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STATEMENT OF:
STEPHEN W. GARD PDF
Image of File
Professor of Law
Cleveland-Marshall College of Law
Cleveland, Ohio 44115
I
Initially, I would like to
emphasize that I am a law professor and have, for the last nine years,
devoted myself to teaching and writing in the areas of constitutional
law and torts. Although I am admitted to practice in the state of Ohio
and Indiana, I have by choice not engaged in private practice since I
began teaching in 1975. Nevertheless, I am here today because I am
counsel representing plaintiffs in two lawsuits presently pending in the
United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio,
Oberle v. Erwin, Civil No. C80-1652 and Gradel v. Erwin,
Civil No. C80-1974. Both are actions against Local 18, International
Union of Operating Engineers and its officers alleging massive
employment referral discrimination against union members seeking
employment through the union's exclusive hiring hall. In both cases it
is alleged that this discrimination has continued for approximately a
decade.
When I was first approached in
1980 by my colleague Professor Alan Miles Ruben to participate in these
cases I was very reluctant to do so. It would be contrary to principles
which I hold dear to take a position which would even appear to be
anti-union. As a strong advocate of civil liberties I believe the tenets
of the labor movement, brotherhood, equality. and social and economic
justice, deserve unfailing loyalty. But when I reviewed the materials
relevant to the Oberle and Gradel cases, and read the
decision of the federal district court in Murphy v. Local 18,
International Union of Operating Engineers, 99 LRRM 2074 (N.D. Ohio
1978), I became convinced that Local 18 had departed so far from the
principles that have given labor unions their greatness that I had to
become involved. Today I am here to share with you the information which
brought me to this decision. In addition, I would like
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to bring more recent relevant
information to your attention and suggest the need for further
investigation and legislative reform.
II.
It is important for this
Committee to be aware that Local 18 has a long and unfortunate history.
Significantly, the McClellan Committee made the following findings:
Within the ranks of United
States labor the men who handle heavy equipment form a distinct elite.
On their skill and efforts depend our giant construction projects: our
highways, bridges, subways, great buildings, military bases, atomic
plants -- all the many massive engineering feats essential to our
national growth.
It would seem a foregone
conclusion that any union made up of men so intimately a part of the
mainstream of American progress would itself embody every advance
achieved by the labor movement to date. This expectation is, however,
at painful variance with the facts. Of all the unions subject to
committee inquiry over the past year, none has proved more backward,
more indifferent to the changing times, more incredibly feudal, than the
International Union of Operating Engineers.
Under a constitution, unworthy
of the name and, even so, seldom observed except in the breach, IUOE
members have dwelt in a state of servitude scarcely imaginable in the
midst of a democratic society....
In the American Labor Movement
the International Union of Operating Engineers stands out as an ugly
example of ruthless domination of working men and
women through violence, intimidation and other dictatorial practices.
The hearings of this Committee
concerning the activities of the Operating Engineers Union clearly
demonstrated the lack of democratic procedures within the union and
exposed to public view the ruthless ends to which the union's
leadership
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will go to stifle any semblance
of democratic action. Interim Report, Select Committee on Improper
Activities in the Labor or Management Field, United States Senate, 85th
Congress, 2d. Sess., Report No: 1417, March 24, 1958 at 371, 437
(emphasis added).
Apparently, neither the
censure of the McClellan Committee and the accompanying unfavorable
publicity nor the passage of the Labor-Management Reporting and
Disclosure Act, 29 U.S.C. E 401, et. seq., in 1959 has had any
deterrent effect upon Local 18 of the International Union of Operating
Engineers. Thus, in 1971 the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a
decision of the United States District Court for the Northern District
of Ohio setting aside a Local 18 election of union officers as void and
ordering a new election. The Sixth Circuit held that Local 18's
restrictive eligibility rule for candidates for union office precluded
the candidacy of over 60% of the union's membership. The Sixth Circuit
noted succinctly, "To sell the right to run for union office ... is
patently undemocratic." Hodgson v. Local Unions 18, 18A, 18B and 18C,
International Union of Operating Engineers, 440 F. 2d 485, 488 (6th
Cir. 1971).
