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  • You make more money!
  • You help build a stronger community
  • Same set of rules applies to everyone
  • You have respect and partnership at work
  • You get better training and advancement opportunities
  • Safety hazards are reduced
  • You have access to the best jobs in town
  • You have retirement security
  • It's the way to more stability and security

Better Wages

Union Workers Earn More
Through collective bargaining, unions have helped raise the standard of living for millions of American workers. There is a distinct economic advantage in belonging to a union and working under a union contract – and particularly under an IUOE-negotiated collective bargaining agreement.

Union workers earn 26 percent more than nonunion workers, according to the U.S. Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics. Their median weekly earnings for full-time wage and salary work were $740 in 2002, compared with $587 for their nonunion counterparts.

The union wage benefit is even greater for minorities and women. Union women earn 31 percent more than nonunion women, African American union members earn 29 percent more than their nonunion counterparts and for Latino workers, the union advantage totals 53 percent.

According to the latest available U. S. Department of Labor statistics, union workers earned significantly more wages than non-union workers did. For instance, the average union worker earned $750 per week, compared to only $617 for non-union workers. That’s a difference of $133 per week. For Latinos, other minorities and women, the wage differences for union members versus non-union workers are even greater. For the year 2000, the earnings difference between union and non-union workers was 28%, and average of $154.00 extra per week.

MEDIAN WEEKLY EARNINGS OF FULL-TIME
WAGE AND SALARY WORKERS, 2002

Union workers also can claim similar advantages in virtually every occupational category and/or job classification.


Union and Earnings by Occupation
In nearly every occupational category, union members earn more than nonunion workers. By comparing the wages of workers within occupational groups, the union difference is most clear.

UNION AND NONUNION EARNINGS BY OCCUPATION, 2002
Full-Time Wage and Salary Workers’ Median Weekly Earnings

Occupation Union Nonunion % Difference
Administrative-clerical $613 $490 25
Exec., administrative, mgr $892 $889 0.3
Farm, forestry, fish $548 $357 54
Handlers, laborers
$555 $381 46
Machine operators $616 $490 26
Precision, craft, repair $821 $590 39
Professional $889 $879 1
Sales $572 $601 -5
Service, protective $820 $519 58
Service, other $448 $341 31
Technicians $775 $682 14
Transportation, moving $728 $525 39
Total $740 $587 26

 

Workers' Incomes Are Lower in States Where Workers Don't Have Union Rights
In states that have laws restricting workers' rights to form strong unions, the average pay for all workers is lower. So-called "right-to-work" laws that limit workers' rights to collectively bargain contracts (including wages and benefits) are a bad deal for all workers. In 2001, average pay in so-called "right-to-work" states was 15 percent lower than in states where workers have the freedom to form strong unions.

Note: Right-to-work states are Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia and Wyoming.
Sources: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Average Annual Pay by State and Industry, 2001, news release, Sept. 24, 2002.
Prepared by the AFL-CIO.

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The Age Factor
The economic advantages union members enjoy over their non-union counterparts hold true over the entire age spectrum, from the youngest to the most senior workers.
Union Membership: The Age Factor--1999

Age Median Weekly Earnings F/T Union Members Median Weekly Earnings F/T Non-Union Difference in Median Weekly Earnings
16 to 24 437 335 102
25 to 34 604 506 98
35 to 44 691 594 97
45 to 54 750 617 133
55 to 64 696 582 114
65 plus 616 381 235

Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2000
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Pension & Health Care
Better Pension and Healthcare
Union workers are more likely than their nonunion counterparts to receive health care and pension benefits, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. In 1999, 73 percent of union workers in private industry participated in medical care benefits, compared with only 51 percent of nonunion workers. Union workers also are more likely to have retirement and short-term disability benefits.

As the chart below illustrates, 79 percent of union workers are covered by pension plans versus 44 percent of nonunion workers. Seventy percent of union workers have defined-benefit retirement coverage, compared with 16 percent of nonunion workers. (Defined-benefit plans are federally insured and provide a guaranteed monthly pension amount. They are better for workers than defined-contribution plans, in which the benefit amount depends on how well the underlying investments perform.)

UNION WORKERS ARE MORE LIKELY TO HAVE
HEALTH AND PENSION BENEFITS, 1999
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Better Sickness & Accident Benefits

Sickness and accident benefits provide needed income to working families in the event of non-work related sickness and injury. Among union workers, 71% have sickness and accident insurance; in non-union work sites, only 36% receive economic security during times of illness and injury.

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A Right to Health & Safety on the Job

Far too many workers are killed, injured, disabled and exposed to risks and diseases on the job. Working under a union contract, workers have built-in mechanisms to monitor and even correct the work environment, and to ensure that health and safety concerns are addressed.


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A Voice at Work the Boss Can't Ignore

Belonging to a union gives workers contractual and other legal rights they do not enjoy without union representation. Being union gives workers a voice on the job, and their collective voices form the union that makes their voices more forceful, more influential with management than any individual voice.

Belonging to a union allows you to establish a written agreement that specifies the terms of your employment. Once you have formed a union, your employer is required by law to bargain with you over your wages, hours and working conditions.


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A Right to Vote on Your Contract

As members of the IUOE, workers are guaranteed by the union's constitution the right to vote on contracts negotiated by the union, unless the workers vote to give the approval authority to a committee.


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Advancing Your Career Through Training and Education

Union members are afforded the opportunities to improve and upgrade their skills – and, consequently, their wages and responsibilities -- through union-sponsored education and training programs. The IUOE is acknowledged as the leader in providing the most comprehensive, highest quality craftsmen training programs in the construction and maintenance and operations industries.


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Job Security

In a time of high unemployment and uncertain economic conditions, the right to retain your job is critical to you and your family. It is important to know that you can't be fired without just cause or laid off to make room for the owner's favorite nephew.

Most union contracts establish strict rules about job security and the conditions under which layoffs or reductions in the work force take place. This makes sure that everyone is treated fairly, and that no one is discriminated against for voicing an opinion on the job, or for insisting on adherence to the terms of the contract.

Without the protection of a union contract, you are at the mercy of the employer. You have the ability to change that; you have the power (and the LEGAL right) if you act collectively.