Why Should You Join a Union?

  • Union members earn better wages and benefits than workers who aren’t union members.
    • On average, union workers’ wages are 27% higher than their non-union counterparts.
    • Union members earn better pension benefits. Unionized workers are 60% more likely to have employer-provided pensions.
    • Union members have better health insurance. More than 79% of union workers have jobs that provide health insurance benefits, but less than half of non-union workers do.
    • Union members have safer workplaces. Leveraging collective action, members have more leverage to create a stronger culture of safety on the job.

Source: AFL-CIO

How Do You Start a Union?

  1. Build a committee of your co-workers who are highly respected and willing to assist with forming a union.
  2. Hold an internal organizing committee meeting to discuss the organizing process, distribute responsibilities and identify next steps.
  3. Identify coworkers who may want to join the union and discuss issues at work such as low wages or an unsafe work environment.
  4. Determine how to build and assess support for the organizing effort.
  5. Aim to have 65% or more of the potential bargaining unit sign authorization cards and then file for an election with the National Labor Relations Board.

For more organizing resources and information, check out the Department of Labor’s Organizing Knowledge Center.

Sectors

Call and Service Centers

UWUA represents call center and customer service representatives across the country. These highly-trained members provide support that upholds public safety. Utility call center operators and customer service representatives provide critical information to ratepayers in the aftermath of natural disasters, assist customers in obtaining essential services, and help customers pay their bills.

Electric

UWUA members operate and maintain every aspect of power generation, transmission, and distribution. We work on steam heating, line reliability and in coal-fired power generation. Our members maintain the electric transmission and distribution grid as substation operators, above and below-ground line crews, and tree-trimming crews.

Gas

The work our members do places them at the center of America’s energy systems — at the point of consumption in a gas appliance for example and upstream all along the pipes. Natural Gas is one of the principal sources of energy for many of our day-to-day needs and UWUA gas workers play an important role in providing us with the safe delivery of gas to our homes and businesses.

Nuclear

UWUA represents workers in the nuclear industry, an essential source of energy that provides reliable, carbon-free power. Additionally, our members’ work involves closing and decommissioning nuclear power plants, a rigorous task that requires the same attention to detail as operating and maintaining these facilities.

Professional/Technical

UWUA represents thousands of professional and technical members whose work facilitates utility planning and other essential supports to protect our utility infrastructure.

Public Sector

UWUA represents thousands of workers in the public sector who do everything from maintaining safe drinking water to generating and distributing electricity to their municipalities.

Renewable Energy

We represent workers who operate and maintain solar facilities, battery storage facilities, and wind farms. We continue to work to ensure more of these emerging energy technologies result in good-paying, family-supporting, middle-class jobs.

Water

UWUA members are part of a behind-the-scenes crew who make sure that every glass of tap water is clean and drinkable, and lakes and waterways remain sewage free. They also operate and maintain hydropower facilities that generate electricity and are one of the largest sources of renewable energy.

Frequently Asked Questions About Organizing

What rights under the law do we have to form a union?

You have the right under Federal law to:

  • Self-organization;
  • To form, join or assist a labor organization;
  • To bargain collectively through representatives of your own choosing; and
  • To act together for the purposes of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection.

How does the government protect my rights?

The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), an agency of the Federal Government, applies rules under federal law which are intended to keep employees’ rights to organize into a union fair and honest. Each state has their own respective boards that offer similar protections. If an employer acts in such a way as to interfere with your right to help organize a union, charges can be filed against the company with the NLRB. Where appropriate, the NLRB provides remedies such as reinstatement for employees fired for exercising their rights including back pay.

What are examples of employer conduct that interferes with the rights of employees?

  • Threatening loss of jobs or benefits by an employer or a union.
  • Misstating important facts by a union or an employer where the other party does not have a chance to reply.
  • Promising or granting promotions, pay raises, or other benefits to influence an employee’s vote by a party capable of carrying out such promises.
  • An employer firing employees to discourage or encourage union activity.

Is there a quicker way for us to gain the union as our bargaining representative?

Yes, if the company would agree to a “voluntary recognition.” This is where the union and company agree for an impartial third party to verify the union’s claim that they have a majority of the employees signed on authorization cards. This is done through a “card check,” in which only the impartial third party, who is not a company representative, sees the signed authorization cards.

Is it true that the union is run by “outsiders”?

You are the union; you elect your own officers. You run your own local union affairs. Every UWUA local is autonomous. You elect your own negotiating committee; the National Union will provide you with skilled negotiators to assist you. You make the decisions on your own union contract. You choose your own stewards. You decide important policies and actions of your own union by a majority vote. You are the final vote of authority in your union.

What is the union contract?

A union contract is a document that is binding by law, negotiated with the employer and provides for wage benefits hours and general working conditions.

When we win union certification, will the employer have to negotiate with us?

Yes, federal law saws that the employer must negotiate “in good faith.”

Is there any limit to what we can ask for regarding wages or benefits?

No. Keep in mind, that what you ask for should be reasonable and justified.

Who will do the negotiating?

The employer and their labor relations representatives and an advisory committee elected by you along with your local union and National representatives.

Do we have to accept what has been negotiated?

No, when negotiations progress to the point where the committee feels that the best agreement has been reached, a report is made to the membership. If the membership approves the results of the negotiations, the committee is then authorized to sign the agreement. If the membership rejects the results of the negotiations, it then votes upon a course of action to secure a satisfactory agreement. The National is a party to all collective bargaining contracts.

Hear from UWUA’s Newest Members

Photo of New Member Matthew Loda“It was time for us to have a voice at the table to promote positive changes in the workplace to benefit us and our families. UWUA gives us that voice.”

— Matthew Loda, Billing Representative II, UWUA member (New Jersey)

Photo of New Member Massiel Marmolejos“I joined the union because I want a reasonable wage increase, job security, and better working conditions.”

— Massiel Marmolejos, Customer Service Representative II, UWUA member (New Jersey)

Photo of New Member Jore Vallejo“One of the biggest factors in my decision to join the union was job security. Also important were better wages, improved working conditions, to have my rights as an employee protected and to actually have a voice at work.”

— Jore Vallejo, Customer Service Representative II, UWUA member (New Jersey)