2,300 workers at Precision Castparts vote June 7 on unionization

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By DON McINTOSH, Associate Editor

On June 6 and 7, a group of 2,306 employees at Precision Castparts Corporation (PCC) will vote on whether to join the International Association of Machinists (IAM). It will be Oregon’s largest private-sector unionization vote in decades — in fact, the largest since 1996, the last time PCC workers voted on unionization.

PCC is a big supplier to the aerospace and power generation industries. It makes complex metal components for General Electric, Boeing, Airbus, Rolls Royce and United Technologies, and is the world’s leading manufacturer of airfoil investment castings used in jet aircraft engines. While the company has operations worldwide, the union vote will take place in 12 buildings at five locations in Portland, Milwaukie, and Clackamas, Oregon.

IAM represents workers at Boeing, a key PCC customer, as well as at PCC subsidiaries like Wyman-Gordon Company in Texas.

“The power to change your life is in your hands,” union leaders tell about 50 PCC workers at a May 10 union organizing meeting. For a month, the union hall has been humming with activity, its parking lot full, as the union revs up its election campaign. This meeting, at 3:30 p.m., is the third such session held at the Machinists hall in Gladstone that day — one for each shift.

[pullquote]The first thing I asked the union-buster,” said one worker, “was, ‘Do you have a contract?’ Yeah? Well, there you go. We want one too.”

[/pullquote]In the course of an hour-long discussion at the meeting, hope for something better is unmistakable, even if workers don’t agree on every detail. Workers have questions. How much would dues be?

That would depend, union leaders reply. Boeing machinists can pay $80 a month or more in union dues. But then, they can also earn $42.36 an hour, and a portion of those dues goes to a strike fund that they’ve used to protect some of the highest pay and benefits in the aerospace industry.

For workers unaccustomed to unions, the meeting is an introduction to strange customs, like calling each other “brother” and “sister,” and talk of “solidarity.”

How can we be sure that smaller locations will get as a good a deal in negotiations, asks a worker from PCC’s Deer Creek annex in Milwaukie. “Solidarity,” a co-worker answers. “We’re all going to have to be our brothers’ keepers.”

“And sisters,” pipes up someone else. “We’re going to be a family, all together.”

For years, Machinists District Lodge W-24 has kept in touch with a committee of union supporters at the company. But interest in unionization spiked last year, says Machinists Grand Lodge Representative Mike Rose, as PCC workers increasingly contacted the IAM web site asking to join the union. Rose attributes the increased interest to management mistreatment, rising health plan co-pays and deductibles, skimpy bonuses, and a company decision to replace the traditional defined benefit pension with a 401(k) for new hires. But the biggest issue, lately, has been mandatory overtime. PCC phased out new hiring a year ago, Rose said, and is responding to booming demand with frequent short-notice requirements to work extra shifts on weekends.

“People can’t plan when they spend time with family, and when they do, they have to cancel the plans.”

At the meeting, workers speak of another reason to want a union: Self-respect.

“They told us they could go to 7/11 or Walmart to replace us,” says a PCC worker at the organizing meeting.

“If they could do that,” Rose replies, “they already would have done it. You have a skill.”

PCC, or PCP as it’s listed on the New York Stock Exchange, is doing well, and can afford to give raises. In its most recent annual report to shareholders, it reported earnings of $1.2 billion on $7.2 billion in sales, and paid its CEO, Mark Donegan, $11.5 million in total compensation. Company sales rose 32 percent in two years.

The annual report also describes “satisfactory” relations with unions: Collective bargaining agreements cover 22 percent of PCC’s global workforce of 21,480, and 12 of those agreements, covering 11 percent of the workforce, are up for renegotiation this fiscal year.

But at its Portland-area facilities, PCC is fighting unionization. When the Machinists union made overtures to workers last October, the company responded with three days of mandatory meetings, Rose said. The company appears to be running a by-the-book anti-union campaign, advised by The Burke Group, an anti-union consultancy based in Malibu, California.

The campaign relies on fear, Rose said — threats and intimidation. Human resource managers and company engineers are out on the shop floor talking to workers one-on-one. Supervisors with clipboards go around and ask workers which way they’re voting. And in mandatory-attendance meetings, managers sow doubts about the union — how high dues will be, how uncertain the prospects for getting a better deal. Though Oregon law bars employers from disciplining workers for not attending such meetings, it’s not clear workers want to test the law by defying an order to attend. But judging by workers’ accounts at the organizing meeting, there is some push-back at those anti-union meetings.

“The first thing I asked the union-buster,” said one worker, “was, ‘Do you have a contract?’ Yeah? Well, there you go. We want one too.”

In the organizing meeting, workers want answers to things they’ve heard in the workplace anti-union meetings. Is it true that they could lose what they have now, in a negotiation?

No, Rose says. Legally, the presumption is that the status quo is the starting point in negotiations. By law, once a union is voted in, an employer can’t change wages or working conditions without bargaining over it. Why would employees vote to accept a reduction? For that matter, why would the company propose it? After all, before the union came along, the company had total freedom to set wages. The wages they make now are set by the company. And as Rose put it, “If they could pay you less, they would.”

“I personally feel that at the worst, we would have what we’ve got now,” said another worker, “but we’d know at least that we’d have that until the next contract.” Without a contract, all wages and working conditions are subject to change, over which workers have no say.

