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Mechanics Strike on Northwestern and are replaced by scabs....

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Mechanics Strike on Northwestern and are replaced by scabs....
Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, August 24, 2005 9:00 PM
From one of the labor websites:

http://www.utu.org/worksite/detail_news.cfm?ArticleID=23139

Being that the RR's are heavily relient on unionized labor, I found this article to be rather informative and alarming. It also led me to think twice about going on strike. These days unions are not as strong as they used to be. Of course the airline industry is in much harder times than the RR industry, but it still got me thinking. A question I had to ask myself was: "Would I take a pay and benefits cut to keep my job, or do we strike to try to protect what we have when we know that our employer can't keep up with the bills." This topic can bring up all kinds of scary thoughts and despair, but my point in bringing this up is what would YOU do? And.. what's your point of view on this subject?
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Posted by BNSFGP38 on Wednesday, August 24, 2005 9:15 PM
I can see both sides. Laborers got familys to feed,bills to pay. Company needs mechanics to keep rolling, to make the money. Sometimes companys kill workers, sometimes workers kill companys.

No union struggle is ever easy.
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, August 24, 2005 9:17 PM
I was under the impression that railroad union could no longer strike.

You can partically thank Mr. Reagan for that. [:(] [:(!]

With the current "guy" in the house, striking isn't a good idea.
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Posted by bobwilcox on Wednesday, August 24, 2005 9:42 PM
Railroad unions can strike, its just very difficult. The basic legislation covering railroad strikes goes back to the 1920s and the reaction to the shopmen's strike. Think Harding not Reagan.
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, August 24, 2005 9:45 PM
You mean President Ronald Reagan, who was voted the greatest American, by the country. I read the article. Why are the mechanics striking? People are taking their jobs, and getting a raise in pay. I could understand the importance of unions way back when, now working conditions are much better. Unions now are little more than money collection devices for the Democrat party. Unions have far too much power, some jobs you have to be part on the union or you can't get the job, and other rules. I believe anything Reagan would have signed would have had to be passed by congress, same with President Bush.


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Posted by MP173 on Wednesday, August 24, 2005 9:53 PM
Nate:

How is the dispatching going? Hope everything is going well. I have found myself listening to the Fostoria web. I think that is handled out of J'ville, so I wont be hearing you.

Management vs labor has been a long struggle. The interesting thing about the Northwest strike is the other unions (particularly the pilots) are not joining in. That is different than in the past. The pilots learned from United that bankrupcy will divistate their pension payouts. So there is a new card being played now...that of pensions.

It is times like this that I am very glad that I am not working for a large corporation and not in a union.

ed
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, August 24, 2005 10:06 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by Lotus098


You mean President Ronald Reagan, who was voted the greatest American, by the country.





Myself and a lot of others must have missed that vote. But I won't start another war that ends up in a deleted thread.

Hopefully L.C. will see this and straight us out. (about striking that is)
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, August 24, 2005 10:13 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by jhhtrainsplanes

QUOTE: Originally posted by Lotus098


You mean President Ronald Reagan, who was voted the greatest American, by the country.





Myself and a lot of others must have missed that vote. But I won't start another war that ends up in a deleted thread.

Hopefully L.C. will see this and straight us out. (about striking that is)

It was a show on the Discovery Channel, and people voted on line, you can see for yourself: http://dsc.discovery.com/convergence/greatestamerican/greatestamerican.html
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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Thursday, August 25, 2005 9:27 AM
I have been on both sides of the fence (labor and management) so it can be difficult to maintain a consistent point of view when it comes to labor issues. I was surprised to see that Northwest's union pilots and union flight attendants chose to cross another union's picket lines, even if it is the AMFA.
The AMFA, in its short existence, has established a reputation of going for increases or maintaining it's members' pay scales at the expense of other job-related concerns. This may explain why other unions hold the AMFA at arm's length and are willing to cross their picket lines. One would have hoped that the AMFA leadership would have realized the futility of a job action when Northwest is teetering on the edge of Chapter 11.
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Posted by coborn35 on Thursday, August 25, 2005 10:11 AM
My uncle is or.. was a mechanic for Northwest for 20 years. He does not expect to get his job back. You would be shocked at the things Northwest did.

