Miami Herald (Sunday)

America appears headed toward a summer of strikes

- BY JOSH EIDELSON

More than 650,000 American workers are threatenin­g to go on strike this summer – or have already done so – in an avalanche of union activity not seen in the U.S. in decades.

The combined actors and writers strikes in Hollywood are already a once-inof a-generation event. Unions for United Parcel Service Inc. and Detroit’s Big

Three automakers are poised to join them in coming weeks if contract negotiatio­ns fall through. One Bank of America Corp. analyst put the odds of a United Auto Workers strike at more than 90%. And while logistics experts and financial analysts expected the Teamsters to reach a deal with UPS, their confidence has dwindled as the July 31 deadline approaches.

“This will be the biggest moment of striking, really, since the 1970s,” said labor historian Nelson Lichtenste­in, who directs the University of California, Santa Barbara’s Center for the Study of Work, Labor and Democracy.

Even before the 100,000-plus actors joined in last week, both the number of strikes and workers on strike were up in the first half of this year, according to Bloomberg Law labor data. Similar trends are playing out in other countries: A cost-of-living crisis has unions across Europe flexing their muscles, with the the UK losing the most working days to strikes in decades.

The pandemic years have, in some ways, reenergize­d American labor. Emboldened by tight labor markets and agitated after shoulderin­g new risks, workers notched a series of surprising victories at some the most prominent U.S. companies. Now, wary of soaring corporate profits as major technologi­cal changes threaten to upend their industries, unions are ready to test their clout.

“There’s an ambition here that I think is new,” said Lichtenste­in. “They’re on the offense.”

The companies, for their part, are facing their own economic realities. In Hollywood, studio profits are down because of a shift to streaming and Wall Street has punished companies for their lagging financials. UPS is confrontin­g difficult headwinds with package demand declining as the country emerges from the pandemic. The carmakers say they already offer generous pay and benefits and need to keep wages competitiv­e with lower-paying rivals like Tesla Inc. as they invest billions into the shift to electric vehicles.

“It’s very clear that unions are quite alive,” said Michael Lotito, who cochairs the Workplace Policy Institute at the management law firm Littler. “The jury’s out on how well they are.”

The showdowns could have sweeping consequenc­es, not just for the hundreds of thousands of workers striking, but for the much-diminished American union landscape. The share of the U.S. private sector that’s unionized has fallen from one-quarter half a century ago to just 6% today. Few groups have as much leverage to upend company plans, capture public attention and force concession­s as the organized workers who deliver Americans’ packages, make their cars and entertain them.

“In terms of workers in America who still have the ability to change their conditions, these are three of the top 10,” said Larry Cohen, a former Communicat­ions Workers of America union president, who now chairs the advocacy group Our Revolution.

If the unions come out on top, it could boost organizing efforts at companies like Amazon.com Inc. and Starbucks Corp. that, despite recent wins, still remain largely union free. Teamsters President Sean O’Brien has said he plans on using the union’s success to win over Amazon workers.

“Hopefully, Amazon employees look at this and go: ‘You know what? We deserve this too,’ ’’ said Minnesota UPS warehouse worker Rikki Schreiner, who has been at the company for two decades.

Even the launch of strikes could galvanize non-union workers, but the move doesn’t come without risks. Drawn-out stoppages can drain members’ finances — and the unions’ — making it harder to fund other efforts. Strikes that lose momentum can leave members divided and disillusio­ned. If fights end with disappoint­ing deals, they could become cautionary tales. Managers often hold up unproducti­ve and costly strikes as a reason to not unionize.

“Workers are watching each other and trying to learn from each other,” said Sharon Block, who served in President Barack Obama’s Labor Department and now directs Harvard Law School’s Center for Labor and a Just Economy.

The details of the current clashes themselves vary, but one thing they have in common is money. Workers across industries are pushing for a bigger share of corporate profits, particular­ly as inflation has bitten into their paychecks. Actors and writers want higher base pay and more residuals from streaming shows. The autoworker­s not only want raises but to ensure the people powering the shift to electric cars get the same pay and benefits as other plant workers. UPS Teamsters members haven’t forgotten how “essential” their work was during pandemic lockdowns, and think they should be compensate­d accordingl­y.

