Unions Yield on
Two-Tier Wage Scales to Preserve Jobs
Published: November 19, 2010 - New YorkTimes
MILWAUKEE — Organized labor appears to be losing an important battle in the
Great Recession.
Even at manufacturing companies that are profitable, union workers are
reluctantly agreeing to tiered contracts that create two levels of pay.
In years past, two-tiered systems were used to drive down costs in hard
times, but mainly at companies already in trouble. And those arrangements, at
the insistence of the unions, were designed, in most cases, to expire in a few
years.
Now, the managers of some marquee companies are aiming to make this
concession permanent. If they are successful, their contracts could become
blueprints for other companies in other cities, extending a wage system that
would be a startling retreat for labor.
Though union officials said they could not readily supply data on the
practice, managers have been trying to achieve this for 30 years, with limited
results. The recent auto crisis brought a two-tier system to General
Motors and Chrysler.
Delphi, the big parts maker, also has one now. Caterpillar, back in 2006, signed
such a contract with the United
Automobile Workers.
The arrangement was a fairly common means of shrinking labor costs in the
recession of the early 1980s. At the end of the contracts, however, wages
generally snapped back up to a single tier. At G.M., Chrysler, Delphi and
Caterpillar, the wages will not be snapping back.
Nor will that happen for workers at three big manufacturers here in
southeastern Wisconsin — where 15 percent of the work force is in manufacturing,
a bigger proportion than any other state. These employers — Harley-Davidson,
Mercury Marine and Kohler — have all but succeeded in the last year or so in
erecting two-tier systems that could last well into a recovery.
gThis is absolutely a surrender for labor,h said Mike Masik Sr., the union
leader at Harley-Davidson, the motorcycle maker, not even trying to paper over
the defeat. His union recently accepted a new contract that freezes wages for
existing workers for most of its seven years, lowers pay for new hires, dilutes
benefits and brings temporary workers to the assembly line at even lower pay and
no benefits whenever there is a rise in demand for Harleyfs roaring bikes.
When the proposal was put to a vote recently, Harleyfs blue-collar employees,
most of whom belong to the powerful United
Steelworkers, approved it by a decisive 53 percent to 47 percent.
Just up the highway, Mercury Marine, which makes outboard motors and marine
engines, has a similar agreement with its factory workers. And the Kohler
Company, another manufacturing giant in southeastern Wisconsin, famed for its
gleaming bathroom fixtures, is negotiating a contract using Harleyfs pact as a
template and, so far, getting much of its way.
gThe simple economic fact is that we overproduced and now we have to burn off
the excess,h Matthew S. Levatich, president and chief operating officer of
Harley-Davidson, said in an interview, speaking in effect for all three
manufacturers. gYou could say,h he added, gthat the new contract is a
recognition of this truth on the part of our workers.h
Nowhere else in the country has quite so tough a contract emerged at
companies that are profitable, the A.F.L.-C.I.O.
says.
gManagement clearly has the upper hand in negotiations because of the
employment situation,h Milwaukeefs mayor, Tom Barrett, said.
Mr. Barrett ran as the Democratic candidate for governor in the Nov. 2
election, losing to Scott Walker, a Republican in a state that usually votes
Democratic. In interviews, several blue-collar workers said they had voted
Democratic in 2008 and switched to Republican this time — mimicking the
blue-collar political shift throughout the Midwest — because the Obama
administration, in their view, had failed so far to help them.
The breakthrough labor agreements reflect this antipathy. They capitalize on
a particularly difficult set of circumstances for blue-collar workers. In
response to falling demand, the big manufacturers here have cut production and
laid off thousands of employees. Many people lost jobs that had paid $22 an hour
or more. Few can get work that pays as well, if they can get steady work at all,
given an unemployment rate of nearly 8 percent in the area. That makes holding a
job a higher priority than holding the line on pay and benefits, much less
pushing for improvements, Mr. Masik said.
Increasing the pressure, Harley-Davidson and Mercury Marine, a unit of the Brunswick
Corporation, publicly declared that they would move factory operations to
lower-cost American cities — Stillwater, Okla., for example, or Kansas City, Mo.
— if the unions failed to accept the concessions set forth in remarkably similar
contracts. One provision denies laid-off or furloughed workers their old pay if
they are called back; they must return as second-tier employees, earning $5 to
$15 an hour less.
Mercury Marinefs nearly 900 hourly workers voted last fall to reject such
terms, but a few days later, they voted again and accepted them. They reversed
course after the company announced that its headquarters factory, in nearby Fond
du Lac, would be closed and operations consolidated in Stillwater. The
Stillwater factory is now being closed instead.
Kohler officials have stopped just short of saying that they, too, will go
elsewhere. They declare that if their proposals are not accepted, then git would
be very difficult and challenging for us to sustain manufacturing operationsh in
Sheboygan County, including those in the town of Kohler, 50 miles north of here,
named for the family that founded and still dominates the company.
The alternative for the workers is to strike, thus challenging the companies
in their stated determination to relocate — in effect, calling their bluff. The
International Association of Machinists at Mercury Marine and the United
Steelworkers at Harley-Davidson declined to take that risk, and so has the
U.A.W. at Kohler, so far.
The workers themselves are convinced, their union leaders say, that the
companies are prepared to move factories from the Milwaukee area, where all
three came to life decades ago.
gThe company stuck to its agenda,h Mr. Masik said of the Harley negotiations,
his voice rising, gand we ended up accepting their agenda.h
Harley-Davidson actually has two very similar new contracts, one with the
Machinists, who represent workers at an assembly plant in York, Pa.; the other
with the Steelworkers at an engine-and-transmission factory in Greater
Milwaukee. The York agreement, ratified last year and now in effect, has shrunk
the core work force there by more than half, to nearly 800 full-timers, while
adding 300 gcasualh employees, who are union members without benefits.
The Milwaukee agreement, recently ratified, will shrink the full-time payroll
to 900 from 1,250 today and more than 1,600 before the recession. Up to 250
gcasuals,h as in York, will be used to handle surges in demand for Harley bikes.
While hourly pay under the current contract averages $31 an hour, that drops to
$25 for the second tier, which becomes the only tier once all the veterans have
left or retired. Casuals, in contrast, get $18.50 an hour.
The new Milwaukee contract kicks in when the current agreement expires on
March 31, 2012. The union balked at negotiating so far in advance, Mr. Masik
said, but conceded after the company insisted it would otherwise use the
intervening months to prepare to move operations elsewhere, perhaps Kansas City.
To guarantee support, Harley also incorporated into the contract $12,000 bonuses
for its steelworkers, including those laid off.
Harleyfs president said the recession left no choice but to reorganize.
Motorcycle sales are down 40 percent from their peak in 2006, Mr. Levatich said.
Cutting the core staff allows Harley to slow the line during the winter months
of lean demand and add gcasualsh when demand picks up in the spring and summer.
gWhat we are doing is not mean-spirited,h Mr. Levatich insisted. gWe have to
retool if we want to survive. We should have started doing this, in small steps,
20 years ago.h