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Labor-Management Interactions and Occupational Health. Allison Susan Eric. Unions: an overview. Unions negotiate contracts Wage and benefits Workplace safety language Unions enforce contracts through grievance procedures
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Labor-Management Interactions and Occupational Health Allison Susan Eric
Unions: an overview • Unions negotiate contracts • Wage and benefits • Workplace safety language • Unions enforce contracts through grievance procedures • Local unions may join forces to form national or international unions (e.g. SEIU: Service Employees International Union; IBT: International Brotherhood of Teamsters) • Unions are involved in political action • Baker R, Stock L. (2006) Labor Unions: Their role in occupational and environmental health. In Levy, B et al. (eds.) Occupational and environmental health. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Unions and Occupational Health • Are involved in occupational health research • Center to Protect Workers Rights: Research and training to prevent illness, injury and death in the construction industry • Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees Union in San Francisco: contract language to allow labor or management to initiate research on workplace safety • Negotiate for representation on workplace safety committees • Unions are involved in worker training
Unions and Labor Law • Unions have been instrumental in getting laws passed that addressed: • Working conditions • Safety • Work hours (i.e. 8 hours/day, 5 days/week) • Minimum wage • Child labor • Right to organize • Discrimination • Workers’ Compensation • Whistleblower protection
Unions and Workplace Safety Laws • Unions have been instrumental in passing laws to protect workplace health and safety: • 1968: Mine Safety and Health Act (MSHAct) • 1970: Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHAct) • Extension of OSHA: • Hazard communications (MSDS) • Blood-borne pathogen protection • Ergonomic protection
Unions and labor law • WSNA (Washington State Nurses Association) has been instrumental in passage of: • 2000: Needlestick Safety and Prevention Act • 2002: Law limiting mandatory overtime • 2006: Safe Patient Lifting Law • 2007: Safe Nurse Staffing Legislation
Number of Union Members • 1983: 20.1 % of US workers • 2007: 12.1% • 2008: 12.4% • Government workers: 42.2% • Includes teachers, police officers and fire fighters • Education: 38.7% • Transportation and utilities: 22.2% • Telecommunication: 19.3% • Construction: 15.6% • From the US Bureau of Labor Statistics
Union membership by State 2008 • All states in the East North Central, Middle Atlantic and Pacific areas had higher rates of union membership than national average • All states in East South Central and West South Central had lower rates of union membership than national average. • States lowest rates(below 5%): NC, GA, SC, VA, TX, LA • States with highest rates: NY, HI, AK From the US Bureau of Labor Statistics
Employee Free Choice Act • To combat declining union membership and strengthen employee’s abilities to form unions • Would establish stronger penalties for violation of employee rights when workers seek to form a union • Provide mediation and arbitration for contract disputes • Allow employees to form unions by signing cards authorizing union representation From AFL-CIO website: http://www.aflcio.org/joinaunion/voiceatwork/efca/whatis.cfm
Future trends? Employee Free Choice Act • To combat declining union membership and strengthen employee’s abilities to form unions • Would establish stronger penalties for violation of employee rights when workers seek to form a union • Provide mediation and arbitration for contract disputes From AFL-CIO website: http://www.aflcio.org/joinaunion/voiceatwork/efca/whatis.cfm White house initiatives • Obama signed executive orders on Friday, Jan. 29 which reversed several Bush policies which favored management. • Bill signed on Thursday, Jan 28 gave workers more time to sue for wage discrimination.
Joint Health and Safety Committees and Bipartite Cooperation
Joint Committees • Made up of labor and management representatives who meet regularly to deal with health and safety issues • First created in 1920s in US and Canada • 1977 – In Canada, mandatory for employers with 20 or more employees to have a joint health and safety committee • 2002 – In WA, mandatory for employers with more than 10 employees to have a safety committee
Occupational Health and Safety Agency for Healthcare – British Columbia, Canada • 1999 – developed by the healthcare workforce, healthcare employers, and unions • Labor-management (bipartite) governed organization • Mandated to implement evidence-based programs to reduce injury rates in health care • Reduced lifting injuries through “no unsafe manual lifting” policy, govt funded ceiling lifts • Prevention and Early Active Return-to-work Safely (PEARS) – dec. in days lost, workers’ comp costs
Joint Committee Education and Development Program (JCED) • Created to provide education and training to JCs to ensure high-quality bipartite cooperation • Ensure that committee members understood roles and responsibilities • Increase problem-solving skills of members • Improve JC’s ability to ID and resolve health and safety problems • Free one-day workshops to groups of both management and labor JC members • Standardized through entire province
Evaluation of the JCED program • Telephone surveys 7 to 15 months after workshops • Retrospective pre-versus-post intervention survey • Included only those who participated in the workshop that were still JC members • This was around half of the workshop participants • 93% response rate in this group
Evaluation results • More health and safety programs were in place after workshops • More workers and managers were participating in inspections • Cooperation and efficiency of JCs were improved after workshops • Committee roles were better understood after workshops • More managers than workers tended to rate degree of cooperation as “high”
Limitations of study • Retrospective recall • Only surveyed workshop participants that were still JC members • Others?
Keys to bipartite effectiveness • Establish common understanding of external pressures • Obtain senior management and union leadership commitment • Identify and acknowledge stakeholder differences and workable tradeoffs – consensus over vote • Create solutions should fit with other initiatives • Use external facilitators • Share all information • Set realistic goals, timeframes and expectations • Measure and communicate results
Benefits of an effective JC • Improved health and safety conditions • Fewer injuries • Higher job satisfaction • Enhanced problem solving expertise
Resources • Baker R, Stock L. (2006) Labor Unions: Their role in occupational and environmental health. In Levy, B et al. (eds.) Occupational and environmental health. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins • Baker, R., Szudy B., Guerriero, J. (2000). Working with labor unions: What occupational health nurses need to know. AAOHN Journal, 48(12), 563-572. • Yassi, A. et al (2005). Joint health and safety committee education and the value of bipartite cooperation in the healthcare sector in British Columbia, Canada. Int J Occup Environ Health, 11, 305-312. • Zelnick, J., Campbell, R., Levenstein, C., Balback, E. (2008). Clearing the air: The evolution of organized labor’s role in tobacco control in the United States. Int J of Health Services, 38(2), 313-331. • Bureau of Labor Statistics – Data on Unions http://www.bls.gov/bls/blsuniondata.htm • Canadian Center for Occupational Health and Safety - What is a Joint Health and Safety Committee? http://www.ccohs.ca/oshanswers/hsprograms/hscommittees/whatisa.html • Employee Free Choice Act http://www.aflcio.org/joinaunion/voiceatwork/efca/whatis.cfm • UW Health and Safety Committee http://www.ehs.washington.edu/ohssafcom/index.shtm • WA L&I Core Rules for Safety Committees and Safety Meetings http://www.lni.wa.gov/wisha/rules/corerules/HTML/296-800-130.htm • WSNA Occupational and Environmental Health and Safety Committee http://www.wsna.org/Topics/Workplace-Environment-You/Committee/