You should have asked me while we were out in Vegas. I would have been more than happy to talk about it frankly with you. I won't, however, air dirty laundry on a public forum. Sorry, but that's simply not appropriate.
I was in Vegas to meet, greet, drink beer and chase my wife around the hotel room naked, not talk union politics.
Again, I'll say this. Discussing faults of a member-driven organization like, say, a union, is fine. I don't see where that's an inappropriate airing of dirty laundry. However, YOU do a fine job of airing OTHER organization's dirty laundry on a public forum.
Wait, I don't think
ATN_Pilot said:
Notice that he ignores your question. He won't even acknowledge the unbelievable action that the IBT took in stiffing the AFL-CIO for millions of dollars in dues. I guess he thinks that the truth will disappear if he simply ignores it.
is airing dirty laundry, is it? I mean because if it is, that might make you a hypocrite.
Anyone who feels that it's inappropriate shows me that they: are in denial about any faults discussed, refuse to believe an organization has faults, is trying to hide the faults, thinks the average member is too dense to see the faults, or has no solutions to fix the faults.
I don't know, nor do I care which of the above apply to you. What I do know is you don't have the confidence to address any perceived faults, only to equate them to a tabloid-style smear campaign with the weight of who Jennifer Anniston is dating this week.
Moving on....
To address the faults of the IBT
Here's the short version, because the 9 years at RAH would just take too much typing.
Just about 12 months ago, we switched union affiliations from ALPA to IBT.
The campaign was full of, ahem, bunk.
Let's begin.
The group that just happened to pop up (yeah right) made some promises. To keep this succinct, I'll just write what they said, then follow that up with where we're at today.
1) We will have our own local within 12 months.
During the election, a memo was put out by the International giving a 18-36 month window after joining the IBT prior to being given the opportunity to decide to vote for our own local.
2) We will have a contract by August '09.
OK, no sane person would believe that within 12 months a group could a) switch unions b) organize and administrate their own local while c) negotiating a contract. It's not impossible, but after talking to the "grassroots effort leader", there was barely enough organization to even make the union switch. No strategic planning was done.
3) We will have the same level of medical and legal representation as ALPA.
I'm not sure on that, as I haven't heard first hand of either process being used.
So, that's that.
Further, from a member of the Local Executive Board, the local is having a hard time paying the mortgage on the Local building.
A grievance won by our FEs was tossed by the union because it "had no merit". Uh, it was already won.
I'd go on, but you can obviously see that the IBT has its faults in this snapshot.
I insist on being fair, because I'm not a fan of either one.