Rose hopes PCC workers will join the union family this time. Previous attempts by workers to unionize failed in the 1970s and again in 1995 and 1996. In July 1995, the United Steelworkers lost 689 to 763. In the wake of the loss, the National Labor Relations Board investigated and concluded that the company had violated federal labor law in the course of its anti-union campaign. So egregious were the violations that the agency ordered the election results overturned and a new election scheduled. But PCC appealed the order to the agency’s five-member board in Washington, D.C. Rather than wait for the outcome of the appeal, the Steelworkers requested a second election a year later. This time, the union lost 573 to 1,127.

The Burke Group advised PCC last time around, too. Rose says Precision has violated labor law, though the union has not yet made that case to the National Labor Relations Board. One such violation — if the union can substantiate it — is a management threat to shut down and move to South Carolina.

“In ’96, it was the same threat,” Rose tells the Labor Press. “At that time, they had bought a potato field in eastern Washington and were going to move the plant there.”

If the 2,306 PCC workers join the Machinists, it would be a major expansion for District Lodge W24, which had 6,525 members as of its most recent annual report. Aiding the pro-union worker committee is the entire District Lodge staff, plus staff from the Oregon AFL-CIO, and dozens of member volunteers from Boeing. After filing April 12 for an election, the union received a legally-mandated employee list May 1, and began a campaign of home visits May 6. Rose said the campaign hopes to have a conversation with every worker before the June 6-7 election.

10 COMMENTS

  1. good for you don’t be like Jenkintown the 510 that voted no are crying the most the smartest people in the plant are the 190 how voted yes it’s time go for it

  2. If you always do what you’ve always done, you’ll always get what you’ve always got. If you want a better life, you’ve all got to band together and fight for it. SOLIDARITY is KEY. Infighting is what the company wants. Or better yet, no union at all. If they truly believed they could pick up and move the plant at the drop of a hat, they wouldn’t threaten you with it, they’d just do it. Call their bluff, unionize, and get your fair share.

  3. I am 70 years old and thanks to the IAM&AW Union I have been retired almost 10 years, If the PCC employees are smart they will vote yes.
    You can only kiss som A** before You choke on S**T.
    Even if things are good today you could be in a new part of company tomorrow have a smaller bonus and a boss thats not so good, with out a union contract your life is like old Forrest Gump said a box of choclates you never know what you are gonna get

  4. The IAM should have a website devoted to this organizing effort.
    50 people showing up for a meeting means 2,250 did not.

    I am an IAM member and proud to be one, but I have been through a losing election campaign at a Honeywell plant and saw the company win with the same methods they are using at Castparts.

    It is time we caught up with every other organization and used the internet to reach people.

    The door to door campaign is a great idea, and will help, but I know many will be afraid to answer the door.

    Doing things the same old way tends to yield the same old results.

  5. To the workers at Oregon and Milwaukee facilities:
    This has already happen here, threats that they will move plant, you will lose everything in negotiations. They’re only a couple. That would have never happen at Jenkintown, but workers got scared. Now after they have forced overtime, shifts were changed ( 4 tens Thursday thru Sunday, 3 12’s Friday thru Sunday) . Termination of employees, because they can change anything and anytime. All of these scared people who voted No are all complaining and say “Why didn’t I vote yes”. For your own good vote YES so you don’t feel how this low morale facility feels. And then maybe sway the other fellow PCC workers here that a Union is necessary at contracts are necessary too. Otherwise they will keep doing the same thing to you if not more.

  6. To all involved in your quest to organizie I wish you the best. We had a vote in Jenkintown that failed,cause this corporation wants us all to work in fear. They broke some laws and some people here fillied charges with the Labor Board against PCC. I will tell you this if you vote no; Our Q.C.B. (bonus) before the election went to 19.2% that translated anywhere from $6000.00 to $13,000.00 per year per employee after the election QCB went down to 2% which translated to $187.50 to $2600.00 per employee per year. Health care cost for a Family per week $59.75 after the election $113.50 for an increase of over 92%,co-pay from $20.00 to $30.00 these health care figuries were what majority of the employees have. 3 day 12 hour work schedules Friday,Saturday and sunday and 4 day 10 Hour work schedules Thursday,Friday,Saturday and Sunday for some employees. Also no more Pention for newer employees. This is just only a few things that has changed at Jenkintown after the failed election. Please donot make the same mistake as Jenkintown did. This coporation has allmost 25% of the plants that are organized. Remember their is no third party, YOU are the UNION!!!! Unitied you stand divided you beg. Best of luck to you all and stand together and strong.

  7. Jenkintown; could you please tell more of your stories? It’s coming down the wire on this side and people need to know.

  8. I’ll put it to you this way,if your election fails,you are gonna get screwed just like we did at Jenkintown. You will get less and somethings you enjoy now will be taken away. I’m sure the management team is treating you real good now but if you do not vote yes to organize you will see things only get worse at YOUR work place. I see other from Jenkintown have warned you also if you fail to organize. Remember YOU are the Union and together YOU will have power to make YOUR work place better so that all can enjoy. Strength in numbers. It took a lot of Veterens to over throw Germany not one person. That’s strength in numbers. Jenkintown is wishing the best for all of you.Please don’t make the same mistake they did here. GOD BLESS.

  9. They will use same anti- union tactics to scare people out there, that they did here. They had a lawyer who use to work for unions and now works for company that tries to keep union out. They said we would lose things in negotiations( which may be true but they aren’t telling you all that you gain do they). This place has gotten much worse since not voting YES for Union, with a Union at least they wouldn’t be able to change policies week to week. I hope you guys do the right thing out there, and Vote Yes for a change.

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