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Originally posted by xpert11
reply to post by Cool Hand Luke
Employment laws vary depending on your location . Employment law is being amended in New Zealand to give a new employers the ability to hire on a ninety day trial period and not face a wrongful dismissal suit . As I understand it sexual harassment and anti discrimination laws still rightful apply thou . Larger company's which hire a minority of the working population have the likes of clueless human resource manages to sort out matters relating to who gets hired .
Nobody should be forced to join a union or be denied the chance to do so if it arises .
Originally posted by Hugues de Payens
Well yes, actually unions were instrumental in bringing about better working conditions, among other things.
I don't know about Canada, but in the US the unions had their place at one time, and still do to a point.
Personally I'm not pro or anti-union. From my perspective, however, it seems they have gotten too greedy over the years, and the companies have given in to them too much and too often. Sure, the US automakers are responsible for their current state, but the UAW should accept some culpability too.......wages and benefits $30/hour more for an average assembly line worker than at a Japanese plant in the south. They forced the companies into this wage+benefit price by strikes and threats of them over the years. They are just as guilty as the management.
In this case the union has out lived its usefulness because they have priced US cars out of the market. Shame on them as well as anyone.
Originally posted by hinky
First and foremost, the early labor movement established the 40 hour work week and the concept of overtime. As have been stated, many safety standards today's worker takes as normal was driven by the labor movement.
I'll bid union jobs for building all sorts of stuff against non-union companies all the time. I'm busy and I know my overhead. Trade workers from apprentices to journeymen are better skilled at what they do than non-union workers who did not go through an approved training course. IMHO, this just makes them a more productive worker, for what I do.
I can send a guy back to his shop if he isn't working or just a dumb ass. I'll let his shop owner do his thing towards bad workers. Usually, you'll see a union member with a bad attitude or bad habits starved out of the skilled labor market. Cutting a guys hours can be a real motivation for improvement, especially when you look at how much skilled workers are paid.
I have no problem telling the guys, you are professionals, do your job and everyone makes money. And to me, that's what it's about.
Originally posted by hawkeye1717
Unions are no different than the businesses themselves. Both are necessary and both can go overboard and hurt the other.
To single out the unions is a subtle form of class warfare in my opinion. Things are going bad in America so it must be the Unions??
Rich bankers on Wall Street did this to America with the help of too much deregulation by both parties the last 25 years.
The system is so corrupt that a Wall Street CEO can run his company into bankruptcy and still get a multi-million dollar BONUS.
If most of us screw up our jobs half as bad as those idiots, we'd get fired(as it should be).
Unions have been weakening for decades now and were still willing to give concessions so if you're going to attack a single group who's played a part in this catastrophe, you've got the wrong target in your sights if you're picking on Unions.