Suppose youāre a union staff rep. (Or a business agent, an internal organizer, whatever the local lingo is.) And suppose you believe in union democracy: the members should run the fight against the boss.
Where do you come in, then? What exactly is your job, and how can you do it in a way that keeps the rank and file in the driverās seat?
The obvious danger: you work for the union all day, while members have their jobs to do. It can be all too easy for members and staffers alike to start thinking āthe unionā means the people who have desks at the union hall: the top brass and the reps they hire. Thatās not only undemocraticāitās a terrible foundation for building power.
We asked four experienced staffers how they see their jobs and how they translate the idea that the members run the union into their day-to-day tasks.
GOLDEN RULE
One union tackles the problem at its root by drawing a thick line around the role staffers play.
University Professional and Technical Employees ātakes member-run to the nth degree,ā said Vice President Lisa Kermish. She was a research administrator at the University of California before coming to work for her union.
Stewards do all UPTEās representation, even arbitrations that pit them against management attorneys. Union staff do no direct grievance handling.
Staffers donāt participate in bargaining; theyāre not even in the room during negotiations. Nor do they participate in discussions of the unionās policies or direction. Instead, their job is to recruit and train members to do these tasks.
āOur golden rule is, donāt do for members what they can do for themselves,ā Kermish said, āand its platinum corollary is, if there isnāt a member to do it, it wonāt get done.ā
Holding fast to these rules isnāt always easy. Whatās a staffer to do when the clock is ticking on a grievable situation and no steward is willing to take it on? Sometimes the union has to call in a āsuper stewardā from Los Angeles to handle a case an hour away in Irvine, or throw a new steward āinto the deep end of the poolāāwith support from staff, but never with a staffer doing the task for the steward.
The policy, Kermish said, is ābased on the premise that, if weāre really a member-run union, we have to do more than talk the talk.ā
TEAM EFFORT
Part of a union repās job, Joe Fahey says, āis to help people do things theyāre not used to doing. None of the big changes that weāre trying to make in the labor movement, in our workplaces, in the world, are going to happen if we donāt make small changes, like in how we talk to each other and how we run meetings.ā
Fahey, a retired Teamster, was a union staffer for two decades. He recalls a bottling plant where different groups of workers took out their tension and mistrust on the steward.
āThe workers would have a steward election and then be extremely dissatisfied with the steward, whoever it was,ā he said, āand so there would be a call to get rid of that damn steward and put somebody else in their place. It just looked like an impossible setup.ā
So he called a meeting and asked all the workers to consider themselves potential stewards.
They went around the circle answering the question, āWhat qualities do you have that would make you a good steward?ā Then they went around again to answer, āWhat would be difficult for you about the job?ā
Some said they were shy, didnāt like conflict, or had trouble understanding the contract language. A couple of people said theyād be terrified to do something the old steward used to: stand up near the end of lunch break and yell that the union meeting was going to be on Tuesday.
āBy then it was sort of self-evident: thereās no perfect steward,ā Fahey said. āEverybodyās going to have parts of the job they could do more easily than other parts.ā
He asked the group, āIs there anybody here for whom it wouldnāt be a difficulty to yell that at the end of lunch?ā Most hands went up. āSo, if someone else was otherwise the best steward, is there anybody here who would help do that part of the job?ā The same hands went up again.
Members reached a consensus on the most important qualities of a steward, and agreed it would take a team effort to support whoever had the job. The next steward stayed on for years.
The staffer doesnāt have to be the idea person. In this instance Fahey guided the process, but didnāt supply his own opinions on who should be steward or which qualities were important.
Especially ābeing a white guy in a union full of mostly Mexican women, more often than not I didnāt have the best answer to the problem facing the group,ā he said. āItās easy for a group to recognize a good idea. My role was to ask the question that led to generating the most ideas, so the group could pick the best one.ā
DONāT PRE-JUDGE
Ellen David Friedman, who organized for many years with the Vermont National Education Association, agrees: be careful not to pre-judge the solution.
