Work teams and unions: keeping employee involvement
legal.
by Thomas, Steven L.^Best, Judy
The nature of the American workplace has undergone a radical
transformation, much of it occurring over the last decade. In the face
of challenges from increasing global competition, organizations have
been continuously pressured to control costs, increase productivity, and
improve product and service quality. Efforts for improved organizational
effectiveness have taken forms that range from corporate downsizing and
massive restructuring, to the introduction of Total Quality Management
and reengineering programs.
One common thread running through attempts at organizational
revival has been the move to restructure conventional work systems by
replacing traditional hierarchy with team based work structures. In many
organizations, autonomous work teams allow employees to collectively
make decisions traditionally reserved for supervisors and managers.
Although many work teams are responsible for relatively simple decisions
such as scheduling, maintenance, and problem solving issues, some have
assumed what have traditionally been managerial functions such as
employee selection, performance appraisal, and employee discipline.
Management scholars and practitioners alike attribute many advances
in productivity and quality to the successful introduction of work team
arrangements. One major problem for organizations, however, has been
that some work team arrangements may run counter to American labor law
that requires organizations to maintain an arm's length
relationship with groups that negotiate over wages, hours, and working
conditions. Since many work teams collectively make decisions regarding
some of these aspects of the employment relationship, and since the
groups have been created by management, the National Labor Relations
Board (NLRB) and the courts have determined that some work teams are
illegal in companies dominated labor organizations. This article
explores this conflict between modern work structures and the law.
Company Dominated Unions: A Bit of Labor History
The onset of the Great Depression with its economic hardship
gradually produced a social climate more accepting of the legitimacy of
labor unions and collective bargaining. Changes in public attitudes were
soon reflected in this country's political environment, and,
ultimately, in new legislation aimed at addressing legal tactics that
had frustrated union formation for a number of years.
In 1932, Congress passed the Norris-LaGuardia Act which removed
several le gal barriers that companies had previously used to prevent
union organizing. As union organizing efforts increased, employers began
to look for new tools to discourage union activity. A particularly
effective tool was to initiate employee involvement committees friendly
to the interests of management. These "company dominated
unions" were created because employers recognized workers'
desires to exercise collective control over their employment situation.
Company unions, not affiliated with the union movement and dependent on
the financial support of the company, allowed this expression in a
non-threatening manner and served to block the formation of legitimate
unions. True collective bargaining was nonexistent because employers
dominated the selection of representatives and controlled the activities
of the association.
Managerial tactics continued to prevent union formation during the
latter years of the depression. Congress recognized that workers acting
individually were powerless to deal with management tactics, and further
felt that to stimulate an economic recovery it was necessary to
encourage the practice of collective bargaining and give employees the
right to form and join unions. As a result the Wagner Act was passed in
1935 to give workers broad rights to form and join unions, to require
bargaining on the part of employers, and to prevent companies from
interfering in the formation of a union.
Aware of company-dominated unions, Congress specifically prohibited
employer participation in labor unions and organizations, favoring
collective bargaining by bona fide independent unions as the exclusive
representative of employees, and preserving the notion that employment
should be contractually based. The theory was that cooperation between
industry and labor would be possible only when either side is free to
contract with the other or to withdraw, and that mutual respect and
industrial peace are most likely to result when employers deal with
independent labor organizations.
The language of the Wagner Act made it clear that Congress intended
to abolish the company-dominated union. Section 8(a)(2) of the Act
provides that employers "may not dominate or interfere with the
formation or administration of any labor organization, or provide
financial or any other support to labor organizations." In Section
2(5), Congress defined a labor organization as "any organization of
any kind, or any agency or employee representation committee or plan, in
which employees participate and which exists for the purpose, in whole
or in part, of dealing with employers concerning grievances, labor
disputes, wages, rates of pay, hours of employment, or conditions of
work." The protections in these sections were not meant to totally
prevent employee representation outside of labor unions, but they were
intended to prevent any form of employee representation dominated by the
company. The overall objective of the Act was, there fore, cooperation
between employers and employees, dealing with one another on an equal
footing.
In 1947, in response to what was generally perceived to be union
abuses, Congress amended the Wagner Act with the Taft-Hartley Act,
outlawing a number of union practices and providing somewhat more
discretion for employers in terms of their ability to actively resist
unionization. Early drafts of Taft-Hartley included a proposal that
would have allowed employers to form or maintain employee committees to
discuss working conditions where no union existed, but the final version
of the Act did not include this proposal (Martin, 1996). Laws regulating
private sector labor relations in the United States, have a common
assumption: an employment relationship characterized by hostility
between labor and management. The U.S. labor laws were not written with
cooperative workplace arrangements in mind at all, even if some room was
left for some forms of these arrangements (Suntrup and Barnum, 1994).
After the Wagner Act became firmly established, relatively few
charges involving company dominated unions were prosecuted. Strict
enforcement of the Wagner Act and active oversight by legitimate unions
served to discourage most post-Act employer attempts to dominate unions.
By the 1970s, however, new work structures began to appear that were
never envisioned by the framers of the Wagner Act. These work structures
evolved from attempts to improve the design of jobs in order to make
them more intrinsically interesting to workers and, in turn, to enhance
the motivational potential of each job. Eventually, organizations began
to turn to work teams or autonomous work groups in an effort to
capitalize on the creative energies of their labor forces and to become
more responsive to an increasingly changing and competitive global
business environment.
The Evolution of the Employee Involvement Movement
There is little doubt that interest in work teams or autonomous
work groups has exploded in recent years. A computerized literature
search conducted by the authors revealed hundreds of recent references
to work teams. The interest in work teams is understandable since they
are at the heart of changing workplace structures. Many organizations
have abandoned narrow job descriptions and hierarchal work structures in
order to achieve greater organizational effective ness through work team
arrangements. Different work teams vary in respect to who makes
decisions and the level at which decisions are made, but most
arrangements share a common feature: they empower employees by
delegating to them some of the decisions normally made by managers in
more traditional organizations. Some teams have authority to implement
decisions without management approval, and the limits of their
discretion are clearly defined. By contrast, cross-functional or
autonomous work teams may be distinct structures in an organizational
system, are largely self-managing, and may make traditionally management
decisions as far-reaching as deciding on work methods, scheduling,
hiring, and pay adjustments.
Changing Assumptions about Work and Workers
Management models addressing the universal challenges to improve
operational efficiency demonstrate the evolution of employee and labor
relations over time. More than half-a-century ago, Frederick
Taylor's scientific management model focused on the one best way to
do each task, explicitly moving thinking, planning and control tasks
from the shop floor to the manager's office. In the name of
efficiency, workers were to do what they are told and only in the manner
pre scribed. Although subsequent "human relations" models of
work behavior stressed that managers had to understand and be
sympathetic to employees, the main objective was still compliance with
authority.
COPYRIGHT 2001 California State University, Los
Angeles Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.