In NLRB v. International
Union of Operating Engineers, Local 18, Soo F. 2d 48 (6th Cir.
1974), aff'g 205 NLRB 146 (1973) the Sixth Circuit Court of
Appeals affirmed a finding that Local 18 had engaged in the unlawful
practice of threatening dissident members with loss of employment
opportunities and other reprisals because they opposed incumbent union
leadership.
In Shimman v. Grothaus,
Civil No. C73-364 (N.D. Ohio 1975), aff'd. sub. nom., Shimman
v. Frank, 625 F. 2d 80 (6th Cir. 1980), Judge Young found that
"Local 18...had determined that it would be necessary to use physical
violence to beat the members of District 2 [of Local 18] into
submission." Id. at 10. Judge Young further found:
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The conclusion is inescapable
that when all other means of silencing dissent had failed, blood was
made to flow in the union hall. After that... plaintiff and Mr. Oberle
have not returned to the union meetings. The dissenters were finally
cowed into silence. The freedom and democracy which § 411 was enacted to
protect has been effectively destroyed in District 2 of Local 18].
Id. at 6.
In Murphy v. Local 18,
International Union of Operating Engineers, 99 LRRM 2074 (N.D. Ohio
1978), Judge Thomas Lambros, in an insightful and perceptive opinion
which deserves to be read in its entirety, surveyed the illegal policies
and practices of Local 18 and its officers and business agents, several
of whom remain officers and business agents of Local 18. The following
findings of fact are of particular relevance here:
43. In a drastic effort to
compel dissidents of Local 18 to submit to hall group practices, rebel
members have been threatend and subjected to assault and physical
violence.
Id. at 1086.
58. Since 1971 operating
engineers have not been permitted to distribute any literature,
political or otherwise, on union property. Id. at 2089-90 (footnotes
omitted).
72. The inherent subjectivity
of the [job] referral system has enabled the members of the incumbent
administration to manipulate employment referrals in such a fashion as
to benefit supporters and punish dissidents. This manipulation has been
evidenced by the operation of the referral itself, and by the statements
of various members of Local 18's Administration. Id. at 2098.
97. The evidence establishes
the existence of a conspiracy between certain defendants to surpress
[sic] the actions of... the dissident movement. The existence of such
conspiracy has been manifested in various acts and statements of the
defendants which include, |
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but are not limited to:
a. The organized attempt to prevent the dissidents of District Two
from addressing the membership at district meetings.
b. The coordinated violence
directed at plaintiff and other dissidents.
c. Union financing of the
defense of civil actions arising out of the above violence.
f. The manipulation of the
referral system as to favor hall group members and punish dissidents.
g. The derogatory and often
scatalogical comments directed toward dissidents by defendants. Id. at
2106.
Judge Thomas Lanbros, in
addition to awarding William F. Murphy compensatory and punitive
damages, also granted the following injunctive relief on July 18, 1978:
4. In order to ensure against
future misuse of the referral system, it is ordered that in every
district of Local 18:
c. Each district office shall
compile a list of the work orders received each day and shall post said
list for at least seven (7) consecutive days in a conspicuous manner in
the district office, not less frequently than every one hundred twenty
days....
d. Immediately prior to, and
immediately following each district meeting, the referral deck shall be
available to members for inspection and copying for a reasonable period
of time. Members shall be entitled to inspect and copy the cards of
those engineers before and after their own referral card, but shall not
be entitled to handle the deck themselves. Id. at 2135-36.
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Local 18 made no effort to
comply with this Order until after the plaintiff, William F. Murphy,
filed a motion for contempt sanctions and the federal district court
entered a Post-Judgment Memorandum Opinion and Order four years later on
October 14, 1982.
