Techniques Used by Companies to Deny You Your Choice for Union Representation

Companies use Supervisors as Frontline Soldiers: Supervisors, who themselves have no legally protected right to be represented by a union, are used by the Company to deliver anti-union letters, speeches, and informal chats prepared by anti-union consultants. Supervisors are essentially used to do the dirty work for management.

One-on-One Meetings: During organizing drives, 78 percent of workers are forced to attend closed-door or isolated meetings with supervisors. These aren't friendly impromptu chats, but well-planned meetings to decipher employees' feelings about the union and persuade them against the union.

Captive Audience Meetings: So-called ‘captive audience' meetings are held for employees during work hours to disseminate propaganda against union representation and to attempt to discredit the union. Employees are almost always required to attend, but those employees considered to be union organizers may be intentionally uninvited to the meeting. Often, the meetings are rigged so that workers who are already against the union are assigned to ask questions to sow misinformation.

Delay: Anti-union consultants often attempt to delay union representation elections by legal maneuvers so they have more time to implement other tactics needed to increase tension, dissension and the employer's chance of winning the election.

Divide & Conquer: Anti-union consultants create opportunities and craft persuasive messages to make employees feel that there is a tense division among staff concerning the union election. They may go so far as to pit one group of employees against each other.

Letters, letters, letters: The specialty of the anti-union consultant is hammering out materials-cartoons, leaflets or management correspondence-to build a case against the union. 92 percent of companies involved in organizing drives mail anti-union materials to employees' homes.

Love offerings: In order to convince employees that they don't need a union, anti-union consultants may advise clients to provide indirect bribes, like unexpected increases in wages or benefits or ‘feel good' measures like free food and lottery tickets.