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NEWS & COMMENTARY December 9, 2022
By Julia Deng
Julia Deng is a student at Harvard Law School.
In todays News and Commentary, a car battery plant votes to unionize, the Biden administration saves some workers pensions from cuts, a new report shows that NEA membership numbers have declined, the movement looks back on the first Starbucks union yes, and data continues to trickle out regarding the ongoing impacts of long Covid on the labor market.
In Northeast Ohio, workers at a GM joint venture auto battery plant have voted to unionize with the UAW. This NLRB-supervised election has been closely watched, since joint venture battery plants are expected to play a large part in the auto industry of the future. GM-LG Energy Solution plants alone are expected to employ thousands of workers in the coming years, and Ford, Stellantis and other automakers have announced similar investments. The growing electric vehicle manufacturing industry is less labor intensive and pays lower wages than the traditional auto industry. The CEO of Ford estimated last month that electric vehicles could require 40% fewer workers than conventional cars and trucks. The unionizing battery plant factory workers make between $16 and $22 per hour, while traditional assembly line jobs top out at more than $30 per hour. UAW President Ray Curry said in a release, As the auto industry transitions to electric vehicles, new workers entering the auto sector at plants like Ultium are thinking about their value and worth. This vote shows that they want to be a part of maintaining the high standards and wages that UAW members have built in the auto industry. A full 98% of votes were cast in favor of the union.
Biden has announced a $36 billion investment in union workers pensions. The investment will avert cuts of up to 60% that would affected truck drivers, warehouse and construction workers, and food processors, and mostly those concentrated in Midwestern battleground states. The pension rescue time comes at an opportune time, immediately after the Biden administration helped force a railroad deal over the objections of some union members.
The Department of Labor has reported that educators are leaving the National Education Association. Over the last four years, membership has fallen by almost 130,000. The reasons for the decline are not immediately clear. The union says that the decline is due to a national teacher shortage, while others suggest that it relates to the new political stances taken by the NEA. For example, the NEAs agenda this year included proposals such as allowing the NEA to stand in defense of abortion and reproductive rights, and taking all necessary steps to defeat and overturn Floridas Parental Rights in Education Law. Some of the other defeated proposals included recommendations to use inclusive language in contracts, such as birthing parent and non-birthing parent instead of mother and father, and a policy of mandatory Covid vaccinations and masking in schools.
FULL story: https://onlabor.org/december-9-2022/
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NEWS & COMMENTARY December 9, 2022 (Original Post)
Omaha Steve
Dec 2022
OP
maccafan
(82 posts)1. NEA membership decline
As a retired teacher I wish I had a good answer to why there is such a decline. As a lifetime NEA member I made it a goal to approach all new teachers to encourage joining. I was successful only about half the time.