It would be difficult to
credit any claim that this pattern of misconduct and illegal activities
extending over a decade is too dated to be of interest to this
Committee. This is especially true because Local 18's present officers
held positions of responsibility during this period. Thus, for example,
Frank J. Miller, Business Manager of Local 18, has been an officer of
Local 18 since 1968 and prior to becoming Business Manager was
Vice-President of Local 18 since 1977. Prior to becoming Vice-President
of Local 18, Steve J. Mayor served as Recording-Corresponding Secretary
since 1976. He has been an officer of Local 18 since 1965. Paul Knott is
the Financial Secretary of Local 18 and has held this office since 1976.
He has been an officer of Local 18 since 1972. Jessee Buckle, the
Treasurer, has held this position since 1978 and has been an officer of
Local 18 since 1965. This history could be continued, but I believe the
point has been made. Before this Committee credits any claim that "new
union leadership" has corrected past abuses it should inquire as to what
specific steps Local 18's officers took during the past decade to
protest the illegal activities which have been documented here.
Moreover, contrary to Local
18's protestations it is clear that abuses continue to this very day.
William F. Murphy was a duly nominated and qualified candidate to be a
delegate from Local 18 to the 1984 International Convention. This
election, held during the past month, was characterized by violations of
Judge Lambros' Order in Murphy v. Local 18, supra. These
violations and election abuses are detailed in Mr. Murphy's February 21,
1984 letter of protest to Frank J. Miller, Business Manager of
Local 18, and Max M. Kendrick, Chairman of Election Committee of Local
18 (see attached). |
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They include the denial of the
right to speak to Local 18 members, denial of the right to inspect union
membership lists, and the frustration of the candidate's right to have
an observer present to witness the mailing of ballots. |
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In addition, we believe that
as recently as 1982 the officers and members of the Executive Board have
repeatedly violated their fiduciary duties to Local 18 under § 501 of
the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act. Although we have no
right to discovery inasmuch as no lawsuit has been filed and Local 18
has volunteered little information, we nevertheless have significant
evidence of improper and unlawful activities. These suspected financial
abuses are outlined in the letter from Ervin A. Shimman to Frank J.
Miller, Local 18 Business Manager, and Mr. Miller's response to that
letter. (See attached). While the number of individuals and the exact
amount involved may be unclear, it is undisputed that Local 18, contrary
to its By-Laws and Article XXIV, Subdivision 7, continued to carry on
its books and records numerous individuals who should have been
suspended for non-payment of dues and thus obligated itself to the
International for the per capita tax for these individuals. Furthermore,
unless these individuals seek reinstatement Local 18 has no lawful means
to recapture these funds. We believe that the improper carrying of these
members has caused a loss to Local 18 in the neighborhood of $300,000.
Frank J. Miller does not even claim membership approval for this action.
In addition, Local 18 made a
political campaign contribution of $15,000 to Richard Celeste, Governor
of the State of Ohio. This contribution is documented on page 138 of
Richard Celeste's "pre-general election report," dated September 2,
1982, on file in the Ohio Secretary of State's office. While not
violative of federal or state criminal law, we believe that this
contribution was unlawful because it was not specifically authorized by
the union membership. Although Mr. Shimman has requested copies of the
minutes of union membership meetings, this request has not been honored.
Other
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suspected instances of
financial abuses are outlined in Mr. Shimman's letter to Frank J.
Miller. Absent the right of discovery we have been unable to further
document these matters at the present time.
Overall, the evidence
presently available indicates a pattern and practice of improper and
unlawful activities by Local 18 and its officers and agents of mammoth
proportions.
III
The most outrageous abuse of
Local 18 and its officers and agents has thus far only been mentioned in
passing. This abuse is the discriminatory manipulation of the union's
employment referral system at the union's exclusive hiring hall in
order to benefit in an unlawful manner favored union members and to
injure disfavored union members and opponents of the incumbent
administration. There can be no doubt that Local 18 has systematically
practiced such referral discrimination for over a decade. Judge Thomas
Lambros made such a finding of fact in Murphy v. Local 18, 99
LRRM 2074 (N.D. Ohio 1978):
72. The inherent
subjectivity of the referral system has enabled the members of
the incumbent administration to manipulate employment referrals
in such a fashion as to benefit supporters and punish
dissenters. This manipulation has been evidenced by the
operation of the referral itself, and by the statements of
various members of Local 18's Administration. Id. at 2098.
