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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TimF who wrote (452344)1/29/2009 9:10:18 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574270
 
Union Membership Up Sharply in 2008, Report Says

By STEVEN GREENHOUSE
Published: January 28, 2009

Union membership in the United States rose last year by the largest amount in a quarter-century, a gain of 428,000 members, the Bureau of Labor Statistics announced on Wednesday.

The bureau said that most of the new members were government employees and that the percentage of workers in unions rose to 12.4 percent of the overall work force last year, up from 12.1 percent in 2007.

The increase is bound to fuel an already feverish political debate over whether to enact a labor-backed bill that would make it easier for workers to unionize. Business groups that oppose the bill can point to the new report to argue that such legislation is unnecessary because unions are already growing under current law.

But union leaders said Wednesday that it remained far too difficult to unionize workers in the private sector.

Most Democrats support the bill, the Employee Free Choice Act, saying that making it easier for unions to grow will help strengthen the nation’s middle class during tough economic times. But Republicans denounce the bill because it would give workers the right to gain union recognition as soon as a majority signed cards saying they wanted a union, rather than through secret-ballot elections.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 36.8 percent of government employees belong to unions, compared with just 7.6 percent of workers in the private sector. Typically, state and city officials do not fight unionization efforts, while private-sector employers, fearing higher labor costs, often vigorously resist organizing drives.

The bureau noted that the percentage of workers in unions has dropped from 20.1 percent in 1983, with the decline especially noteworthy among private-sector workers because of a sharp drop in manufacturing jobs as a result of plant closings and pressures from imports. The bureau said 11.4 percent of manufacturing workers, once the heart of organized labor, were in unions.

The bureau said 16.1 million workers belonged to unions at the end of 2008. The number of unionized government workers grew by 275,000 last year and the number of unionized private sector workers grew by slightly more than 150,000.

Some economists discounted as a statistical fluke the bureau’s report last year that the number of unionized workers had jumped by 311,000 in 2007. Unions have made significant gains in organizing by persuading various governors and state legislatures to allow the unionization of tens of thousands of teachers, home-health aides and home-based child care providers.

nytimes.com



To: TimF who wrote (452344)1/29/2009 9:11:28 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574270
 
Officials: Army suicides at 3-decade high

Jan 29, 7:49 AM (ET)
By PAULINE JELINEK

WASHINGTON (AP) - Defense officials say suicide among U.S. soldiers increased again last year and is at a nearly three-decade high.

The Army plans to announce figures later Thursday, but senior officials told The Associated Press that at least 128 soldiers killed themselves last year.

And the final count will likely be considerably higher than that because more than a dozen other suspicious deaths are still being investigated and could also turn out to be self-inflicted.

In 2007, the number was 115 - the highest since record keeping began in 1980.

Officials say troops are under unprecedented stress because of repeated and long tours of duty due to the simultaneous wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

apnews.myway.com



To: TimF who wrote (452344)1/30/2009 1:09:34 AM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574270
 
Esp. the "I am wrong" part because my statement was far more general than what the article and study covered.

In other words, you are unable to admit you were wrong. I understand....its seems to be a winger problem.