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Posted by broncoman on Thursday, August 25, 2005 10:20 AM
I would think that as a passenger I would think twice about flying on an airline where the inspections and preventive maintenances are being done by "scabs". I guess people don't realize or even think about what those mechanics do just in day to day life. Being a union member I think that the unions haven't evolved for the changing times. It would be just as easy for a lawyer to hash out a contract as a union, and they would only take their fee once, and I wouldn't have to worry about my dues going to support a candidate that I don't support.
[2c]
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Posted by tree68 on Thursday, August 25, 2005 10:36 AM
[2c] Unions serve an important function in protecting workers from abuse by employers. That's one of the chief reasons unions came into being as we know them today. It's an admirable cause, unfortunately sometimes still justified.

The flip side probably started with one Eugene Debs, whose motto was "More." Based on the comment above about wages, I'd say that the problem continues. While I can't fault anyone for wanting to improve their standard of living, any raise is part of a vicious cycle. My wage goes up, so the price of the product I produce goes up. You need more money to buy my product, so you want a raise. That means the price of your product goes up, etc, etc. Any union that simply wants "more" is contributing to the problem, not the solution.

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Posted by Big_Boy_4005 on Thursday, August 25, 2005 11:04 AM
Well guys, living in the home of Northwest, this is part of the daily news here, and has been for months. It is a tough situation for both sides. The company has taken a very hard line, and if successful will bust the union. The question is can they keep enough planes in the air long enough to starve the union out. They have brought in replacement workers, of doubious skill and training to try to keep the planes patched together. Reports are that the FAA has inspectors watching closely.

A few years ago, Northwest pilots saw the writing on the wall, and took some serious lumps at the bargaining table to keep the airline alive. Now they are less sympathetic to the mechanics, because they've been there and done that. The flight attendants are in a real jam, because their contract is up next. Some are even walking the lines with the mechanics in their spare time, in a show of support.

It all boils down to how long can Northwest fly without major delays or cancellations. A month may bust the union, because a large number of the members may not be able to go much longer without a paycheck, and the union has no reserve fund to pay out while on strike.

Lotus, give the political a rest.
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Posted by broncoman on Thursday, August 25, 2005 11:21 AM
Does anyone know what the mechanics make and what are their benefits roughly?
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Posted by Junctionfan on Thursday, August 25, 2005 11:23 AM
Scabs are nothing more than corporate lackies to break legal labour action. In most cases, unions are not the ones being unreasonable but the employer trying to cut costs and raise the bottomline by any means necessary.

Scabs are the bottom-feeders of the workforce and should be at all times shunned and ridiculed for the sake of fairness of a decent wage that covers the cost of living based on the amount of training and type of job that person is doing.
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, August 25, 2005 11:33 AM
It's a catch-22 situation. [:(]
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, August 25, 2005 11:42 AM
The AMFA website has a chart of Northwest's final offer as well as the current contract terms for United (post bankruptcy).

Google Airline Mechanics Fraternal Association and then go the strike page.

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Posted by Modelcar on Thursday, August 25, 2005 11:46 AM
...It's not all one sided....and how does one solve the age old problem....As stated above, one gets a raise and then the other raises prices, etc, etc......

Quentin

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Posted by Paul Milenkovic on Thursday, August 25, 2005 12:00 PM
QUOTE:
Scabs are nothing more than corporate lackies to break legal labour action. In most cases, unions are not the ones being unreasonable but the employer trying to cut costs and raise the bottomline by any means necessary.

Scabs are the bottom-feeders of the workforce and should be at all times shunned and ridiculed for the sake of fairness of a decent wage that covers the cost of living based on the amount of training and type of job that person is doing.