79. Business
Representatives of District One [of Local 18] have manipulated
the referral system in order to refer relatives to employment
ahead of more experienced, better qualified engineers. Id. at
2099.
87a. From 1969 to
date, Kenneth Delaney, a member of the District Two hall group,
frequently witnessed District Two Business Agents manipulate the
referral system in order to refer favored
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engineers to
employment.
b. Business Agent
Harley Salisbury would pass over the cards of those engineers
at the top of the referral deck until he came upon the card of a
favored engineer. Salisbury would then dispatch the engineer of
his choice and write "called and not at home" on the cards of
the by-passed engineers.
c. In a similar
fashion Business Agent Robert Bowes would telephone the engineer
at the top of the referral deck, let the phone ring once, hang
up, write "called not at home" on the respective engineer's
registration card, and then continue on in succession in the
same fashion until coming upon the card of a favored engineer.
Bowes would then dispatch such engineer.
d. Business Agents
would "back date" the registration cards of favored engineers in
order to raise such engineers' referral priority.
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f. Business
Representatives of District Two have manipulated the referral
system in order to refer relatives to employment ahead of more
experienced, better qualified engineers. Id. at 2103.
97. The evidence
establishes the existence of a conspiracy between certain
defendants to suppress the actions of plaintiff [Murphy] and the
dissident movement. The existence of such conspiracy has been
manifested in various acts and statements of the defendants
which include but are not limited to:
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f. The manipulation of
the referral system as to favor hall group members and punish
dissidents. Id. at 2106.
The case of William Murphy is
especially compelling. Al‑
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though the average member of
Local 18 works 1,200 - 1,400 hours per year, once Murphy became an
opponent of the incumbent officers of Local 18 his referrals quickly
dwindled. In 1971 he worked only 207.5 hours and he was not referred to
a single job in 1972; in 1973 he worked only 85.5 hours. In 1974, 1975,
1976 and 1977 he was not referred at all. He worked only 4 hours in 1978
and not at all in 1979. Although it may be possible to argue about
specific isolated events during this nine-year period it is clear that
the chances of Mr. Murphy's work record (see attached) being the result
of a fair operation of the referral system are no greater than the
chances of being struck by Haley's Comet.
Glenn Oberle became a member
of Local 18 in 1946 and at all times relevant here was fully qualified
for the prestigious classification of master mechanic. Judge Thomas
Lambros, in Murphy v. Local 18, International Union of Operating
Engineers, 99 LRRM 2074 (N.D. Ohio 1978), made the following
findings of fact concerning Mr. Oberle:
82a. In the 1971
state-wide election Oberle ran for Vice-President on the
dissident slate against [John] Frank [then District
Representative of District Two of Local 1].... Id. at 2101.
4O. From 1971 until as
recently as 1975 the meetings of District Two have been accented
by the planned vilification of rebels by members of, the hall
group....It is clear that this verbal harassment was intended to
be, and functioned as an instrument of control. Specific
instances of the tactic are discussed below:
......
b. District
Two meetings, June-August, 1971. Frank called Glenn
Oberle,..., a "commie," and declared to the membership
that any engineer supporting Oberle
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_________
1.The trial in
Murphy began on February 26, 1976. Thus no implied finding that such
tactics are no longer being perpetrated can be fairly drawn from
Murphy.
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would be thrown
out of or starved out of the union.
........
c. Election
tally, District One offices, August, 1971. Frank
denounced Oberle, and stated he would starve Oberle and
the Shimman brothers out of the union.
........
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e. District Two meeting,
October, 1971. Frank villified Oberle in scatalogical language because
Oberle had been selected as master mechanic by the Braun Construction
Company...
.....
f. District Two meeting,
December, 1971.
- Frank called Oberle a "fool" and stated
"these small minds must be destroyed."
- James Grothaus, an Executive Board member,
accused Oberle of incest; Frank, presiding
officer, concurred in these comments.
........
