Nursing
Home Workers Win May 6, 2004 More than 100 workers at Lemont Rehabilitation Center in Illinois will have a voice on the job with Local 15, Downers Grove, following a long campaign that ended with a decisive vote in late April. The 56-21 vote gives the nursing assistants, dietary, housekeeping and clerical workers union representation for the first time. Organizer Charlotte White said exorbitantly high health insurance premiums, unfair treatment and arbitrary leave policies were among the reasons the workers reached out to the IBEW. An unsuccessful election in June 2003 was overturned by the NLRB, which found the management guilty of firing, spying on, intimidating and threatening members of the internal organizing committee with physical harm, White said. "You can just imagine what these people were up against," said White, praising the 16 active members of the internal organizing committee. "This was one of the most vicious anti-union campaigns Ive seen." Union supporters also had to fight the widespread perception that the owner of the facility, Eric Rothner, was a good-hearted, philanthropic member of the Chicago Jewish community. He was named one of Chicagos top 100 Jews of the 20th century by Chicago Jewish News. On the job, the workers suffered from poor working conditions, with supervisors falsifying records to compromise pro-union workers. Commonplace practice included playing favorites in the allocation of overtime and personal time. And family health insurance cost $600 a month, White said. Despite the problems during the campaign, White said she is hopeful they will be successful in getting a first contract negotiated. She has enlisted the help of an interfaith group that has agreed to talk to Rothner. Rothner owns or is a major investor in more than 65 nursing homes in Illinois and Wisconsin, and workers at the other facilities have been watching the campaign unfold at Lemont with interest, White said. "People from other nursing homes are calling me now and wanting a union," she said. Local 15 Business Manager Bob Joyce said it makes sense to seek to organize nursing home workers, particularly since there is renewed emphasis on growing membership numbers. "We will organize anybody anywhere anytime that wants to be in a union," Joyce said. |
"Show Us The Jobs" Tour Heads to Washington, D.C.www.showusthejobs.com |