When youāre working without a union, it can feel impossible to take on workplace problems. What if you lose your job?
But Somos un Pueblo Unido, a New Mexico worker center, is honing a process to help even tiny groups of workers win changes through small collective actionsāwhile staving off retaliation.
Willing co-workers form a committee, agree on a plan, and commit to share the risks. Somos helps them tailor their plan to maximize the protection theyāll get from federal law and from community publicity.
Carlos Campos had worked at a Santa Fe restaurant for seven years when he formed a committee with two co-workers. The others in their workplace of 29 were nervous about joining. Some were single mothers who couldnāt take the risk.
In the past, when theyād brought up working conditions, the boss would tell them, āthe doorās wide open and you can leave,ā says Campos. āWe knew we had to organize ourselves.ā
The groupās first public action was to hand their boss a letter, asking the restaurant to start paying for overtime, respect their lunch breaks, and stop requiring them to attend a monthly meeting without pay.
The restaurant fired all three. But that wasnāt the end of their organizingājust the beginning.
GETTING PAST FEAR
With the help of Somos, the workers did two things right away: they filed a National Labor Relations Board complaint, and they organized a loud demonstration in front of the restaurantāa story that was picked up by local media.
In four months, Campos was back at work. The NLRB had ordered the employer to reinstate him and his co-workers, and to reimburse all lost wages.
The restaurant also started providing lunch breaks, and ended the unpaid meetings and overtime.
āFear will always be there, and employers take advantage of this,ā says Campos. āBut we have rights and we deserve respect.ā
This group faced the worst retaliation a boss can dish out. But more often Somos is finding that employers, recognizing their legal position, donāt retaliate at all.
Testing the waters with action can be a swift way to boost workersā confidence and get results on the job.
MAKING RIGHTS REAL
Somos un Pueblo Unido didnāt start out with a focus on workplace organizing. The organization, which is celebrating its 20th anniversary, has an impressive track record of legislative successes.
Through community mobilizing and lobbying it won a living wage in Sante Fe, stronger wage theft protections, and a state law granting licenses to undocumented workers.
But despite winning new rights on paper, Somos members kept seeing them violated in practice.
āWe had amazing members who were incredibly skilled at creating strategies, talking to media, and doing policy work, but at the end of the day were still incredibly vulnerable in the workplace,ā says Executive Director Marcela Diaz. āThat contradiction was too much to bear for our members.ā
In 2008, when 14 women were fired at a Hilton hotelāafter demanding a meeting with their manager about harsh chemicals and the excessive number of rooms they were expected to cleanāSomos helped them file complaints with the NLRB, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
Somos had supported many workers to file individual OSHA and wage complaints in the past. āWe never saw a strong effort to get folks reinstated,ā Diaz said. āLegally people are protected against retaliation, but practically they are not protected.ā
But this was the first time the group had appealed to the NLRB. The employer ended up agreeing to pay back wages and post a notice in the workplace listing the violations.
Somos learned a lot through this first case. āWe started asking, āWhat if we engaged proactively in protecting concerted activity?āā said Diaz.
Over the last five years, the organization has supported the formation of 50 workplace committees at hotels, restaurants, car washes, landscapers, and cleaning companies.
āWe didnāt set out to create a model,ā says Diaz. āWhen you donāt have the power to bargain, you have to be creative. We throw mud at the wall to see what sticksāand this is what stuck.ā
THE SOMOS MODEL
When workers contact Somos with a problem, organizers start by helping them understand their rights.
āViolations tend to cluster,ā says Diaz. āIf an employer is willing to steal wages from an employee, usually there are other workplace violations.ā
The next step is to ask if itās happening to other people. It usually is. Somos helps workers to recruit co-workers and organize a meeting, where representatives from other worker committees come and share their experiences.
Thatās often when people start to get excited, says Diaz. The workers talk about what theyād like to change, and lay out the steps for applying this model in their own workplace.
Next they put their demands in writing. Often the letter to the company includes a warning that the workers will file an EEOC, wage, or OSHA complaint if conditions donāt change. Workers always ask the employer to meet and discuss their concerns.
Somos asks committee members to sign a contract with the organizationāand each otherāthat establishes some basic rules.
Workers agree they wonāt meet with the employer alone, and they wonāt sign anything without checking with the others. If the committee is forced to file a complaint, the contract states how members will distribute any settlement monies within the group.
All committee members must agree to speak to the media about their complaints. āIf no one knows about this, weāre not building power,ā says Diaz.
Once the letter is delivered, the employer will know workers are organizing. Somos stresses that workers must not give the employer any excuse to retaliate.
Workers roleplay how the boss may react to the letter. For example, what if the employer offers to meet with just one committee member?
After the letter delivery, in many cases workers see changes on the job right away. āThey feel like itās that letter that protects them,ā Diaz says.
FIGHTING RETALIATION
Going public about violations is another critical part of the strategy.
If an employer retaliates, workers organize an immediate public demonstration, where theyāre joined by community allies and members of other workplace committees.
Somos encourages local media, including Spanish-language newspapers, to cover these protests. In a small community like Santa Fe, word travels fast.
Enough cases have been publicized now that āemployers know not to retaliate,ā says Diaz. āThey know whatās going to happen if they do.ā
So far thereās been severe retaliation, like firings, in only 12 of the 50 cases. Many times workers donāt need to file an official NLRB complaint at all, because employers address workersā demandsā from getting safety equipment to wage increasesāand donāt retaliate.
The cases that do go forward often end with settlements or board decisions that require employers to reinstate workers or pay back wages. Not all cases are resolved quickly, though. In one case, it took five years for workers to win, because their employer kept appealing.
What about when a case involves undocumented workers?
Undocumented workers are protected under the NLRA and many other workplace laws, and have the same rights to concerted activity as other workers. Immigration status cannot be raised until the very last stage of a NLRB complaint. But the Supreme Courtās Hoffman Plastic Compounds decision does limit their access to key remediesāreinstatement and back pay.
In the vast majority of cases, Diaz says, questions of status havenāt come up. When employers have tried raising it, workers still won, through settlements.
RIPPLE EFFECT
Diaz is quick to point out there are limits to what a workplace committee can achieve. Without a recognized union, an employer doesnāt have to sit down and negotiate with workers.
But when a union drive might not succeedāfor instance, because workers can only recruit a small minority willing to participate, or the workplace is too small to interest a union, or it has high turnover, or itās full of temporary workersāthis is a tool they can still use to make changes.
Through the experience, members develop skills that also feed into Somosās ongoing policy campaigns on racial profiling, wage theft, and immigration reform.
Some committees continue to meet once the issue is resolved. Others come together again to strategize if new problems emerge. Other workers often look to committee members for advice or support.
Campos didnāt stay long at the restaurant job after being reinstated. He says the boss found other ways to make the environment difficult. But heās proud that he changed his workplace for the betterāand started a ripple effect by fighting publicly.
āPeople who are in the same situation could see that itās possible to make a change at work,ā Campos said. āThat motivates other workers to do the same.ā
āIt builds an incredible solidarity and camaraderie,ā says Diaz, āthat is invaluable to a workersā organization and workersā rights movement in a place as small as Santa Fe.ā
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