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Apprentices
were told by Ray Frankhouse how to vote on
certain issues. Those voting contrary to
instructions were told by Frankhouse, State
Apprentice Coordinator, not to ask for help from
thehall. Shortly after this meeting, Frank
commented that apprentices were tantamount to
slaves and should not oppose the union or they
could be hurt. Id. at 2085.
Judge Lambros' Order documents
Local 18's refusal to honor the Braun Company request for Oberle as
master mechanic and a second request for a cherry picker job. Despite
repeated efforts by Oberle to contact union officials he received
no satisfaction. Thereafter Oberle filed charges with the NLRB which
resolved the issue in his favor. "Despite the decision of the NLRB,
Frank again refused to dispatch Oberle to the Braun |
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job. Eventually, upon the
advice of an NLRB attorney, Oberle reported to the Braun job without
being dispatched by the District Two hiring hall." Id. at... . As
the two letters (attached) to NLRB officials from Cary-Cooper,
Oberle's attorney, attest, this matter was never wholly resolved in a
satisfactory manner due to the defiance of Local 18 and the neglect of
the NLRB.
For the next decade Oberle was
the victim of retaliatory employment referral discrimination by Local 18
and its officers and agents (see attached complaint). During the first
four months of 1973 Oberle earned $8,024.22 working on the Braun Company
as a result of NLRB intervention. Thereafter for the last eight months
of 1973 Oberle earned only 2,049.02 through Local 18's employment
referral system. Remembering that Oberle's skills were much greater than
the average Local 18 member and that the average Local 18 member worked
approximately 30-35 weeks per year, Oberle's work record stands in
marked contrast (see attached letter from Glenn Oberle):
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YEAR |
WEEKS WORKED |
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1974 |
21 weeks |
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1975 |
22½ weeks |
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1976 |
4½ weeks (Testified in Murphy. v. Local 18) |
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1977 |
16½ weeks |
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1978 |
27 weeks |
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1979 |
25 weeks |
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1980 |
13½ weeks |
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1981 |
3 weeks |
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1982 |
7 weeks |
Any attempt by Local 18 to
relegate this data to the past should be given little credence in light
of the fact that a substantial portion of the present leadership of
Local 18 held union office during this entire period, supra
at.........
Furthermore, the case of James
Nevitz illustrates that employment referral discrimination is a way of
life at Local 18. Mr. Nevitz became romantically involved with the
daughter of Steve J. Mayor, Vice-President of Local 18, during the
summer of 1978. Prior to that time he had no prior work experience as an
operating engineer. At the urging of Mr. Mayor James Nevitz promptly
registered with the Local 18 hiring hall. Nevitz and Mayor's daughter
were married on November 18, 1978 (see
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attached marriage record). Mr.
Nevitz apparently received very favorable treatment under Local 18's
employment referral system, working steadily beginning in June 1978.
Unfortunately, Mr. Nevitz and his wife had marital difficulties and were
separated in January 1981 and ultimately divoreed (see attached divorce
decree). Perhaps not coincidentally Mr. Nevitz was never referred for
employment by Local 18 after March 1981. Overall, Mr. Nevitz's work and
earnings records (see attached) show the following: |
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DATES |
HOURS |
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Prior to 6/78 |
-0‑ |
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6/78 - 6/79 |
1,523.50 |
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6/79 - 6/8o |
2.091.50 |
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6/80 - 3/81 |
1,337.50 |
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3/81 - Present |
-0‑ |
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The economic effect on Mr.