“If my work is so important, then why shouldn’t I be properly rewarded for it?” said Portland, Oregon UPS employee Nick Marrapode.

Workers also say past contract deals gave some staff worse terms than peers. One issue in the Hollywood stoppage is that talk show and gameshow writers for streamers – including giants like Netflix Inc. – lack the contractua­l protection­s provided to their counterpar­ts working for cable stations, even tiny ones. UAW members are pushing to end “two-tier” arrangemen­ts that pay newer employees significan­tly worse than longtimers, and UPS staff are pushing to close the gap between full- and part-time worker compensati­on.

“UPS needs to share the billions of dollars that they made with their workers,” said Scott Gove, a 35-year UPS employee in New Hampshire. “I think that that’s a bitter pill for them.”

An undercurre­nt of major technologi­cal and societal changes is driving some worker anxieties, too. Writers’ rallies have been studded with signs about the dangers of artificial intelligen­ce. “Only uncreative people would think that you can replace writers and actors with artificial intelligen­ce and that it would be interestin­g or any good,” said Chaley Rose, a SAG-AFTRA member best known for playing Zoey Dalton in the television series Nashville.

The UAW is pushing to secure a path for electricve­hicle and battery workers to unionize as the industry shifts to greener options. The Teamsters got a commitment to add air conditioni­ng in the iconic brown trucks, a necessity in a warming planet.

The negotiatio­ns are testing new union leadership. Both the Teamsters and UAW presidents won their seats in the past two years, in part, by promising to reverse past concession­s. One galvanizin­g issue in the Teamsters showdown was members’ frustratio­n with the prior leadership’s decision to push through a UPS contract deal in 2018 that a majority of the membership had voted to reject.

UAW President Shawn Fain has said he is going to “war” against the Detroit automakers and last week he eschewed the traditiona­l handshake-across-thebargain­ing-table with CEOs that has marked the opening of auto contract talks for decades, saying he’ll do so “when they come to the table with a deal.”

 ?? VALERIE MACON TNS ?? A member of the SAG AFTRA bargaining committee steps out the bus dedicated to guild members traveling to picket lines to join members of the Writers Guild of America and the Screen Actors Guild outside Paramount Studios in Los Angeles on July 14, 2023. Tens of thousands of Hollywood actors went on strike, effectivel­y bringing the giant movie and television business to a halt as they joined writers in the first industry-wide walkout for 63 years.
VALERIE MACON TNS A member of the SAG AFTRA bargaining committee steps out the bus dedicated to guild members traveling to picket lines to join members of the Writers Guild of America and the Screen Actors Guild outside Paramount Studios in Los Angeles on July 14, 2023. Tens of thousands of Hollywood actors went on strike, effectivel­y bringing the giant movie and television business to a halt as they joined writers in the first industry-wide walkout for 63 years.
 ?? GENARO MOLINA Los Angeles Times ?? Esther Dorado, 70, center, who has worked 38 years in housekeepi­ng at the Viceroy Hotel, joins fellow Unite Here Local 11 workers on the picket line in front of the hotel in Santa Monica, California, on July 12. ‘I clean 13 rooms a day.’ she said. Some older hotel workers scrape by on their income and can’t afford to quit. Some work two jobs just to make ends meet. Unite Here Local 11 hotel employees have been striking for higher pay and better benefits.
GENARO MOLINA Los Angeles Times Esther Dorado, 70, center, who has worked 38 years in housekeepi­ng at the Viceroy Hotel, joins fellow Unite Here Local 11 workers on the picket line in front of the hotel in Santa Monica, California, on July 12. ‘I clean 13 rooms a day.’ she said. Some older hotel workers scrape by on their income and can’t afford to quit. Some work two jobs just to make ends meet. Unite Here Local 11 hotel employees have been striking for higher pay and better benefits.
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