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Do Unions Hurt Small Business

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wasteful View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote wasteful Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Sep 03 2009 at 3:25pm
So Ron why were canned from Dillman's? 
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VietVet View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote VietVet Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Sep 03 2009 at 3:28pm
And we did, John. It took us awhile, but we finally figured out that the pay and job choices were better back here than out there. The "Tucson Experiment" for us was a trial gone bad. We were so taken in by the mountains and a totally different landscape than here, that we were just fooled into thinking that "everything would be ok by moving out there" Turned out to be a nightmare.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote lrisner Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Sep 03 2009 at 5:04pm
Wasteful...your cut and past just shows that you have no opinion of your own.

As to "Right to Work States"....well I'll just say that I had a similar discussion with a Toyota Employee and I assured him that his wages and Ben were at the level they were for the  purpose of keeping the Union OUT. If any of you don't understand that, I have a lot of Section 8s to sell YOU.

Anti-Unionism, at the level people like Wastegate and Pac-it-full display is very hurtful for the Nation as a whole. It is true there is corruption in Unions sometimes just as there is currently serious corruption in the Butler County GOP. That kind of thing is a Human quality that we will never be fully purge from Life.

Capitalism and the Free Market are indeed the best System tried yet by man, but it is only successful for the masses when it is regulated somewhat. Unions are part of that regulation.


In a completely unregulated Capitalistic System with totally Free Markets, not one person on this Board would be anything but a Slave.




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John Beagle View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote John Beagle Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Sep 03 2009 at 5:07pm
VietVet

Sounds like your nighmare adventure had some good points too.

1. You got to enjoy the beauty of America
2. You got perspective on jobs
3. You can back here to make a better life


John Beagle

Middletown USA

News of, for and by the people of Middletown, Ohio.
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wasteful View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote wasteful Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Sep 03 2009 at 5:19pm
Irisner what the hell are you and Hermes talking about I cut and pasted his comment and then made my own comment after doing some research on the net and finding out how many states were actually "Right to work", rather than spouting off like Hermes that Ohio is a "Rght to Work" State which it isn't.  And then I pasted a link to my source....so what.  I think my opinion of Unions is quite clear from above.
 
I don't need to be long winded like you Irisner. 
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Pacman View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Pacman Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Sep 03 2009 at 5:20pm
Wastefull don't let Irisner get under your skin he can't stand it when someone is right.LOL
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Pacman Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Sep 03 2009 at 5:35pm
Irisner this is for you, oh my God a cut and paste:
 
June 19, 2009

A Move to Put the Union Label on Solar Power Plants

By TODD WOODY

SACRAMENTO — When a company called Ausra filed plans for a big solar power plant in California, it was deluged with demands from a union group that it study the effect on creatures like the short-nosed kangaroo rat and the ferruginous hawk.

By contrast, when a competitor, BrightSource Energy, filed plans for an even bigger solar plant that would affect the imperiled desert tortoise, the same union group, California Unions for Reliable Energy, raised no complaint. Instead, it urged regulators to approve the project as quickly as possible.

One big difference between the projects? Ausra had rejected demands that it use only union workers to build its solar farm, while BrightSource pledged to hire labor-friendly contractors.

As California moves to license dozens of huge solar power plants to meet the state’s renewable energy goals, some developers contend they are being pressured to sign agreements pledging to use union labor. If they refuse, they say, they can count on the union group to demand costly environmental studies and deliver hostile testimony at public hearings.

If they commit at the outset to use union labor, they say, the environmental objections never materialize.

“This does stress the limits of credibility to some extent,” a California energy commissioner, Jeffrey Byron, said at one contentious hearing, “when an attorney representing a labor union is so focused on the potential impact of a solar power plant on birds.”

Union leaders acknowledge that they make aggressive use of the environmental laws, but say they do it out of genuine concern for the sustainability of California’s power industry, not just as a negotiating tactic. And they contend they do not abandon valid environmental objections to a project just because a company signs a labor agreement.

“We’ve been tarred and feathered more than once on this issue,” said Marc Joseph, a lawyer for California Unions for Reliable Energy. “We don’t walk away from environmental issues.”

