It could take years for the federal regulator Osha to set new heat rules as excessive temperatures are killing Americans at work
It could take years for the federal regulator Osha to set new heat rules as excessive temperatures are killing Americans at work
Yup! Why bother wasting a fan on me if I can power through the problem.
Nevermind the fact that I had a near miss and could have ended up costing the company a ton of money by getting hospitalized - cost prevention is a waste of money!
For the last quarter it was. 🤭
Yup, and because I didn’t bash my head in when I collapsed, there were no consequences for abusing me!
Gotta love Right-to-Work states.
So therein lies the solution. Next time you need a fan, just fall, when they panic and lift you up, be like “I’ve collapsed from the heat, if only there was a fan around… Who knows, next time I fall, I might bash my head…”
I’m sorry for your treatment, that has nothing to do with right-to-work though.
Right-to-work weakens unions.
A strong union wouldn’t let me be treated this way.
Therefore:
You’re right of course, but right to work does not preclude forming or joining a union which is the implication. I’m pro-union and a union member, even moreso I believe the right to collective bargaining by employees ought to be inviolable, but closed shops are bullshit. If the union doesn’t serve it’s members to their satisfaction, their continued collection of dues amounts to coercion. An employee invoking their “right to work” is making a statement about how their union is representing them, (often via political speech which is the basis of Beck). Furthermore, I don’t know about all states, but I believe most still make you pay the part of your dues attributable to bargaining. That was/is the same when exercising your “Beck rights.” There seems to be a default position on the left that unions are only forces of good (and polar opposite on the right). There are countless examples contrary and IMO employees should be able to vote with their dollars when their vote for representation fails or is corrupted. Anyway, nothing is stopping OP from organizing in a right-to-work state, the bar is the same, convince enough of your fellow employees that a union is in their best interest. Many, possibly most people do not understand what the terms right-to-work or at will employment mean. That was my main aim when commenting on it. My bad for the hit and run instead of explaining why right-to-work wasn’t at fault, just a shitty employer.
Closed shops are necessary for union power. In the real world, in real right-to-work states, unions are powerless. We have the real-world data to examine and compare right-to-work states and we can see it weakens unions across the board. This is a fact.
Deal with it.
If workers don’t like their union, they should form a rank-and-file committee and collectively bargain with the union 😤
Look, I know where I’m at here and know this is falling on deaf ears (see my previous comment about unions being unequivocally good from the left’s perspective). And I do have to deal with it, since I’m in a coerced membership state. My union is one of the largest in the country and has been the subject of much impropriety including collusion with one of the companies it represents employees of (not allegations of, convictions of). It’s not going anywhere because a few members are motivated enough to tell them to kick rocks and not worry about the repercussions. Your edit let’s me know you do not belong to a union or have any idea how a local works in the real world. I’ll not change your mind and you’ll not change mine. Union Yes!, closed shop no.
I was a member of the AFL-CIO for 4 years. They’re weak as fuck in my state because of the right-to-work laws.
Rank-and-File committees, made up of members of the union to push the union towards militancy, are the only way we can force do-nothing unions into action. All right-to-work does in the real world is weaken unions, that’s all we have seen in every state it has been implemented.