144 Cong Rec H 4965, *
 
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -- HOUSE
 
Tuesday, June 23, 1998
105th Congress, 2nd Session
 
144 Cong Rec H 4965

The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Shimkus). Under the Speaker's announced  policy of January 21, 1997, the gentleman from Minnesota (Mr. Vento) is  recognized during morning hour debates for 5 minutes.  [*H4966]   
 
Mr. VENTO. Mr. Speaker, today I rise to recognize and support those  
in my district and around the Nation who are joined together in labor  
unions to promote workers' rights. 

In our free market economy and free enterprise system, freedom for  
workers means the right to choose a representative and have a voice in  
their wages and their working conditions. Unions provide and organize  
an effective means for workers to join together to solve problems and  
participate in discussions regarding their wages, better benefits,  
safer working conditions, and better opportunities. 


Workers should make their voices heard. Today they celebrate such  
right. I sincerely hope they have a fair hearing; that people in our  
Nation will, in fact, listen. 


Union organizing is supposed to be a right guaranteed by law;  
however, in many instances employers have directly interfered with  
worker organizing efforts. The atmosphere of intimidation in many  
workplaces makes joining a union difficult, if not impossible. This is,  
of course, unacceptable. It is time for employers, communities, and  
legislators to support the right of workers to organize. 


Unions perform a vital function in the lives of working families.  
Despite a booming economy, some workers cannot even remember the last  
time they got a raise. As the unionized share of the work force has  
declined, income inequity is increasingly dramatic. At a time when U.S.  
corporations are making record profits and the economy is strong and  
stable, it seems unreasonable that working people must struggle and too  
often losing in efforts to make ends meet. 


American workers, the most productive workers in the world, deserve  
to share in the bounty of our economy. The benefits and the path to  
achieve such justified improvements is through union membership within  
the labor movement, the same folks who brought us the 40-hour work week  
and, that is right, and importantly the weekend off. 


In fact, union negotiating does not just help those members that  
belong to that labor union. It helps our society in general and has  
promoted fair wages, fair taxes, and justice throughout our society.  
Unions attack all wage gaps, the discrepancy between executive pay and  
that of workers, income differences for women and for people of color,  
for the disabled, they fight discrimination and actively promote equal  
treatment and opportunity for all the workers in our society. 


Because better pay and conditions help achieve a more productive work  
force, union workers earn an average of 33 percent more than nonunion  
workers and are much more likely to have health and pension benefits,  
the tools that we need to take care of our family. 


Today, the simple justice of joining a union and the self-help and  
freedom to gain a fair wage is a big problem. In countless organizing  
campaigns, a majority of workers have clearly voiced a desire for union  
representation. However, more often than not they are obstructed by  
their employer's antiunion campaigns. Antiunion consulting industries  
are booming. It is a big business, guiding employers to manipulate the  
law and distort the intent in order to stall the organizing process,  
harass it, threaten and terminate workers who are trying to organize  
and achieve an exclusive representative, a union. 


Mr. Speaker, all this is done with minimal, if any, penalties. In  
fact, the process is so cumbersome that it generally takes years before  
violations are even rectified. I have seen this happen firsthand in my  
own State of Minnesota this past year. Employees at the Metrodome  
Sheraton Hotel began an organizing drive with huge worker support. In  
fact, 80 percent of the workers, 112 workers of the 140 workers, signed  
cards supporting a union. But they had to have an election. 


The Sheraton management in turn began a high-pressure campaign to put  
an end to the organizing and defeat the vote. They paid an antiunion  
consultant $300 an hour to assist them in their task. Management  
inundated the workplace with antiunion literature; offered pay raises  
to employees who promised to go along with the company and vote against  
the union. 


Worst of all, the company repeatedly brought small groups of  
employees into rooms, where the heat was turned up to almost unbearable  
levels. Workers were lectured for hours about the evils of unions. They  
got paid for sitting there. They could not speak up or talk back. They  
could not ask questions. This is in America and this is legal in labor  
union elections today. 


Mr. Speaker, this tactic of course worked. This election was lost by  
these workers, these hotel restaurant and housemen that worked at the  
Sheraton Metrodome in Minnesota. Amazingly, this type of antiunion  
campaign is neither illegal nor uncommon. Eight out of ten private  
sector employers hire professional consultants when faced with  
organizing efforts in their business. They do not want workers  
organized. They do not want workers in a union. They do not want  
workers to have such rights accorded in law. 


Of course, this tactic works. The result is the frustration and  
intimidation of workers. In the case of the Minneapolis Sheraton,  
despite overwhelming support at the beginning of the process, the  
employees voted not to elect an exclusive representative this past May.  
But this was an election stacked against the workers and their right to  
have a union. 


Mr. Speaker, a strong labor movement helps all Americans. Let us  
listen today as these voices are raised of working people across this  
country. 


It is our job as elected leaders to ensure that the national and  
state laws allow our constituents to enjoy the fundamental values of  
democracy--freedom of speech and freedom of assembly. That includes,  
under law and custom, the long honored right to have a voice in their  
wages and working conditions. When workers are denied that voice, they  
no longer share in the wealth that they create. The health worker can't  
afford to be treated at the clinics and hospitals in which they labor.  
Auto workers can't afford to buy and drive the cars they make. 


Congress needs to show support beyond voting positively upon labor  
issues. We can use our leverage to ensure that the rights and interests  
of America's labor force are advanced, that working families are  
accorded dignity and respect. Moreover, we have the obligation to make  
sure that the employers, policies, and laws that shape this  
relationship are just and workable. 


Workers have the right to fully participate in the political arena.  
However, today the political voice of labor and working families faces  
the prospect of being silenced. Frankly, big business has the economic  
leverage to elect candidates who put the interests of corporations  
first. Corporations outspend labor unions 17 to one in lobbying efforts  
and other types of political involvement. We have to support labor  
organizations, so that they have a fair chance to support the  
candidates who will amplify the voices, views and concerns of the  
worker and working families. 


Unfortunately, in Washington, DC, too much time and energy is focused  
on controversy, personalities, and political rhetoric. The everyday  
struggles of working families are often glossed over and shifted to the  
back burner. Or worse yet, under the guise of reform turned inside out,  
further limiting and stripping the worker of the limited rights they  
today hold. It is time to do the right thing, by respecting laborers  
and their rights, and truly listen to their concerns. On this day, the  
day for workers to make their voice heard, I speak for Minnesota  
working families, and working families across the nation, to recognize  
and support the right to organize. I encourage all of my colleagues to  
consider the successes and heartaches of those who are trying to join  
together in this crescendo to make their voices heard.