My grandpa was a union carpenter so I am familiar with the positions of labor advocates on these issues. He was an anti-Nazi pro-Socialist in his native Hungary and later Yugoslavia (and now Serbia), and he saw being a Democrat and a union member in Chicago to where he emigrated as a natural fit, but he had seen a lot, both in Chicago and in the old country, and he had some cynical views about unions and whether they were really helping the little guy.

Scabmechanics -- I like to pronounce that as one word, and that has a scary feel, especially when I have my wife out on a trip on Northwest (when you travel on business you often have to go where you are told and you don't get to honor union picket lines) and Northwest is experiencing mechanical delays out the wazoo right now.

Terrible people these scabmechanics. Suppose these scabmechanics keep Northwest out of Chapter 11 and help other union people keep their pensions, or suppose they keep Northwest out of liquidation so, I don't know, Southwest doesn't take over their routes, where Southwest has an entirely different "labor agreements" (don't know if they are even union). I suppose that makes the whole of Southwests's labor force scabpilots, scabattendents, and scabmechanics as well.

I empathize with the Northwest mechanics because Northwest wants to chop their pay by a quarter and chop the number of mechanics in half. This is not some whiny bunch of guys wanting "more" -- bigger pay raise -- these guys are trying to hang on to their life. But on the other hand, Northwest is not some big corporation raking in big profits that they are not sharing with their workers -- they are about to go broke.

Fundamentally, a union is a kind of economic monopoly. We think that monopoly is bad, but some kinds of monopolies (like power companies and not duplicating the power lines going to your house) are good, and a union as a labor monopoly can serve a social purpose if it allows workers to make living wages and allows a company to have a qualified, skilled workforce. But like any monopoly, a union can charge more for its services (the labor of its members) than in free-competition, but they cannot charge more than the market can support.

Come to think of it, by the calculus of crossing picket lines, Northwest now has scabmechanics, scabpilots, scabattendents, and scab everyone right now, most of them dues-paying union members.

If GM "killed the electric car", what am I doing standing next to an EV-1, a half a block from the WSOR tracks?

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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, August 25, 2005 12:04 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by Junctionfan

Scabs are nothing more than corporate lackies to break legal labour action. In most cases, unions are not the ones being unreasonable but the employer trying to cut costs and raise the bottomline by any means necessary.

Scabs are the bottom-feeders of the workforce and should be at all times shunned and ridiculed for the sake of fairness of a decent wage that covers the cost of living based on the amount of training and type of job that person is doing.


AMEN, BRO....AMEN!
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, August 25, 2005 12:13 PM
Lotus, have you ever belonged to a Union? Look at Arizona.....right to work state. Very non-union. Now look at the wages there. Very low! Unions raise the prevailing wage for a given area. Even non union jobs wages will follow suit. In Az it is either minimum wage or or you are wealthy. That is it.
Clinton lied and he was tried..........Bush lied and men died.........Nuff said!
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Posted by Paul Milenkovic on Thursday, August 25, 2005 12:59 PM
QUOTE:
Clinton lied and he was tried..........Bush lied and men died.........Nuff said!
George W. Bush-a wholly owned subsidiary of Halliburton.


Clinton may have lied and got called on the carpet, Bush may have lied and gotten away with it, and yes many men (and many women) have died, defending our freedom by fighting in a far-off land. If there is one thing that Clinton and Bush were in agreement on was the threat Saddam's continued violation and defiance of the Gulf War cease-fire agreement and related U.N. resolutions posed to our security here at home.

If someone brings up the WMD thing, my analogy is that Saddam's Iraq was on "parole" (the armistice and related U.N. resolutions), and we busted his door down because we though he had a stash of drugs, and we didn't find any drugs because he either had time to flu***hem down the toilet or he was going around letting people think he had drugs to make people think he was a player. We didn't find any drugs, but we "violated him on his parole" anyway. There are a lot of other tough guys in the neighborhood, but we don't have any parole violations on them but we are keeping a real careful eye. One guy decided it was better to come clean (Qadaffi), so that case is being resolved by diplomatic means. From the example of Libya, you also know what coming clean looks like compared to what Saddam was doing (i.e. shooting at our planes).