At proposed fossil-fuel power plants, the union group has long been accused of exploiting environmental laws to force companies into signing labor agreements. The tactic is a subject of perennial discussion in the California legislature, which has considered, but never passed, bills to strip labor of its right to participate in environmental assessments.

What is new is that California Unions for Reliable Energy, a coalition of construction unions, appears to be applying this approach to new-age renewable energy projects, especially solar power plants, which are being fast-tracked to help meet the state’s green power target.

Lawyers for the union both negotiate labor agreements with solar developers and participate in the environmental review of the projects.

California Unions for Reliable Energy insists it is pursuing the long-term interests of its members. If energy projects are held to high environmental standards, the group says, more of them will ultimately get built, and that will mean more union jobs.

Nationwide, as billions of dollars in public and private investment flow to renewable energy projects, the environmental and labor battles being fought in California could prove to be the opening skirmishes of a larger fight over the emerging green economy.

Should Rust Belt factories converted to making solar components and wind turbines be union shops, gateways to the middle-class for a new generation of workers in the green economy? Or will the green economy look more like the service economy, with low-paid employees installing rooftop solar panels and retrofitting buildings?

For the labor movement, green jobs represent an opportunity to regain relevance after years of declining membership.

“Unions are trying to get a foothold in solar, wind and other new green occupations,” said Philip Mattera, research director for Good Jobs First, a labor-oriented research group in Washington.

“We’re at a turning point that will have an impact on the future of the whole economy, and a lot of unions are gearing up.”

But skeptics fear that union control of renewable energy projects will saddle the nascent industry with high costs and undermine its competitiveness.

“These environmental challenges are the unions’ major tactic to maintain their share of industrial construction — we call it greenmail,” said Kevin Dayton, state government affairs director for the Associated Builders and Contractors of California. “The future of solar energy is jeopardized by these unions holding up construction.”

In California, project labor agreements can raise costs on a project by about 20 percent, Mr. Dayton estimated.

The fights of the moment center on solar farms proposed for tens of thousands of acres of desert and agricultural land.

When the utility giant the FPL Group ignored entreaties from California Unions for Reliable Energy to use union labor on a planned 250-megawatt solar farm, it was hit with 144 data requests, demanding details on things like “the engine brand, model, and horsepower rating” of a water pump engine, “the number of man-hours devoted to focused tortoise surveys, by location” and “the role of each individual that participated.”

In filings with the California Energy Commission, Ausra has accused the union group of abusing environmental laws in a bid to extract a labor agreement. FPL’s lawyers accused the group of trying to stall the company’s solar project.

Bob Balgenorth, chairman of the labor group, makes no apologies for pushing hard for union jobs from solar developers while scrutinizing the environmental impact of the projects. “You only have so much land that can accept solar power plants,” said Mr. Balgenorth, who has cultivated strong ties with conservation groups.

“So the question is, should that land be used for low-paid jobs or should that land be used for high-paid jobs?”

Some solar developers say that signing a labor agreement is simply an unavoidable cost of doing business.

“Let’s just say that it is clear to us from experience that if we do not enter into a project labor agreement, the costs and schedule of the project is interminable,” said Douglas Wert, chief executive of Spinnaker Energy, a San Diego company hired to build two solar farms for Portuguese developer Martifer.

After Stirling Energy Systems filed plans with California regulators to install 30,000 solar dishes on 10 square miles of desert land, its executives got a call from Mr. Joseph, the union lawyer. Sean Gallagher, a vice president for Tessera Solar, the development arm for Stirling, said the company declined Mr. Joseph’s request to commit to using union labor.

California Unions for Reliable Energy subsequently filed 143 data requests with the company on the final day such requests could be made, and later intervened in a second, 850-megawatt Stirling solar project.

It was a different story after BrightSource Energy pledged to hire union-friendly contractors to build its Mojave Desert solar power plant complex. Despite questions raised by environmental groups about the project’s impact on wildlife, the union group took no action, according to commission documents.

Mr. Joseph said that the labor group wants to mediate between environmentalists and BrightSource, which is based in Oakland, Calif.

“We’re actually hoping that we can help resolve these issues in a way that allows that project to go forward and gives maximum protection to the desert tortoise,” he said.

