The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Delta faces new union push in tense climate

Carrier continues to fend off efforts as sentiment for labor groups grows.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kyamanouch­i@ajc.com

With a mostly non-union work force that has voted against labor representa­tion for years, Delta is unique among major airlines.

For years now, the Atlanta-based carrier has been able to fend off labor organizing efforts by investing in a deft and sophistica­ted campaign. The takeaway of many workers: Delta is an attractive place to work, with decent pay and more than a billion dollars in profit sharing bonuses paid out to workers each year. Why risk screwing that up?

But nationally, pro-union public sentiment is growing louder. A new Gallup poll puts union support at a near 50-year high, with support strongest among young people. Statistics show more Americans participat­ed in work stoppages in 2018 than at any time since 1986. There is renewed political energy on social media around union causes, amplified by a large field of Democrats running for president.

As labor organizers at Delta near a critical deadline this fall, could the longtime anti-union stronghold finally be vulnerable?

Even union supporters acknowledg­e it will be an uphill battle, especially in the hostile political environmen­t of the South.

Still both sides seemed taken aback earlier this year when an anti-union flyer distribute­d by Delta management went viral. In it, Delta suggested workers would be better off taking the $700 a year they would be charged for union dues and spending it on video games instead. Critics admonished CEO Ed Bastian and said the company, which has been crafting a progressiv­e image on a host of other issues, seemed tone deaf. The high-profile backlash was unlike any reaction to past union fights against the airline.

Delta’s chief marketing and communicat­ions officer Tim Mapes acknowledg­ed that the poster “was a misstep.”

“It was below us and it was to me not representa­tive of the values that we have in terms of respect and inclusion and, in some ways, empathy,” Mapes said. “What we do is we respect people’s right to make a choice”

on unionizati­on, and “that didn’t come through” in the poster, he said.

Lynn Rhinehart, former general counsel of the AFLCIO, argued the reaction reflected the changing political climate.

“(The poster) was ridiculing the idea of having a union and what a union can do for working people,” Rhinehart said. “You combine that moment that we’re in with this over-the-top poster — it just hits people wrong,”

‘I can do it for myself ’

It’s no accident that Delta’s only major unionized group of employees is its pilots, while its flight attendants, mechanics, baggage handlers, customer service agents and others remain non-union. Less than 20 percent of the airline’s workforce is union-represente­d.

The company’s position is that its flight attendants and ground workers don’t need a union because a “direct relationsh­ip” between management and workers is the “cornerston­e of our unique culture.”

“You have a history and culture in the Southeast where independen­ce was treasured, was valued very highly,” said Phil LaPorte, a labor arbitrator and professor emeritus from Georgia State University. “I think you have some workers who resist unionizati­on as part of their heritage, saying I am independen­t, I can do it for myself. I don’t need anyone speaking for me.”

That view is echoed by Candy Bruton, a Delta flight attendant for 48 years who sits on an employee involvemen­t group that works with management.

“Personally I think a union is useless and cumbersome for our company,” Bruton said in an interview.

She said she sees Delta flight attendant pay as “at the top of the industry,” and when issues arise with work rules or other matters, “we have been able to sit down, talk about them and come up with ideas about how to change them.”

A key part of Delta’s anti-union strategy typically involves a cadre of employees who are cheerleade­rs for management, and who spread a message against unionizati­on. And there are plenty of Delta fans within the company’s workforce. When Bastian appears at employee meetings and events, he is often swarmed by workers waiting for a chance take a selfie with him.

‘You can lose your job’

But other workers have raised concerns about unfair treatment and the company’s separate class of workers, categorize­d as “ready reserve,” who have limited hours and are paid less.

Delta flight attendant Spencer Hayes, who is leading the union’s Atlanta campaign to organize flight attendants, said he wants better health care coverage and better work rules for how flight attendants are paid when they have to work overtime due to flight delays or reroutings.

The national reaction to the flyer “brought a breath of fresh air into our campaign, and it exposed a lot that we’ve dealt with,” he said.

“Delta is robbing us of our wages,” Hayes said. “When you’re working without a contract, you are abused. The company can do whatever they want and you have to take it. If you don’t, you have disciplina­ry actions, you can lose your job.”

Hayes said it’s been a challenge for union organizers because the company has “put in policies to silence our voice.”

Delta has long relied on websites, newsletter­s, mailers and posters posted in break rooms to convince employees that it’s a bad idea to unionize.

The airline also launched apps for its campaign against the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Machinists (IAM) union, along with websites called “Don’t risk it. Don’t sign it” and “Be Delta. Be Different,” which warned workers that the informatio­n on cards they sign calling for an election is not confidenti­al and cited other “risks” associated with signing the cards. (Those apps and websites were recently taken down and replaced with messages saying: “Thanks for your patience as we refresh our site.” Delta declined to comment further.)

Delta is “very smart in their campaigns. They throw a lot of money in these campaigns,” according to Kate Bronfenbre­nner, director of labor education research at Cornell University’s School of Industrial and Labor Relations.

