The following is a list of common reasons
non-members give for not joining, and some responses that will give them
something to think about.
REASON 1: I can't afford the dues.
RESPONSE: Could you afford to work for
$6 an hour? That's what you would be making if there were no union.
You don't really believe the Postal Service gives you raises out of the
goodness of its heart, do you? You saw the wage package the proposed
in the last contract negotiations. They think you make too much.
Management wanted to freeze your wages, cap the COLA and cut benefits.
You've got it backwards. Given what management wants to do to our
pay and working conditions, we can't afford not to pay union dues.
The union is all that stands between our paychecks and management's give
back demands. Don't you want the best contract negotiators, union
advocates, and stewards working on your side? The union can't afford
them with out you dues money. Can you afford to have the second best
negotiator on your side at contract time? Can you afford to have
less than the best trained steward or advocate representing you when your
discipline or termination is on the line?
REASON 2: I don't believe in unions.
RESPONSE: Do you believe in termination
without just cause? Do you believe in child labor? Slave wages?
No retirement system? Straight pay for overtime? 84-hour workweeks?
Monetary fines for breaking rules that management set up solely to be able
to fine you and get their money back? Didn't they teach history where
you went to school? All those things happened before there were unions.
Some still happen in other countries, and in non-union labor industries
in this country. Unions are the only means for the workers to deal
with management on an equal basis. Unions, not businessmen or bosses,
brought this country into the 20th century. How can you believe in America
and not believe in unions?
REASON 3: I don't need to be a member. I get everything that members get without paying the dues. That's the law.
RESPONSE: It is? The law says only
that raises apply to non-members as well as members, and that the union
must handle grievances for you. If you get injured on the job and
have to fight a long compensation claim, you get no help from the union
unless you are a member. If you have an EEO complaint, the union
won't represent you unless you are a member. Union insurance and
discount plans are available to members only. Members alone are eligible
to vote for union officers, and to ratify contracts. Only members get to
choose whose their union representatives are through democratic elections.
Non-members have no say in who represents them. Many rights are stamped,
"MEMBERS ONLY."
REASON 4: Who needs the Union? What has it ever done for me?
RESPONSE: More than three quarters of the
things that make your job worth having exist only because the union exists.
If you haven't worked here long, ask somebody who has how great a place
this was to work BEFORE the unions. If the unions ceased to exist
tomorrow, how long do you think you'd have the salary and benefits you
have now? See responses one and two.
REASON 5: I don't like so and so.
RESPONSE: One person isn't the union or
this local. The union is all of us. So you don't like one person.
By not being a member, you're hurting everybody, including yourself.
If you've got that big of a problem with an officer, then run against him.
But don't just drop out. People who didn't like Ronald Reagan didn't
renounce their citizenship.
REASON 6: The union is just here to get trouble makers out of the trouble they deserve to be in.
RESPONSE: Yes, the union defends anybody
who's in trouble. Isn't that part of the union's job - to make sure
everybody gets his day in court? That isn't all the union does, though.
The union works to create jobs, improve working conditions and make sure
no one's rights are violated. Look at responses one and two.
Grieving disciplinary actions is the union's job, but it's far from the
only job.
REASON 7: I don't want anything to do with the union. I'm trying to get promoted to boss.
RESPONSE: 80% of the employees in here
are union members. Over 90% of the people promoted in the last five
years have been union members. Notice a trend?
REASON 8: I went to the union with a problem and didn't get any satisfaction.
RESPONSE: Did you talk to somebody higher up? Did you bring it up at a union meeting to try to get some action? Is one bad experience really reason enough to just give up on the union? Are you sure you really had a legitimate grievance? If you don't believe the union is handling things properly, that should be the reason that gets you involved in the union to try and change things, not a reason to get out. The union isn't perfect, but it's all we've got to protect our rights and jobs.
-PPA Reprint