Union members tend to enjoy better wages and benefits than their peers who are not protected by labor agreements.
So why does union membership continue to decline? Union members accounted for 14 percent of all workers in 2006, down from 27.5 percent 13 years prior.
Few local businesses employ union workers outside of public service. Union leaders have at times refused to make concessions that would allow employers to remain competitive. This obstinateness has prompted some employers to close doors.
A year ago, union jobs at Philips Products in Selinsgrove went south. Other union jobs have gone overseas. Regardless, they went places where workers were willing to punch a clock without the perceived protection of labor membership.
So has the age of labor passed?
Perhaps not.
A union protest in Selinsgrove may be illustrative. Representatives of the Mid-Atlantic Laborers Association protested outside Selinsgrove Elementary School this week. Among their complaints, a contractor hired by the Selinsgrove Area School District has been cited by the Occupational and Safety Health Administration for having unsafe workplace conditions.
The federal government has assumed the role of ensuring that work sites are safe. The presence of unions would be superfluous if vigilance of the federal agency were sufficient.
OSHA’s record is far from spotless, and there is growing evidence that workplace safety might be an issue that union leaders can hang their hard hats on.
Six laborers have died in industrial accidents in the Valley in the past year — not including commercial truck drivers killed in traffic crashes.
Unsafe working conditions are unacceptable, and unions can fill the void if the federal government is unwilling to invest needed funds so adequate inspections take place before tragedy strikes.
At one time, labor organizations were the staunchest defenders of workers’ rights. Reclaiming that role could help ensure the survival of both the unions and more of the workers.
Opinion
A role for unions
- Opinion
-
-
Good-paying jobs
I am writing in response to comments made by several lawmakers and certain media regarding people receiving unemployment compensation not searching for employment but only wanting extensions.
-
Economy is tough but still pay rises
It was my first time attending a Lewisburg School Board meeting last night. I went to hear public comment on the Boards recent decision to extend the Superintendents contract, which included a 20-plus percent pay raise.
-
Sunbury has a lot to offer
I would like to respond to the letter writer that inferred that Sunbury was a pretty package with nothing inside.
-
Mutual aid is necessary
Mutual aid agreements in local law enforcement strike at the heart of basic small-town decency. When a neighbor is in need, those equipped to help ought to drop everything and spring to aid.
-
Lifting me higher
I am not a winner of a Pulitzer Prize, nor am I an author of best selling novels, I'm just a human being attempting to live life here on earth with purpose and I can find no greater way to do that than through my faith and my belief in God.
-
Understaffing
I read with interest your article regarding police mutual aid in Northumberland County.
-
Carney, Marino ought to get focused on issues
U.S. Rep. Chris Carney and Tom Marino ought to focus on the issues in the upcoming campaign for Congress.
-
Blatantly unfair
The Pennsylvania Republican Party is supporting an effort to strike third-party candidates from the general election ballot in November.
-
Fiscal responsibility
This editorial letter is only the second such letter I have been moved to pen in my lifetime.
-
Schools need a little help from home
Milton High School failed to meet its adequate yearly progress under Pennsylvania's version of the federal No Child Left Behind because one student did not show up for the standardized test.
- More Opinion Headlines
-
Good-paying jobs