And if we are talking unions, one thing that American unions have been famous for has been their anti-Communism during the heyday of the Cold War and their America First stand for any disputes outside their borders.

If the unions have become knee-jerk anti-Republican, and anti-George Bush, I guess that is their right, and I suppose Mr. Bush expected too much to support steel tariffs to help his corporate buddies along with their union workers and to expect and recognition from union people on this. And yes, there are legitimate reasons to criticize the war effort in Iraq or even the fact that we went in to Iraq. But if to support unions means you are anti-America doing anything overseas to protect our security at home, it is a sad, sad day and a repudiation of unions who supported the fight in WW-II, in the Cold War, and yes, even in Viet Nam.

I know I am far, far off topic, and I respect people who oppose the war in Iraq because the decision to fight in Iraq and the decision to keep fighting in Iraq is a real hard call in terms of our national interest, but glib statements of "Bush lied, people died" don't represent a sentiment that everyone agrees on around here.

As to George Bush, union villian, you haven't given the guy even half a chance -- he hasn't intervened in the Northwest strike as it is his presidential power to do so (I believe Harry Truman was given that power and used it too on a railroad strike and caught a lot of heck for it as well). And if he does intervene, it may give a way for the mechanics union and Northwest to back off from their collision course and save face and negotiate something that may help both parties.

If GM "killed the electric car", what am I doing standing next to an EV-1, a half a block from the WSOR tracks?

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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, August 25, 2005 1:56 PM
Whatever
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Posted by Junctionfan on Thursday, August 25, 2005 2:34 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by Paul Milenkovic

QUOTE:
Scabs are nothing more than corporate lackies to break legal labour action. In most cases, unions are not the ones being unreasonable but the employer trying to cut costs and raise the bottomline by any means necessary.

Scabs are the bottom-feeders of the workforce and should be at all times shunned and ridiculed for the sake of fairness of a decent wage that covers the cost of living based on the amount of training and type of job that person is doing.


My grandpa was a union carpenter so I am familiar with the positions of labor advocates on these issues. He was an anti-Nazi pro-Socialist in his native Hungary and later Yugoslavia (and now Serbia), and he saw being a Democrat and a union member in Chicago to where he emigrated as a natural fit, but he had seen a lot, both in Chicago and in the old country, and he had some cynical views about unions and whether they were really helping the little guy.

Scabmechanics -- I like to pronounce that as one word, and that has a scary feel, especially when I have my wife out on a trip on Northwest (when you travel on business you often have to go where you are told and you don't get to honor union picket lines) and Northwest is experiencing mechanical delays out the wazoo right now.

Terrible people these scabmechanics. Suppose these scabmechanics keep Northwest out of Chapter 11 and help other union people keep their pensions, or suppose they keep Northwest out of liquidation so, I don't know, Southwest doesn't take over their routes, where Southwest has an entirely different "labor agreements" (don't know if they are even union). I suppose that makes the whole of Southwests's labor force scabpilots, scabattendents, and scabmechanics as well.

I empathize with the Northwest mechanics because Northwest wants to chop their pay by a quarter and chop the number of mechanics in half. This is not some whiny bunch of guys wanting "more" -- bigger pay raise -- these guys are trying to hang on to their life. But on the other hand, Northwest is not some big corporation raking in big profits that they are not sharing with their workers -- they are about to go broke.

Fundamentally, a union is a kind of economic monopoly. We think that monopoly is bad, but some kinds of monopolies (like power companies and not duplicating the power lines going to your house) are good, and a union as a labor monopoly can serve a social purpose if it allows workers to make living wages and allows a company to have a qualified, skilled workforce. But like any monopoly, a union can charge more for its services (the labor of its members) than in free-competition, but they cannot charge more than the market can support.

Come to think of it, by the calculus of crossing picket lines, Northwest now has scabmechanics, scabpilots, scabattendents, and scab everyone right now, most of them dues-paying union members.


