Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nonunion automakers matching UAW contract may be bad for union

- Michael Hiltzik

Afunny thing happened in the wake of the United Auto Workers’ recent contract settlement­s with major auto companies. Toyota said it would give its workers a raise worth about 9% on its top pay rate, beginning in January.

Nissan said its 9,000 U.S. workers would get raises of about 10% and would end a two-tiered pay system.

Honda announced a pay raise of 11% for workers at its plants in Ohio, Indiana and Georgia, along with an accelerate­d schedule of bringing workers up to the top rate to three years from six.

Subaru said it would raise pay at its plant in Lafayette, Ind., though it hasn’t said by how much.

What’s funny about these announceme­nts is that none of these companies is covered by a UAW contract. But they could read the handwritin­g on the wall from the UAW’S contract settlement­s. If they didn’t, UAW President Shawn Fain made sure they wouldn’t miss the message.

As some of the leading nonunion shops in the industry, they responded almost instantane­ously. Before the ink had dried on the union’s agreements with GM, Ford and Stellantis (the owner of Chrysler and Jeep), he announced that his next targets would be the foreign automakers that had set up their shops in anti-labor states to keep unions from their doors.

“One of our biggest goals coming out of this historic contract victory is to organize like we’ve never organized before,” Fain said. “When we return to the bargaining table in 2028, it won’t just be with a Big Three, but with a Big Five or Big Six.” (He also signaled that he would be pushing to unionize Tesla.)

There are a few ways to look at this. One is that the UAW has absorbed the lesson that the key to organizing new locations and recruiting new members is achieving victory in contract negotiatio­ns. That’s what brings union membership out of the abstract and makes its benefits concrete.

Few things spell success like the contract terms reached by the UAW after its six-week strikes in September and October — including historic wage gains, the rollback of many concession­s the union gave the companies to ensure their survival during the last recession, and assurances that the industry’s transition to electric vehicle manufactur­e won’t proceed without union participat­ion. As far as that goes, the new contracts are a great advertisem­ent for the virtues of union membership.

The improved wage scales and other workplace benefits announced by the Japanese automakers are, of course, good for those companies’ employees, who become collateral beneficiar­ies of the UAW’S efforts.

It’s also true, however, that the nonunion companies’ responses could successful­ly undermine the UAW’S organizing efforts.

“When you have a half-unionized industry where the unions have real ability to make a difference, the non-union companies have to follow along or they are just inviting the unions in,” labor historian Erik Loomis told me. “It becomes very easy to siphon off union support in a factory when the wages are the same plus the workers don’t have to pay dues.”

Indeed, the technique of fighting unionizati­on by offering workers better pay and benefits is as old as, well, labor-management relations themselves.

None of that means that the raises announced by Toyota et al are, or should be, the equivalent of everything a union can offer workers at an organized plant or company.

There may be other benefits that aren’t offered by the nonunion employers, including job security guarantees — especially in antiunion right-to-work states where many foreign automakers and some domestic manufactur­ers have set up shop, such as North and South Carolina, Indiana, Alabama, Tennessee, Kentucky, Kansas and Georgia.

Nor should it escape workers’ notice that the nonunion companies had to be goaded by the UAW’S success into offering raises to their own employees.

“Why not the raise before the UAW’S?” asks veteran union lawyer Thomas Geoghegan. “It should tell auto workers at Toyota, Honda and Subaru, who had nowhere else to go anyway, that they were being paid less than they were worth.”

The companies’ motivation may be to keep the UAW from storming their gates, Geoghegan says, “but it may backfire by making the workers wonder why a raise now, and not before. We don’t have truly competitiv­e labor markets, paying people what they are worth — if we did, then that raise would have occurred without the UAW.”

In other words, the UAW, along with other heavy industry unions such as the Teamsters, have a ways to go to reinforce their recent victories by carrying their fight to new plants in parts of the country — such as the Deep South — where they have long struggled to make headway.

They have a lot to show for their efforts thus far, and for at least the next year, an administra­tion in Washington that has supported Americans’ collective bargaining rights like no other administra­tion in 90 years. At the moment, they appear to have the advantage over recalcitra­nt management­s. Let’s see what they do with it.

Michael Hiltzik is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times.

 ?? PAUL SANCYA / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? United Auto Workers members hold picket signs Sept. 29 near a General Motors Assembly Plant in Delta Township, Mich.
PAUL SANCYA / ASSOCIATED PRESS United Auto Workers members hold picket signs Sept. 29 near a General Motors Assembly Plant in Delta Township, Mich.

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