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At the merger of the AFL and CIO 50
years ago, America's union movement recognized we
are stronger when we are united and inclusive.
In the tumultuous years that followed, the new labor
federation became a close partner of the civil
rights movement, and nine years after the merger we
were key to passage of the landmark Civil Rights
Act. We also were instrumental in passage of
the Equal Pay Act of 1963 to protect working women
from wage discrimination. Since then, the
union movement has spoken out for equality for all
people regardless of race, ethnicity, gender, faith,
age, sexual orientation, disability or immigrant
status. But beneath the highlights of
our fight for justice in the workplace and American
society, the vestiges of a divided past remained.
Throughout our history, the union movement has
struggled to remove the remnants of our own "-isms" as
well as those of the broader society.
The struggle continues today. Despite decades of
progress, the union movement acknowledges we have not
met our goals: that unions must reflect the diversity
of our communities and union movement leadership must
reflect the diversity of our members. In too
many cases, women and people of color still are
underrepresented among union leadership. it is
understandable that many women and people of color -
the workers who are among those with the most to gain
from union membership and who are most actively
organizing today - do not feel welcome.
It is incumbent upon the union movement to stand
before employers and governments in every part of the
world as a model of openness. fairness and
opportunity. We will not allow women, people of
color, gay or lesbian workers or brothers and sisters
with disabilities to be denied the fruits of their
labor in the workplace. We cannot be less
vigilant and demanding of ourselves. Building a
stronger union movement to improve the lives of
working families will require all of us, working
together. If we fail to hear every voice and to
speak for every worker, we all are weakened.
In 1993, the AFL-CIO formed a Full Participation
Committee, which in 1995 reported on the need for more
active recruitment and training of leaders and the
importance of greater inclusion of people of color,
women and young members in union activities and as
representatives of their organizations. It also
highlighted the need to recognize and overcome
barriers to participation and to support sound policy
and dedicated leadership that would work toward
achieving change. When the current executive
officers were elected in 1995, they expanded the
Executive Council to include more women and people of
color at the very top ranks of America's labor
movement. The 1995 report of the Full
Participation Conference recommended that unions
develop leadership education and training programs for
our diverse membership and that we develop policies
and practices to foster diversity in staff hiring,
appointments, program assignments and delegate status
to achieve full participation. Last
year, the AFL-CIO's Working Women's Committee
conducted research on the factors deterring women from
joining unions and becoming more involved as leaders
and activists. That study, released in March
2004, found women had been joining unions in larger
numbers than men for the past 25 years and union
election campaigns were more likely to succeed among
predominantly female workforces or if the lead
organizer was a woman. Nonetheless, unions were
losing ground with woman: Polling showed women's
favorable attitudes toward unions declining. The
Overcoming Barriers to Women in Organizing and
Leadership report recommended investments in
reaching out to working women; recruiting and training
more women organizers; focusing on traditional
economic issues for women such as equal pay, work
hours and balancing work and family; and demonstrating
that unions work effectively for working families.
The study also found women perceived a lack of
commitment among union leaders to advancing women and
increasing the ranks of women labor leaders would
require structural changes in union leadership,
training, mentoring and accountability measures.
The AFL-CIO's Civil Right Committee recently
commissioned a study by Silas Lee, Ph.D., of Dr. Silas
Lee and Associates, on overcoming barriers to full
participation by people of color in today's labor
movement. Preliminary results show the barriers
identified by unionists of color are strikingly
similar to those noted in the Overcoming Barriers
to Women in Organizing and Leadership report: |