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Yahoo! News + Reuters wrote: 2 hrs 42 mins ago
(Reuters) – The United Food and Commercial Workers union (UFCW) has stepped up efforts to organize employees at the world's largest retailer Wal-Mart Stores Inc, the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday.
UFCW's efforts at the company, after a five-year lull, combine with its attempt to win Congressional support for a bill that makes unionizing easier, the paper reported.
Last month, Wal-Mart Treasurer Charles Holley had said the retailer was opposed to a bill introduced in the Congress that would let employees form a union if a majority signed authorization cards.
The paper said since Wal-Mart is the nation's largest private sector employer with 1.4 million employees, the union's campaign could have significant impact on the legislative debate and other actions to organize workers.
Wal-Mart could not be immediately reached for comment.
(Reporting by Eric Yep in Bangalore; Editing by David Holmes)
Editor wrote:I see this title and a few things pop into my head...
1) Unions have gotten a foothold in Walmart before in Eastern Canada, and wallyworld shut those locations down. Regardless of any press releases they issued at the time the message is clear. Wal-mart would rather close a location than have it union-operated. They can always open another store close by anyways. They lose a few months of sales, and still end up unionless in the long run.
2) Unions have overstepped their boundries. I have no problem with an auto-workers union helping Ford plant employees, or woodworkers union looking out for loggers, but driver unions signing up a McDonalds, or a civil service union helping a supermarket just doesn't seem right. Those cases seem more that the union has grown too large and when their key industries start lossing jobs, they rush to sign up anyone that they can possibly pull union dues from to pay their bloated office staffs, and line the pockets of the union heads and lobbyists.
3) In the current ecomony, we all know things are going to get worse, before they get better, so prices are going to get raised and we all are going to have to shop smarter. If the Wal-mart or other store you shop at does get unionized, how much more will it effect the prices there? Saddly we really don't know until it happens, and if it does and it is cheaper to shop at Target or K-Mart, Zellers or Sears whatever, then it's the workers who chose to unionize that will eventally be at fault when the stores they work at are no longer profitable to maintain.
I personally am not anti-union, I just feel that unions should exist for the cause they were created for. When they do, they are a force for positive output and assistance for their members.
What we mostly see nowdays, that is not the case. If Wal-mart workers unionize, more power to them, but i hope it's done for the right reasons, and done at the national level so selected stores don't get shafted, screwing no only the workers of that local, but impacting the people who shop and/or need that store to be there. Anything less within this political and economic climate, would be a diservice to all parties involved.
muswp1 wrote:If any Wal-Mart store joins a union, that store will get closed down by corporate. Wal-Mart is about the most anti-union corporation there is.
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