One day last fall, employees of Iron Mountain, a Boston-based records
management company, were subjected to what union organizers like to
call a captive audience meeting.
Employers hold these anti-union meetings once they’ve gotten wind of
an organizing campaign in their midst. Whether the meeting is led by
in-house managers or outside consultants, the gist is usually the same: Joining a union is totally your call. But it’s a really bad idea, and we’re disappointed it’s come to this.
The spiel at an Iron Mountain facility near Atlanta, where the
Teamsters were trying to organize truck drivers, wasn’t unlike the
anti-union speeches commonly delivered at other companies. What made
this meeting different was that a pro-union worker in attendance was surreptitiously recording it.
“We have the right to educate you,” the Iron Mountain manager lectured his employees. “And we’re going to exercise that right.”
Ben Speight, a Teamsters organizer in Atlanta, later posted the audio to SoundCloud,
and it was picked up by Gawker, Salon, Al Jazeera and The Huffington
Post, among other outlets. Since then, Speight has obtained a litany of
similar recordings from meetings purportedly held at more recognizable
companies, including Coca-Cola, Staples and FedEx.
Those recordings are posted below, along with commentary from the
workers who helped make them possible. The workers asked to remain
anonymous for fear of jeopardizing their jobs.
Look for more of these in the future. The recordings have been made
possible by the ubiquity of smartphones, Speight told HuffPost — a trend
that management is sure to take note of.
“Most people will work their whole lives and never sit through one of these meetings,” Speight said.
Indeed, even most union workers will never sit through a
captive audience meeting, Speight said, since they generally become
members of unions by taking jobs at already-unionized workplaces. These
meetings tend to happen in the midst of ongoing and often heated
organizing campaigns that employers would very much like to scuttle.
The Teamsters local had previously used such recordings primarily for
what Speight calls “inoculation” — to give closeted pro-union workers a
taste of the pressure they can expect once their organizing becomes
known. But now Speight is using the recordings in part to embarrass the
companies for what he calls their “relentless pressure and
misinformation and half-truths.”
“The atmosphere is coercive by nature,” Speight said.
As noted in their statements below, the companies in question see
things differently. What unions view as captive audience meetings are
often framed by employers as nothing more than helpful “information”
sessions. And even though unions aren’t given the same platform in the
workplace, it’s perfectly legal under U.S labor law for companies to
require workers to attend such meetings, so long as their language isn’t
overtly coercive, threatening or retaliatory.
Companies wouldn’t hold the meetings if they weren’t effective. A 2009 study
authored by Cornell labor expert Kate Bronfenbrenner and published by
the Economic Policy Institute found that workers were significantly more
likely to vote against the union in cases where employers held captive
audience meetings.
taken from here
To read transcripts of 'captive audience meetings' held by Coca Cola, Staples and FedEx go here
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