Labor union membership in New York state rose last year as union leaders
stepped up organizing efforts.
The U.S. Labor Department reported that the percentage of unionized workers
jumped 3 points to 25.2 percent in New York—the highest in the nation.
In 2007, 2.1 million workers in the state belonged to unions, up from 2
million the year before. An additional 91,000 workers were covered by collective
bargaining agreements, but were not union members themselves. The rise follows a
period between 2005 and 2006 where membership in the state fell 5 percent.
“Our unions are organizing on a scale they never have before,” says Greg
Tarpinian, executive director of Change to Win, a federation of seven unions
representing 6 million workers. “There’s a lot of organizing going on in health
care, in building services, in food service.”
Department of Labor regional commissioner Michael Dolfman says the jump
resulted in part from an executive order signed by Gov. Eliot Spitzer that paved
the way for unions to organize 60,000 child care workers across the state. Among
them were 28,000 home-based child care providers in New York City who joined the
United Federation of Teachers in December.
“Even with the fact that it’s very difficult to organize, there still is an
increase,” says New York State AFL-CIO president Denis Hughes. “It shows that
there’s a pent-up will for people to be represented in the workplace, to have a
democratic voice in the workplace.”
Union leaders say the National Labor Relations Board’s election process is
stacked against workers, sparking a need to organize creatively through
legislative and other means, such as the child care campaign.
“If we use the law that was originally passed to give workers the right to
join unions, we’d lose more often than not” Hughes said. “So we’re forced to
look at different ways to approach it.”
New York has more than four times as many union members as Texas, despite
having 1.7 million fewer workers.
Nationally, union membership rose by 311,000, to 15.7 million, comprising
12.1 percent of the workforce. Membership declined in 27 states, including New
Jersey and Massachusetts.
Filed by Daniel Massey of Crain’s New York Business, a sister publication of
Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.