He said he sees “absolutely no conflict of interest” in seeking labor agreements from solar developers while challenging the environmental effect of the projects. “It is in the interest of construction workers to have good middle class jobs — and to have conventional and renewable power plants that are sustainable,” Mr. Joseph said.

The union group’s strategy drew plaudits from environmentalists when the group was winning agreements from developers to cut pollution from fossil fuel power plants. But as some conservation groups ally themselves with business interests to push for a rapid rollout of renewable energy, strains are showing in the so-called blue-green alliance.

Some environmental groups are worried that the labor tactics will delay green energy projects and cause a backlash, but they are reluctant to go public with criticisms of the labor movement.

Others, like the Natural Resources Defense Council, are trying to steer clear of the controversy.

The council “hasn’t taken a position on whether union labor should or shouldn’t be used in these projects,” said Sheryl Carter, the group’s co-director of energy programs.

And still others defend the labor group’s role.

Carl Zichella, the Sierra Club’s director of western renewable programs, said California Unions for Reliable Energy had been effective at extracting concessions that aid the environment.

“It’s not a warm fuzzy thing they are doing; it’s a very self-interested thing they’re doing,” he said. “But it has a large ancillary public benefit.”

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: June 20, 2009
Because of an editing error, an article on Friday about union efforts to gain a foothold in green energy projects misstated the title of Jeffrey Byron, who questioned union motives in objecting to some projects on environmental grounds. He is one of five members of the California Energy Commission; he is not “the California energy commissioner.”

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Hermes View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Hermes Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Sep 03 2009 at 5:53pm
Originally posted by wasteful wasteful wrote:

Irisner what the hell are you and Hermes talking about I cut and pasted his comment and then made my own comment after doing some research on the net and finding out how many states were actually "Right to work", rather than spouting off like Hermes that Ohio is a "Rght to Work" State which it isn't.  And then I pasted a link to my source....so what.  I think my opinion of Unions is quite clear from above.
 
I don't need to be long winded like you Irisner. 
 
 
wasteful calm down,what I meant was my point was exactly what you copied and pasted from my post. And I was wrong about Ohio still being a right to work state and I think I even thanked you for the correction. I even said I would look deeper into that because it use to be a right to work state. I have been retired so long I didn't know it was no longer the same.
 
So don't get excited none of us are right all the time,just part of the time. LOL
No more democrats no more republicans,vote Constitution Party !!
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lrisner View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote lrisner Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Sep 03 2009 at 10:23pm
Give me a break! The Pac mouth strikes again!

Self delusion has no room for anything but what it whats and believes!....Sounds like Pac Man to me!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Vivian Moon Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Sep 04 2009 at 6:59am

Small business is the backbone of our Nation’s wealth. It is small business that creates the majority of the new jobs in this country and yes many are minimum wage. If all small businesses had to open under union rule I doubt that any would ever open their doors.
  It is sad to read the old newspapers where Mr. Sorg’s tobacco factory employed 14 year old children. If you got killed while working in the new steel and paper mills, little help was given to the families. Unions have had their place in our history and did many good things to protect the workers to give them safer working conditions…however I’m not sure they are now looking out for the best interest of the workers. jmo 

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Pacman Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Sep 04 2009 at 7:16am
Lighten up Irisner, everyone's entitled to a different opinion even you.  I don't know why you bother to read some as all it does is raise your blood pressure, then you go off half cocked because everyone doesn't fall in line and salute you.  Here ya go Irisner my salute to you. and.......Oh my God...a cut and paste salute. LOL
 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote lrisner Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Sep 04 2009 at 6:11pm
Originally posted by Pacman Pacman wrote:

Lighten up Irisner, everyone's entitled to a different opinion even you.  I don't know why you bother to read some as all it does is raise your blood pressure, then you go off half cocked because everyone doesn't fall in line and salute you.  Here ya go Irisner my salute to you. and.......Oh my God...a cut and paste salute. LOL
 

My BP doesn't get up, YOUR'S does every time someone tries to defend the Working Class.

 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Pacman Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Sep 11 2009 at 7:15am
Irisner I am the working class.........Big%20smile
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