UBC Today
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| Provided by The United Brotherhood of Carpenters and
Joiners of America www.carpenters.org |
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The UBC Meets the Challenge
Initially, many of unions were taken by surprise by the non-union
sector's developing economic clout. In the absence of a comprehensive
counter-strategy, a number of locals and district councils adopted wage
concessions in order to stay competitive with the non-union sector.
Non-union employers effectively undercut that tactic by simply driving
their own pay rates down further. At the same time, the ABC grew in
political sophistication and became one of the linchpins of the "New
Right" that propelled Ronald Reagan to the presidency in 1980.
"Our organization was set up to deal with the industry as it was in
post-World War II North America," said UBC General President Doug
McCarron when he was elected in 1995. "But the industry has changed
drastically since then, and we must change with it."
Since his election, McCarron has reorganized the Brotherhood's
priorities and its structure. He set organizing as the union's number
one priority and has redirected its resources to get that job done. The
union's localized and often politically-motivated structure has also
been restructured and streamlined to reflect today's regional and
national construction industry, as well as to ensure that union leaders
are more accountable to members for the job they do.
The ultimate goal of these structural changes is to organize and
reorganize every carpenter and contractor in North America and set the
standard for wages, benefits, and working conditions on every jobsite.
It is an ambitious goal, and one that will take a long-term effort to
complete. But it can be done through organizing.
The UBC faces a complex and challenging future. New tools and
materials and new methods of construction are entering the industry at
an accelerated rate. In many ways, the carpenter of the 1990s is no
different from the carpenter of the 1880s. But all indications are that
the dawn of the 21st century will bring much more rapid technological
innovation. Increasingly, the on-site carpenter is more an "installer"
than a "fabricator" with the development of prefabricated materials,
modular components, and panellized building sections. The multi-faceted
general contractor is giving way to the construction manager whose
subcontractors expect their carpenters to restrict their skills to more
highly specialized tasks, such as concrete forms, framing, drywall,
ceilings, finish work, etc. Union apprenticeship and
journeyman-enhancement training programs have addressed these new
developments while at the same time maintained a high level of
all-around craft competence that union journeymen will always need.
Ultimately, maintaining and extending a strong union for carpenters
will depend on combining an awareness of the dynamics of the future with
the finest traditions of the past. The days of "country club" unionism
that provided job security to members by keeping membership numbers down
and the unorganized out are over. The UBC's growth in the future rests
on its ability to reach out and open its doors to all working
carpenters.
Just as Peter J. McGuire built the Carpenters Union in the 19th
century by organizing all carpenters, today's leaders must rebuild this
union in the 21st century in much the same way. They must embody that
same spirit of inclusion in order to organize the unorganized and
mobilize current union members to talk to their non-union brothers.
In 1882, W.F. Eberhardt of Philadelphia's UBC Local 8 (which remains
strong to this day), wrote a letter to the Carpenter. He outlined the
efforts of his local's members to contact every single carpenter in the
city on a ward-by-ward basis. He described how those pioneering
volunteer carpenter-organizers held regular meetings across the city to
bring the unorganized carpenters into the new union. Today, more than
116 years later, the Brotherhood is using a "new" model much like the
outlined by Eberhardt. Every district, council, and local in the union
currently boasts an active volunteer organizing committee that uses
today's modern techniques and technologies, as well as old-fashioned
one-on-one contact, to spread the still-relevant message of unionism to
every non-union carpenter in their area.
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