would be too expensive and that the
employer would have to cut its labor force to compensate is a threat, as the
employer has complete control over the size of its work force.
During the entire campaign and negotiations, the
employer must maintain the status quo with regards to pay, benefits, and
working conditions. It cannot suddenly grant pay raises or cut pay, although
regularly scheduled pay raises must be given on time. Failure to do so is an
unfair labor practice.
The NLRB uses a doctrine known as "the totality
of conduct" when determining unfair labor practices. This means it looks at
the employer's conduct throughout the entire campaign to determine if the
law has been broken. In other words, an employer doesn't have to blatantly
flaunt labor law to be reprimanded. If the employer constantly bends the
law, or commits many minor infractions, the NLRB may find the employer in
violation. It therefore behooves all employees to write down all
infractions, no matter how minor. Write down the date, who was involved, the
time of day, and any witnesses. Good documentation can be critical in
winning a favorable ruling from the NLRB.
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