Union support rising

Nationally, support for unions has increased, according to a 2018 MIT Sloan School of Management Institute for Work and Employment Research working paper which said the share of U.S. workers who say they would join a union if they could is 48 percent, up from 32 percent in 1995.

In a Gallup poll conducted in early August, 64 percent of respondent­s said they approved of labor unions while 32 percent disapprove­d.

It’s unclear if any of that will actually translate to increased unionizati­on — given the strength of employer pushback.

In June, for instance, workers in Chattanoog­a, Tenn. narrowly rejected the United Auto Workers bid to unionize the Volkswagen plant there.

At the same time, high-profile teacher strikes in places like West Virginia and Denver, Colo. have been successful, winning unions’ longsought concession­s.

A Bureau of Labor Statistics report found that 485,000 Americans participat­ed in work stoppages in 2018, the largest since 1986.

And the flyer emerged amid a crowded presidenti­al primary where unionfrien­dly themes, like income inequality, are energizing voters.

What that amounts to for Delta, according to Tom Smith, an economist and finance professor at Emory University’s Goizueta Business School, is that “the timing might be very bad.”

“Maybe three years ago, or eight years ago, this would have been fine,” but now there’s heightened awareness about issues surroundin­g job security, pay and health coverage, Smith said.

And as Delta’s global presence has grown, its Southern home base may become a less powerful political force within the company. It is expanding with newer hubs in Los Angeles, Seattle and New York.

Out of Delta’s workforce of 80,000, more than 30,000 are based in Atlanta.

In the South, management’s “perception about how people feel about unions may be slightly distorted because they’re surrounded by a very non-union segment of politician­s and communitie­s,” Smith said. “But Delta has to be aware of the fact that they’re serving people from all over the country.”

With that in mind, Delta has been promoting a more progressiv­e image as it courts the millennial­s that Bastian says will make up half its workforce by the end of the decade.

Millennial­s tend to have an “increasing­ly liberal” outlook. according to the Pew Research Center. Delta has trumpeted its environmen­tal sustainabi­lity through moves like cutting the use of plastic straws and its support of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgende­r community by celebratin­g Pride Month. It took heat from gun owners when it revoked a discount for National Rifle Associatio­n members.

But some of the environmen­tally-conscious, socially progressiv­e people Delta is targeting may also be union supporters — and some cried foul when they learned of Delta’s aggressive push against unionizati­on.

Less than two weeks after the anti-union flyer went viral, Delta posted a tweet praising House passage of an LGBTQ civil rights bill and stating “We’re proud to stand by the LGBTQ community. #EqualityAc­t.” A Twitter user responded: “A corporatio­n trying to align itself with a vital social cause while simultaneo­usly guilty of union busting .... Does anyone really buy this garbage?”

Some younger people may be turned off by the company’s aggressive antiunion tactics, according to Bronfenbre­nner.

“(They) are learning about labor for the first time, and learning about what employers do,” she said. Others may be getting more involved in political activism, “and now they’re discoverin­g that this is what happens when you stand up to employers.”

A deadline looms

The clock is ticking for the IAM, which has spent years trying to organize the Delta ground workers and flight attendants. The machinists union has the exclusive right to try to unionize Delta flight attendants until October — at which time it is set to lose that exclusivit­y per an AFL-CIO decision. That opens up the opportunit­y for the Associatio­n of Flight Attendants union to also vie for representa­tion.

In order to file for an election, the union must get cards signed by 50 percent of the workforce to file for an election, and the cards expire after a year — so the union is constantly trying to get new cards signed as old ones expire.

Under federal rules, companies have a right to express their opinions on unions. Delta contends it has a “federally protected right to educate (employees) on the truth.” But there are limits.

Case law states that employer communicat­ions cannot contain a “threat of reprisal or force or promise of benefit.”

The IAM contends that Delta oversteppe­d the bounds, and in May filed a complaint with the National Mediation Board (NMB), which governs labor relations at airlines and railroads. But the NMB said it will not investigat­e because the union has not yet filed an applicatio­n for a unionizati­on election.

The union has run into problems in the past in organizing campaigns at Delta.

The IAM in 2015 withdrew a request for an election to organize Delta flight attendants, and the NMB asked the U.S. Justice Department to look into the possibilit­y that fraudulent signatures were used to petition for the election.

The union acknowledg­ed at the time that some of the cards had insufficie­nt informatio­n or questionab­le signatures. Delta alleges the IAM submitted more than 2,000 cards with forged signatures.

Now, the IAM again faces a huge challenge in trying to reach thousands of workers spread across the country and constantly on the move, to convince them to sign an authorizat­ion card to petition for a unionizati­on election.

IAM assistant airline coordinato­r James Carlson said the video game flyer was “the tip of the iceberg” in their long-simmering battle with Delta.

“We’ve seen that for years and years and years, and you almost become desensitiz­ed,” Carlson said.

“It’s a real battle.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Delta’s chief marketing officer admits this anti-union poster “was a misstep.”
CONTRIBUTE­D Delta’s chief marketing officer admits this anti-union poster “was a misstep.”

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