
Fairness Needs Community Support
By Fr. John Rausch
Herald Columnist
(From the issue of 6/3/04)
Several years ago I received a call from a group of workers in an
industrial laundry in eastern Kentucky. The 65 workers voted for union
representation 10 months before, but negotiations had stalled in securing a
first contract. The union wanted some church people to listen to the workers
because it recognized the Catholic teachings on workers' rights.
The plant launders bed linens and uniforms especially from hospitals and
nursing homes plus fire retardant garments from heavy industry. Started as a
family business, it was sold years before to a national firm. The family
atmosphere of the early days changed to more standard and impersonal work
rules.
The testimonies at the hearing ranged from wages to work conditions. One
worker after over 40 years at the laundry still made only $6.25 an hour, a
wage that kept a family of 3 in poverty. Another worker testified that when
summer temperatures outside reached 90 degrees, she recorded a 118 degree
temperature at her work station in the plant. Other workers complained of
rigid work rules, crowded conditions and unclean bathrooms. After 2 hours of
round table discussion, I puzzled over my next step.
Labor law currently favors the employer. Nationally, one-third of the
workplaces that unionize never negotiate a first contract, and one-fourth
more never get a second contract. The law requires employers to bargain in
good faith, which essentially means meeting on a regular basis. The only
correction for bargaining in bad faith-however defined-is a flimsy order to
bargain in good faith. No fines, no penalties, no punitive damages.
As a sympathetic listener, I had no legal power. But, as a person of
faith, I could use moral suasion. I discovered the owner of the laundry
business was a devout Catholic living in New York, so I wrote a letter
outlining the social teachings of the church, emphasizing the dignity of
every worker and the right to a just wage. Next, I contacted his bishop and
asked him to hand deliver the letter, which he did-on the golf course. Ten
days later the negotiating team came to the meeting, letter in hand, and
negotiated a contract giving everyone a one dollar an hour raise.
The hearing that I and the other church representatives convened
instinctively at the industrial laundry reflects a major program of Jobs
with Justice (JwJ), a community organization dedicated to improving workers'
standard of living. JwJ organizes Workers' Rights Boards composed of
community and religious leaders, academics, elected officials and other
prominent members of the community to review workers' complaints. With no
legal authority, yet with great moral authority coming from upright
community members, these boards invite employers to the public hearings,
then seek follow-up meetings with management to discuss the findings. If
talking and mediation prove ineffective, the WRB may pursue publicity
through letter writing to customers, newspapers and stockholders, or more
direct action through picketing and demonstrations. These boards are
operating in 20 cities and have helped janitors and factory workers, food
service folks and immigrant laborers affirm their dignity in labor
struggles.
Maintaining a vibrant middle class depends on protecting and advancing
workers' rights. Unfortunately, anti-union sentiment appears pervasive and
the right to organize must fight an increasingly hostile legal system. Union
busting represents a $500 million industry that plays the system to insure
property rights over human rights.
Workers' Rights Boards offer communities a way to affirm justice until
labor law is reformed. No workplace is off limits or a
"none-of-your-business" situation. Developing a just society demands
involvement, and fairness needs community support.
Fr. Rausch is a Glenmary priest who lives, writes and organizes in
Appalachia.
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