esa17
Well-Known Member
Research a company called Nucor. Once you see how its possible for a steel manufacturing company to be (very) profitable, the nations largest recycler, and run the safest plants in the world you'll never give unions a second thought. I consider them to be a necessary evil, if I want to be an airline pilot I've just got to put up with them.
I'm not sure about the current status but for most of the 1990's they were the nations only profitable steel company. Their line supervisors with only a high school education make between 75k-90k per year using the companies bonus system. Nucor pretty much kills every argument there is for the pro-union crowd.
The bottom line is in this day and age unions are bad for employees, bad for business, and bad for efficiency. Unions are allowed protections that management isn't. Two union members can discuss strategy for getting what they want but as soon as management does it then they're guilty of racketeering.
I'm not sure about the current status but for most of the 1990's they were the nations only profitable steel company. Their line supervisors with only a high school education make between 75k-90k per year using the companies bonus system. Nucor pretty much kills every argument there is for the pro-union crowd.
The bottom line is in this day and age unions are bad for employees, bad for business, and bad for efficiency. Unions are allowed protections that management isn't. Two union members can discuss strategy for getting what they want but as soon as management does it then they're guilty of racketeering.