If you’d like a sense of what a boss’s campaign to try to destroy a
union looks like in the 21st century, take a look at a recent NLRB
decision against the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC).
On Friday, November 15, a judge with the National Labor Relations
Board (NLRB) ruled that the UPMC has engaged in a series of
discriminatory practices against workers who have been trying to
organize a union since 2012.
In the wide-ranging 123-page decision, one can see how a
sophisticated anti-union campaign is run. The decision outlines in
detail how the multi-billion dollar Pittsburgh hospital chain repeatedly
violated the law in order to sow fear of organizing. Employees were
surveilled and photographed, interrogated and threatened with discipline
and arrest. Four were fired. The decision also found that UPMC helped
create and support a “company union”- an employer-dominated labor
organization - in violation of federal law.
With more than 20 hospitals, 400 outpatient sites, more than 62,000
employees, and a health insurance division that had $10 billion in
operating revenue in 2013, UPMC is the largest private sector employer in Pennsylvania.
In 2012, the nonclinical support staff at two of UPMC’s hospitals
began an organizing campaign through the Service Employees International
Union (SEIU), which would include approximately 3,500 workers. The
employer began violating workers’ rights almost immediately, launching
an anti-union campaign that often straddled the line between legal and
illegal.
In addition to the captive audience meetings that have become a
standard (and legal) anti-union practice - in which the employer
explains in no uncertain terms that it is against the employees
organizing - UPMC sought to create an environment of fear and
intimidation. The hospital chain posted a document on its internal
website called “UPMC Cares,” which contained sections such as “Why
Unions Aren’t Necessary.”
When the organizing drive began, UPMC placed screensavers on
employees’ computers throughout the hospital which scrolled through
anti-union messages such as “You can say NO to the SEIU. It’s your
right”; as one walked around the hospital, idle computers displayed in
all caps, “NO” and “SEIU.”
Though these practices are technically legal, employees cannot miss
the overwhelming message that their employer does not agree with their
right to unionize. The judge found that while the behavior was legal, it
was proof of the employer’s open opposition to the union, which
provided context for the other illegal activity that the company engaged
in like firings as a result of union activity.
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