Nevitz is graphically revealed by his earnings record (see attached
Social Security Earning Information): |
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CALENDAR YEAR |
EARNINGS |
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1977 |
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$3,003.21 |
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1978 |
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$13,924.63 |
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1979 |
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$20,775.88 |
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1980 |
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$24,649.05 |
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1981 |
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$5,527.34 |
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It is also profitable to
compare the work record of Mr. Nevitz, whose work card was registered in
the "B" deck with the work records of Mr. Murphy and Mr. Oberle, whose
work cards were registered in the priority "A" deck. In 1980 Mr. Nevitz
worked 2,091.50 hours. Even though no one in the "B" deck is to be
referred until the "A" deck is exhausted Mr. Murphy worked only 80 hours
by referral and Mr. Oberle worked only 13½ weeks, or approximately 550
hours.2 |
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___________
2. The comparison to Oberle may be somewhat inaccurate due to
variance between service and calendar years. In any event, Oberle worked
only 1,000 hours for all calendar year 1979
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Curiously, since Judge Thomas
Lambrose entered his Order on October 14, 1982 requiring record-keeping
of referral calls and posting of referral lists the normal operation of
Local 18's hiring hall has changed dramatically. Prior to this Order
most operating engineers were employed through Local 18's employment
referral. In contrast, now virtually all employment of operating
engineers is the result of specific requests by contractors, thereby
bypassing the referral process. The attached letter from Ervin Shimman
to my colleague Alan Miles Ruben dated December 26, 1983 that Ray
Frankhouse, an officer of Local 18, told a retired operating engineer
that "the only way a man can go to work now is by being requested." This
is confirmed by the job referral list postings. The attached lists for
June 1983 and January 1984 are illustrative. Although we have no
specific evidence at this time, the danger inherent in the
request method of employment is that "steering" by Local 18 officers of
favored operating engineers is easily accomplished, very difficult to
detect and almost impossible to remedy. Indeed, this is precisely the
reason why Judge Lambros' Order (attached) specified:
2. No officer,
business agent, employee, or other representative of [Local 18]
shall, directly or indirectly, whether personally or through
intermediaries, suggest, recommend, or otherwise designate to
any employer or representative of an employer, that any
individual or individuals be employed in any job subject to
being filled through the aforesaid referral system. This
provision shall in no way prohibit any representative of [Local
183 from, upon unsolicited request, giving his opinion of the
abilities of any registrant based solely upon personal knowledge
of registrant's work experience.
3. No officer,
business agent, employee, or other representative of [Local 18]
shall directly or indirectly, through others, recommend,
suggest, or otherwise indicate to any employer, or
representative of that employer, that any registrant not be
requested or employed, or, if such registrant has been
dispatched to work, that his employment be terminated.
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IV.
Exclusive union employment
referral systems serve an important societal function, especially in
those trades where employment is normally seasonal or otherwise of
limited duration. The union hiring hall facilitates employment for
unemployed workers and provides a ready source of skilled labor for
employers. Historically, the union hiring hall was a socially beneficial
replacement for a system which was disorganized, inefficient and
frequently corrupt. Union employment referral systems, however, also
have an inherent potential for abuse, favortism and corruption. In Local
18, International Union of Operating Engineers, this potential for abuse
and favortism has become a reality. There is evidence that these abuses
are not limited to Local 18. See, e.g., Vandeventer v.
Local Union No. 513, Internation Union of Operating Engineers, 579
F.2d 1373 (8th Cir.), cert. denied, 439 U.S. 984 (1978); Keene
v. International Union of Operating Engineers, 569 F.2d 1375 (5th
Cir. 1978). Moreover, such employment referral discrimination, when it
occurs, predictably often disadvantages blacks, women and other
minorities disproportionately. See UNITED STATES CIVIL RIGHTS
COMMISSION REPORT ON DISCRIMINATORY PRACTICES BY REFERRAL UNIONS (1976),
quoted in A. SMITH, C. CRAVER & L. CLARK, EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION LAW
743-46 (2d ed. 1982).
It is intolerable that no
federal statute explicitly addresses itself to this problem of
discriminatory administration of union employment referral systems.
Neither the courts nor the relevant federal agencies have enunciated any
consistent or coherent solution to this problem. Where abuses exist it
is the union and its officers which perpetrate them. Employers accept
such abuses silently because of ignorance, apathy or the fear of
retaliatory union action. Simply stated, the union member has been
abandoned and is friendless precisely when assistance is needed the
most. Indeed, we cannot even rely on the union member who has been
victimized by a discriminatory union referral system to speak on his own
behalf.
