Being a Teamster gives you many rights and benefits on the job. It also gives you the chance to join working men and women to win changes in your workplace, your community and our country.
As a member of the Teamsters Union, you are part of a big family. There are some 1.4 million Teamsters and their family members and 400,000 retirees in the United States and Canada. Your union is a democratic organization — where the members have the right to elect their leaders and decide the union’s policies.
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Do you know the difference?
… If your workplace is non-union
… if you join a union and have a contract
In private industry, union workers earn 22% more than nonunion workers.
In public sector employment, union workers earn 21% more than nonunion workers.
Union women earn 26% more than nonunion women.
African Americans who belong to a union earn 25% more.
Hispanics who belong to a union earn 49% more.
(Source: U.S. Department of Labor Employment and Earnings, January 2005)
Unless workers have a union contract, they are at the mercy of company policies. Most employment handbooks clearly state that policies are “guidelines only and … not a contract of employment” or that the terms of the handbook are subject to change without notice.
Even under a company’s “open-door” policy, there is nothing to really make anyone believe that the policy is meaningful. To the contrary, there is often a powerful conflict of interest in these “open door” policies because workers are complaining about management’s decisions to a board or body that has been handpicked by management.
It’s not surprising then that workers without a union are often subject to arbitrariness and unfairness on the job. Workers without a contract are considered “employees at will.” That means they can be fired at any time and without reason, the only exceptions are termination for discrimination, whistle-blowing or union organizing.
In fact, when looking at laws affecting workers, it’s good to think of this: laws like the minimum wage, worker’s comp, overtime, OSHA and ERISA (governing pensions and profit sharing) provide the bare minimum that applies to everyone. For non-union workers, however, the bare minimum becomes a ceiling – no one promises rights any higher. For union workers, on the other hand, the bare minimum is just the floor – they always bargain for rights and benefits above the bare minimum set by the law.
No surprises then that union wages are better, union shops are safer and union jobs are more secure!
If you are interested in organizing your workplace, know of someone, or an employer that may be interested in organizing, please contact your Local Union at 253-627-0103 or Toll Free at 1-800-683-8934
Here are just a few of the things working people like us, joining together in unions, have won:
The 40 hour week
The Eight hour day
Overtime Pay
Paid vacations and holidays
Health plans
Higher wages for union members
Pensions
Protection from unfair firings
Safety and health protections on the job
Fairness in promotions and job assignments
Sick Leave
Vacation Benefits
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