How Collective Bargaining Really Works
The union and the company come together for a series of meetings to reach an agreement on a union contract.
During these meetings, the union is allowed to ask for the things it’s promised you, but it’s also allowed to ask for things the union wants, things that you might not care about at all.
And the union can trade away things that you do care about to get what they want.
No time limit. Bargaining can take months or years. In fact, according to a Bloomberg Law Analysis of first contracts, the average time to negotiate a first contract is currently 465 days.
No improvements.
The Company must maintain the “status quo” and cannot make new changes to wages, benefits or working conditions during bargaining.
No guarantees.
By law, there’s no guarantee or requirement that a contract ever be reached.
Everything’s on the table.
Your wages, benefits, vacations and holidays may be traded away by your union negotiator.
In a typical contract, you'll also see language that says the company has the right to allocate its resources, manage its facilities and direct the workforce. It also gives management the right to hire, promote, transfer, demote, or lay off associates; to subcontract or contract out work; and to establish and modify policies, rules and regulations governing safety, performance, procedures and conduct.
Basically, the company still runs its business, union or not.
The National Labor Relations Board has ruled that:
“ ... collective bargaining is potentially hazardous for employees and that as a result of such negotiations employees might possibly wind up with less after unionization than before." -- Coach and Equipment Sales Corp., 228 NLRB 440
There are no quick fixes, and when it's all over, you could even end up with LESS than what you have right now.