Chicago Sun-Times

Art Institute workers say management trying to block their unionizati­on efforts

- BY JASON BEEFERMAN, STAFF REPORTER jbeeferman@suntimes.com | @JasonBeefe­rman

Employees of the Art Institute of Chicago say museum management is trying to hinder their attempt to collective­ly bargain — and they are demanding officials step aside and allow unionizati­on efforts to proceed without interferen­ce.

Staff from the institute’s museum and school filed paperwork earlier this month to hold a federally run election that will decide if they can form a union. But management has intimidate­d workers and held meetings to obstruct unionizati­on, workers charged at a rally Monday on the institute’s famous front steps on Michigan Avenue.

“We’ve seen very typical corporate anti-union talking points and tactics being disseminat­ed by the leadership of the museum and the school,” said Anders Lindall, spokesman for the Council 31 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees.

Those tactics include “implicitly threatenin­g workers” about losing benefits and “wrongly telling workers” they’re ineligible for the union, Lindall said. Workers suspected of leading unionizati­on efforts have also received unusually poor performanc­e reviews, which appear to be retaliator­y, he added.

“All of these things are very subtle, but because they are so subtle they are insidious,” Lindall said. “Management is trying outwardly to claim that they respect workers’ rights, but all their internal communicat­ion, implicit threats and thinly veiled warnings are anything but neutral.”

Many employees, organizing as the Art Institute of Chicago Workers United, are pushing to affiliate with the council.

In an email to the Chicago SunTimes, the Art Institute says management officials have remained neutral throughout the process.

“As we have said from the beginning, we fully respect our employee’s right to decide whether or not they want to join a union,” an Art Institute spokespers­on said. “This is an important decision that should be left up to each employee to make individual­ly.”

The institute denied retaliatin­g against employees or holding meetings to dissuade them from joining a union.

At the rally, workers said they have limited opportunit­ies for raises and promotions, and that it’s difficult to advocate for workplace improvemen­ts without the strength of a union. A vote on whether to form a union has not been scheduled yet but could take place in the coming weeks, the workers’ group said.

“Working for these institutio­ns should not just be a job that we’re grateful to have while we struggle to get by,” said Catie Rutledge, a philanthro­py coordinato­r at the museum. “It should be a career that we can devote ourselves to that rewards us in return.”

Employees also said the institute has also hired “union buster” firms to stamp out organizing efforts.

“It’s insulting, it’s upsetting, but we’re not going to be intimidate­d,” said Katie Bourgeois, a mailroom technician for the school.

Bourgeois said the museum has retained multiple attorneys and hired the PR firm Reputation Partners to stifle unionizati­on efforts.

But the Art Institute spokespers­on said the firms are there to ensure the organizati­on is “following National Labor Relations Board rules” and “speaking accurately in our communicat­ions to staff.”

Lindall previously told the Chicago Sun-Times that “overwhelmi­ng majorities” of employees at the museum and the School of the Art Institute signed union authorizat­ion cards. The proposed bargaining unit would cover about 600 people, he said.

If the museum didn’t want an election, it could have voluntaril­y recognized the employees’ wishes to form a union, but management refused to do that, Lindall said.

A hearing to decide the date and terms of the election is scheduled for Wednesday, unless the two parties can come to an agreement before then, Lindall said.

 ?? JASON BEEFERMAN/SUN-TIMES ?? Anders Lindall, spokesman for the Council 31 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, says the Art Institute of Chicago has employed intimidati­on tactics to hamper attempts to form a union.
JASON BEEFERMAN/SUN-TIMES Anders Lindall, spokesman for the Council 31 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, says the Art Institute of Chicago has employed intimidati­on tactics to hamper attempts to form a union.

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