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FACTS ABOUT SIGNING AN AUTHORIZATION CARD


What  is a Union authorization? - An authorization is a card or petition  signed by an employee  indicating his or her desire to form a Union at  their place of  employment. The authorization states that the employee  “authorizes a  local Union of the IAM to represent them in collective  bargaining”. This  means that the employee has indicated his or her  desire to be  represented by the Union.

Why  is an authorization necessary? The National Labor Relations Act, the  federal labor law that defines employees rights to form a Union,  requires that a majority of employees sign authorizations to prove they  want a Union before the IAM can ask  for recognition from the Employer.

How does an authorization work? 

1. Employees sign IAM authorization petitions or cards.

2. When a  majority of authorizations have been secured, the IAM will ask the employer to recognize your Union.

3.  If the employer should refuse such recognition, the card may be then  taken to the National  Labor  Relations Board (NLRB) where the IAM will  file a petition for a secret-ballot election.

4. The NLRB then sets a date when you vote by secret ballot  to be represented by the IAM.

5.  If the workers vote YES, the NLRB then issues a certification – which   legally compels the  employer to bargain with the IAM  and soon  thereafter, contract negotiations begin with the  employer    for the  changes the employees through their Union want to make.

What  else will the authorization be used for?  Nothing else.The only reason  for the card is to determine sufficient interest from the employees in  seeking collective bargaining with the employer. 

The  IAM’s policy is that employees should vote in an election sanctioned by  a neutral party, whether they want IAM representation or not. Once  employees determine that they want the opportunity to vote in  an  election, the cards are forwarded to the third party (NLRB) to support  the employee’s petition.

Will  my employer see my authorization?  As long as the IAM has possession of  the cards, the employer will not see the authorizations.Only the Union  and the NLRB will see the cards. If the employer agrees to a card-check,  a neutral third party will compare the authorizations to a listing of  employees provided by the employer.

If  I don’t believe in joining the IAM, should I sign an authorization? The  IAM doesn’t want anyone to sign an authorization unless they  truly  want to form a Union. The decision to sign an authorization is the  employee’s choice and the employee’s choice alone. No one should or will  be forced to sign an authorization.

Can  signing an authorization force a Union on the employer? No.Under  Federal law, once the employees decide to seek recognition of their  Union, the Union must “demand” (legally request) recognition by the  employer before the NLRB will intervene on the employees behalf. (Why  should the government expend taxpayer’s dollars to conduct an  election  if the employer will voluntarily recognize the employees  wishes to form  a Union?) The employer can, and usually does, refuse such voluntary  recognition. The NLRB petition clearly asks if the Union has  asked the  employer to voluntarily recognize the Union. The NLRB rules and  procedures are designed to uphold employee free choice in forming a   Union. If a majority of employees are opposed to forming a Union, no   Union will be formed, according to the NLRB.

The  company says I cannot get my card back once I give it to the Union. Is  this true? No. The IAM’s policy is that any employee who wants to get  their authorization revoked prior to an NLRB petition being filed or a   card-check procedure can get their authorization back without question.  Once the authorizations are submitted to the NLRB with the Petition, or  a neutral third party in card-check procedures, the NLRB or neutral  party  has possession of the cards. The IAM then has no control over the  cards  once they are filed with NLRB.

The  company says I am giving up my rights by signing a card? No, your  actually improving them with the IAM. Right now, you currently  have  little to no rights whatsoever the employer sets your terms and  working  conditions. If you want rights, just like the hundreds of  thousands of  service contract workers enjoy now working under and IAM  contract,  then you should sign the card - without it, you are powerless  to  negotiate at improving your wages, benefits and working conditions.