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Often the union member is
unaware of the existence of such discrimination because it is practiced
so subtly. More frequently, the union member is aware only that the
discrimination exists and favors other members but is unable to
identify who suffers. Even the union member who knows that it is he who
is suffering faces a difficult and lengthy battle to prove the
discrimination. It will be a rare and courageous individual who
actually challenges the union leadership knowing that he is dependent
upon their good will for future employment referrals, and may face years
of unemployment while his case is pending in administrative agencies or
the courts.
I would respectfully submit
that federal legislation is necessary to correct the intolerable abuses
which now exist. The right to fair and equitable employment referral
opportunities is one of the most fundamental rights of working
Americans. No longer can this basic human right remain at the mercy of
the unregulated caprice of those who would subvert union employment
referral systems for personal gain or to perpetuate themselves in power.
In addition to concern for the dignity and wellbeing of the union
members wholly dependent upon the employment referral systems,
legislation on this issue is necessary in order to make the promise of
union democracy contained in the LMRDA a reality. No right of free
speech or electoral participation within a union truly can
exist where union officials wield the weapon of unfettered control over
job referral opportunities. Legislative reform is essential for the
protection of union democracy and working Americans.
Presently no effective federal
legislation requires that union employment referral systems be operated
openly and subject to the scrutiny of the union members who rely on such
systems for their livelihoods. It is true that the United States
Department of Labor, in § 110.320 of the LMRDA Interpretative
Manual, has declared:
All supplements which are
incorporated by reference into a collective bargaining agreement become
a part of it. Thus, where an agreement makes reference to a work
referral system which the union is to administer, and further sets up
terms, conditions and classifications of employees
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which the union is obliged to
follow in referring applicants for jobs, the referral list is
incorporated by reference into the basic agreement. Therefore, being a
part of the basic working agreement, the referral list should be made
available pursuant to section 104.
Unfortunately, this policy is
inadequate to safeguard the rights of union members. Moreover, the only
remedy presently available for breach of this limited right of
inspection of referral lists is injunctive in nature. What is needed is
a criminal statute, or perhaps privately enforceable civil penalty
statute, which mandates the following:
1. The list of union members
presently available for employment ("referral list") must be available
for inspection by all union members at all times during normal business
hours;
2. The public posting of all
job orders, the date and time received by the union, the name of the
individual referred to the job, the date the individual registered with
the union, and the date and time of the referral;
3. The maintenance at the
union hiring hall of a sufficient number of telephones specifically
designated for referral use equipped with telephone recording devices in
order to create a permanent record of job orders and referrals.
4. Record-keeping requirements
to insure the maintenance of referral records for a reasonable period of
time.
It is axiomatic that "sunshine
is the best disinfectant." It is doubtful that employment referral
discrimination could long survive if the process were to be made subject
to continuous and ongoing scrutiny by those most directly affected by
its operation.
The requirement that union
employment referral systems be operated openly and subject to the
scrutiny of union members will only be effective if it is coupled with
an effective
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legislative prohibition on
referral discrimination. Presently, no federal statute explicitly
prohibits the discriminatory operation of union hiring, halls. The
Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act, 29 USC § 411, et.
seq., has been used to remedy referral discrimination in a few
cases, but it is only applicable when the discrimination has been
perpetrated with the wrongful intent to "discipline" a union member for
exercising rights guaranteed under the LMRDA. See, e.g.,
Vandeventer v. Local Union No. 513, International Union of Operating Engineers,
579 F. 2d 1373 (8th Cir.), cert. denied, 439 U.S. 984 (1978);
Keene v. International Union of Operating Engineers, Local 624,
569 F.2d 1375 (5th Cir. 1978); Cooke v. Orange Belt District Council
of Painters No. 48, 529 F.2d 815 (9th Cir. 1976); Murphy
v. Local Union 18, International Union of Operating Engineers, 99
LRRM 2074 (N.D. Ohio 1978). In other words, the LMRDA itself was .not
intended to prohibit employment referral discrimination but to guarantee
certain rights to union members, such as free speech and electoral
participation. Many victims of employment referral discrimination have
no remedy under the LMRDA either because the union member is unable to
prove the wrongful motivation of union officials or the causal
connection to the exercise of LMRDA-protected rights. Neither does an
adequate remedy exist under the duty of fair representation imposed upon
unions by the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185, et. seq.
