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Rights and Responsibilities of a
Union Representative
If you are a
Representative,
committee-person, delegate or other union grievance representative, you
are part of an extraordinary group, estimated to number more than 250,000
men and women, in 53,000 local unions across the United States. Union
Representatives represent departments, shifts, and work sites. They monitor
collective-bargaining agreements, advise employees on contract provisions,
confront employers over safety issues, and represent employees in
grievance proceedings.
A Representative's job is important and exciting.
You protect jobs and welfare of your fellow employees and use your
leadership skills to build the union.
Your position, however, is
not without perils. To be effective, you must protest management actions
that violate the collective-bargaining agreement, are arbitrary or unfair,
or threaten the health or safety of employees. In response, management may
try to intimidate or harass you or impose discipline.
To prevent
reprisals -- and to gain management's respect - you must be well prepared.
Your most valuable tools are union solidarity, contract rights and labor
law rights.
A Union
Representatives
rights are determined by three basic factors:
Union
Solidarity. This is the cohesion
and determination of employees you represent. A Representative backed by a
unified group, willing to act if the Representative is attacked, has
significant freedom of action.
Contract
Rights. A strong union contract forbids discrimination against
union activities and guarantees time for union business.
Labor Law
Rights. Federal and state labor
laws prohibit interference with legitimate union activities, protect
Representatives in presenting grievances, force employers to supply grievance
information, and require employers to bargain before making changes that
affect employees.
As a Representative, you have two main
jobs---first, building a strong union in your work place; and, second,
grievance handling.
You must have a strong union behind you if
you're going to be able to carry on your job of handling grievances
effectively. Your attitude and effort you put into your job is what
counts. Make it a privilege for your fellow workers to be active union
members who attend meetings regularly and willingly pay their dues. Being
a know-it-all or overbearing Representative doesn't do this. A lot of it will
come about by the example you set. Enthusiasm and sincerity are
contagious. You can always sell better what you believe in yourself.
Like most vitally important jobs, that of a Representative is very
difficult. In fact, it may seem like a Representative is expected to be
all things to all people at once. Of course that is impossible, but by
understanding the various roles of a Representative and doing your best in fulfilling them, the Representative will contribute greatly to the
strength of the union.
The roles of the Representative can best be described as that
of a negotiator,
leader, educator, communicator,
organizer
and political
activist. (As Representative, be sure to greet
the new hire on their
first day.)
"Know your contract!" This is the first commandment for
the Representative. Your fellow workers don't expect you to know everything, and
they respect you a lot more if you don't try to bluff your way out of
things. But they do expect, as their leader, to be well informed. To
educate workers so they understand and cooperate with union policies, you
must first educate yourself.
To know if the company and the union
are living up to their agreement, you must know what's in it. Unless you
know what it says, you cannot tell a worker if he's right about it. You
certainly can't discuss it intelligently with management.
Read
over every word of it. Discuss it with union officers. Become familiar
with the provisions. Understand how they apply to special conditions in
your department.
Remember the union is not a slot machine where
the worker puts in his dues and gets the jackpot in the form of higher
pay, shorter hours, better lighting, longer vacation----, it all takes
work! But it's worth it. As Representative, you have to do a lot of the day to
day work. But if you are a good leader, you'll get cooperation from your
fellow workers and your union officials as well as from management and
this helps make the job easier.
You will have headaches, but you
will also get breaks. Being a Representative gives valuable experience. From
adjusting plant grievances you may come to represent labor in
industry-wide conferences, policy-making conventions or even government
agencies. The keystone of the local union may be the stepping stone to
greater union leadership.
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