In cases of near bankrupcy, unions will recommend to their members to negotiate for a settlement in the interest of self-preservation. This has happened in a few companies such as Stelco Steel in Hamilton, Ontario. As far as I know the unions and management negotiated a revision of contracts with approval of the union members in order to maintain job security.
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Posted by Big_Boy_4005 on Thursday, August 25, 2005 2:47 PM
Well guys, I'm not a company man. I like to take the side of the little guy, but this situation sucks.

Northwest is like a sinking ship, in large part because of rising fuel prices. Even if they get rid of the mechanics, and outsource the work, they may still go bankrupt just like United.

The consessions Northwest wanted were massive, 26% pay cut plus lots of jobs lost. No union in it's right mind can accept an offer where they lose money and flush nearly one third of the rank and file down the toilet. They would rather all go down together, than accept and then draw straws. The mechanics are betting that the airline can't live without them. This is a true test of wills.

OK, so you are on a ship in the middle of the ocean, and it's sinking. What do you do?

By the way, one of my neighbors is a mechanic for Northwest, and my step brother is a pilot.
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Posted by gacuster on Thursday, August 25, 2005 4:41 PM
As a union member, I must say it is a very good thing for keeping decent wages and benefits and preventing management from running roughshod over the workers. Just look at how hard Wal-Mart fights to keep unions out so they can pay third world wages with no benefits.
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Posted by Big_Boy_4005 on Thursday, August 25, 2005 7:58 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by gacuster

As a union member, I must say it is a very good thing for keeping decent wages and benefits and preventing management from running roughshod over the workers. Just look at how hard Wal-Mart fights to keep unions out so they can pay third world wages with no benefits.


Unfortunately, this situation may be in part the result of all the positive union efforts of the past. Each contract renewal, they manage to squeeze out a little better deal from the company, for the membership. That's the good part.

The bad part comes when the company's economic situation goes into reverse. I'm not suggesting that the union should just roll over and take what the company is offering, but this is the source of the impass. The union feels that the company could make a better offer than what they have. They might even be willing to accept a 10% pay cut and a 20% job loss, which is a far cry from Northwest's last best offer.

I'm not at all thrilled with the congress. They seem to think that it's OK to line their pockets with money from lobbyists representing big business. What would happen if businesses could no longer buy a vote in Washington. The little guy might actually get his voice back. By the way, the new bankruptcy law, is a direct result of a push from the credit card companies.
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, August 25, 2005 9:42 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by ironken

Whatever
So you just don't listen, when a valid argument is placed forth, you just ignore it, so I won’t bother to say anything, though he is pretty much right. Someone told me to stop with the politics, I will, no reason to argue such blatant nonsense.[:D]
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, August 25, 2005 10:01 PM
Good. Blatant nonsense????? Keep taking pictures of the pretty trains.....foamer.
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, August 25, 2005 10:21 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by Paul Milenkovic


Terrible people these scabmechanics. Suppose these scabmechanics keep Northwest out of Chapter 11 and help other union people keep their pensions, or suppose they keep Northwest out of liquidation so, I don't know, Southwest doesn't take over their routes, where Southwest has an entirely different "labor agreements" (don't know if they are even union). I suppose that makes the whole of Southwests's labor force scabpilots, scabattendents, and scabmechanics as well.


Regarding your quote:

1. Just what exactly does Southwest Airlines have to do with a strike at Northwest Airlines??

2. Southwest's hardworking line employees are union, many TWU, also ALPA, and would most certainly take tremendous offense at your characterization of them as "scabs". Particularly since they have absolutely nothing to do with either Northwest's labor troubles or Northwest's current approach to those troubles. In fact, with the exception of DTW, Southwest does not fly into either of NWA's other 2 fortress hubs, MSP or MEM.

3. Perhaps you should consider getting your facts straight before spouting off your peurile, unsubstantiated and inflammatory invective.

I do NOT work for SWA. Nor does any member of my family.

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