See generally, Bastress, Application of a Constitutionally-Based
Duty of Fair Representation to Union Hiring Halls, 82 W.
Va. L. Rev. 31, wherein the author concluded that "[t]he [NLRB] 's
efforts to deal with the abuses have not been adequate." Id. at 83.
Moreover, the Act itself does not provide adequate remedies for union
employment referral discrimination. Thus, as a general matter, it is
unclear whether mere negligence is sufficient to constitute a NLRA
violation or whether proof of bad faith is required. See, e.g., Note,
Determining Standards for a Union's Duty of Fair Representation: The
Case for Ordinary Negligence, 65 Cornell L. Rev 634 (1980). Moreover,
the NLRA makes no provision for personal liability for wrongdoing
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union officials, no provision
for punitive damages and no provision for the award of attorney fees to
prevailing parties.
A federal statute which
explicitly prohibits all employment referral discrimination-by unions
is urgently needed. To be effective such a statute must provide for the
award of reasonable attorney fees to prevailing plaintiffs. Absent such
a provision it is only conscientious law professors like Alan Miles
Ruben and myself who will be financially able to undertake
representation of union members who have been victimized by employment
referral discrimination. It is Significant. that Alan Ruben has received
no payment for services rendered since 1973 in the Murphy case
and neither of us has received any payment for services rendered in the
Oberle and Gradel cases since 1980. Under present federal
statutes no attorney fees will ever be received unless a violation of
the LMRDA or the federal civil rights act, 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3) is also
established. The award of attorney fees under such a statute is
justified by the same principles of justice and equity which have led to
the award of such fees under the LMRDA. See Hall v. Cole, 412
U.S. 1 (1973).
In those cases where the union
officials responsible for the operation of the employment referral
system have acted with malice or reckless indifference to the right of
the union member personal liability should be imposed on the officials
and punitive damages should be awardable. Employment referral
discrimination cases are particularly appropriate for punitive damages
because such discrimination is often so subtle and easily. concealed
that many violations will inevitably escape detection. Given union
members' dependency on the referral system and their natural hesitancy
to sue their union many other violations will remain unremedied. Under
these circumstances true deterrence of employment referral
discrimination can only be achieved by the allowance of punitive
damages. Again the analogy to the LMRDA is instructive. It is now
generally agreed that punitive damages are awardable for violations of
the LMRDA. See, e.g., Cooke v. Orange Belt District Council of
Painters No. 48, 529 F. 2d 815 (9th Cir. 1976); Int'l. Brotherhood
of Boilermakers v.
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Braswell, 388 F.2d 193 (5th
Cir.), cert. denied, 391 U.S. 935 (1968).
Finally, a statute prohibiting
union employment referral discrimination should not require the
exhaustion of intra-union procedures but instead merely timely and
sufficient notice of claim to the union. Thereafter, unless the union
favorably responds within a reasonable short period of time by awarding
backpay compensation to the member access to the court should be
immediately available. In an employment referral discrimination case
time is of the essence to all parties. Unless the union member is able
to secure swift relief long-term unemployment may follow. This is
especially true, as is often the case, when the union removes the
member's referral card from the deck pending resolution of the claim.
For the union swift resolution is necessary to prevent the accumulation
of a sizable backpay obligation. Simple justice requires that any
limitation period on claims not begin to run until after discovery of
the facts supporting the member's claim. On the other hand, fifteen days
(but certainly not more than thirty days) would be an adequate time for
a union response.
Recent events in Poland have
reminded us in a vivid fashion that free and democratic unions are the
backbone of a free and democratic nation. I hope that in America fair
and equitable union employment referral systems, an essential element of
free and democratic unions, can be achieved.
Thank you.
Laborers for JUSTICE©
1997-2006 All Rights reserved. Not for republication on the internet
without permission.
Jim McGough, Director
2615 West Peterson Avenue
Chicago, Il 60659
773-878-1002 (tel)
773-409-1503 (eFax number)
laborers@comcast.net |
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