Whatever the problem youāre setting out to confront, she saidāmember apathy, division inside the union, a bad boss, a contract campaignāitās members who need to define it and plan what to do.
āItās not authentically democratic,ā she said, āif members are simply going out with a goal, like āwe have to get so many signatures on a petition,ā or āget so many people to turn out at a rally.āā
Instead, begin by finding out whoās already aware of a workplace problem, and get them talking to each other.
Your job in the conversation is āto turn what looks like just a dead end or an endless cycle of wheel-spinning or pessimismāāweāve tried that, it hasnāt worked, no one caresāāinto a frame-able, settable goal,ā David Friedman said. āWith some dose of, if not optimism, at least commitment to try something.ā
Encourage members to figure out who else is likely affected by the problem and how to bring them into the conversation, she said. You can help them prepare and practice what to say to their co-workers.
MESSY, SLOW, UNEXPECTED
Maybe the group agrees to do a survey. When you come back together, she said, ānow instead of five people concerned, weāve talked to 50, and wow, 88 percent of them said their problem was x.ā Maybe they write up the results, go back out to check in with people again, hold a meeting.
Again you might role-play or talk through how to frame the issue. The organizerās task is āto prepare people for having their own conversations with each other,ā David Friedman said. āThose are where the democratic process is going on.ā
But āitās not as if the organizer or staff person is invisible. They have a job to do: matching power to appropriate goals,ā she said. āMembers who are not experienced organizers might have an idea of what they want, but it bears no relationship to what can be achieved based on existing power.ā
So your role is to point out, āIf we really want to do that, we need to build up our power.
āThe question is always, how detached can the organizer be from controlling the outcome? Things may go in a different direction than you expected. They may take a lot longer. They may be a lot messier. But the result is authentic and powerful.ā
TALK ABOUT WHY
For Chicago Teachers Union organizer Matthew Luskin, a big part of the job is to put union strategy on the table for members to discuss.
āOrganizing canāt just be about getting people to do things,ā he said. āIt has to be about getting people to believe inĀ whyĀ weāre trying to do these things.ā
The reformers who won leadership of CTU in 2010 believed it would be necessary to build towards a strike. They also knew many members werenāt yet thinking that way.
So organizersā job wasnāt just to turn out members for this or that event. It was āwinning people on the whysā of the strategy that officers were proposing. āWe were engaging people in a very honest conversation,ā Luskin said: āāhereās what the challenges are, hereās what the risks are, hereās what we think we could win.āā
Organizers also talked with members about āwhat sorts of experiences would build peopleās confidence that these were strategies that could win,ā he said.
Members werenāt just asked to wear red union T-shirts every Friday, for example. It was discussed: this will show the scared members at your school how much support the union has. Other activities aimed to prove the union could get parent support.
āI have a low tolerance for meetings where you pretend everybody can participate but really thereās only one acceptable outcome,ā Luskin said. āIām not saying we donāt have a planned strategy weāre trying to get people to agree to. Iām just saying they can say no to it.ā
Before and since the 2012 strike, dozens of members have gone through CTUās summer member-organizer program. There they receive much of the same training a new staff organizer would get: how to draw out a fellow memberās issues and move that member to action.
They learn strategy and campaign planning, too. āItās important to push back against the ultra-professionalization of organizing work,ā Luskin said, āthe idea that it requires a secret handshake and training that are not accessible to the rank and file.
āAre there skills and training that staff get, through experience and time? Sure. But the problem we have in the labor movement is not needing more brilliant strategists and tacticians. Itās ādo we have huge numbers of people willing to take real risks to fight?āā
The point of CTUās member-organizer program isnāt to boost a particular campaign. The point is how members are changed by the experience.
āWe want members to come out of this able to organize their co-workers and community around a struggle in their neighborhood,ā he said. āWe want to expand the number of fights the union can take on, and that can only happen if more members feel comfortable developing strategies themselves.ā
Alexandra BradburyĀ is co-editor of Labor Notes.[email protected]
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