‘Surge’ in organization efforts has labor leaders optimistic for the
future
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[September 02, 2023]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – As workers in Illinois prepare to celebrate Labor Day this
weekend, a new report shows there has been a surge in efforts to
organize labor unions in workplaces throughout the state, while overall
public approval of labor unions nationally is the highest in nearly six
decades.
In 2022, there were 72 successful petitions to organize labor unions in
Illinois, which represent 9,600 new unionized workers, the highest
single-year numbers at any point in the last decade.
That’s according to The State of the Unions 2023, an annual report by
the Illinois Economic Policy Institute, a think tank with strong ties to
organized labor, and the Center for Middle Class Revival at the
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
After decades of declining union membership and declining unionization
rates, U of I’s Robert Bruno, a coauthor of the report, said those
numbers may signal a resurgence in the labor movement.
“That's kind of a leading indicator of an upsurge, of growth in the
movement,” Bruno said in an interview. “And if you look at where you're
seeing organizing happening – in a lot of growth sectors with larger
numbers of employees – then you see the kinds of conditions for
increasing the actual density of the labor movement.”
While the rate of unionized workers in Illinois had increased in 2020 –
followed by a boost of nearly 16,000 new unionized workers the following
year – the state saw declines in both metrics in the past year,
according to the report. That continued the downward trend in
unionization in the last decade. In 2022, there were 734,430 unionized
workers in Illinois, which represented 13.1 percent of the state’s total
workforce.
The report attributes that to a shift in the state’s economy away from
manufacturing and other unionized sectors toward more service- and
knowledge-based industries with low unionization rates. It also cites a
large number of vacancies in federal, state and local government
positions, which make up the bulk of union membership.
The authors also attribute some of that to the 2018 U.S. Supreme Court
case, Janus v. the American Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employees, which struck down an Illinois law that required public
employees who chose not to join the union representing their shop to
nevertheless pay a portion of their union dues known as “fair share” or
“agency fees.” Those fees covered a portion of the union’s costs for
collective bargaining.
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A graphic from the State of the Unions
2023 report by the the pro-union Illinois Economic Policy Institute
and the Project for Middle Class Renewal at the University of
Illinois Urbana-Champaign shows national and state organizing rates
from the last decade. (Credit: Illinois Economic Policy Institute
and the Project for Middle Class Renewal at the University of
Illinois Urbana-Champaign)
“State and local government vacancies increased 78 percent following
Janus as wages in the public sector failed to keep pace with those
in the private sector,” said ILEPI’s Frank Manzo IV, the other
coauthor of the report. “And in Illinois, unfilled positions at
public school districts rose 164 percent. And Illinois also had
thousands of vacant state local government jobs and in 2022 … So
it's the labor shortage that's in part caused by the Janus decision
because workers are dissatisfied with pay in the public sector.”
Statewide, public sector union membership has fallen by about
24,000, or 3.3 percent, since the Janus decision and now averages
around 334,000.
Still, the report notes, Illinois’ unionization rate of 13.1 percent
of its workforce is significantly higher than the national average
of 10.1 percent. Nationwide, however, total union membership grew in
2022 to nearly 14.3 million workers, the first time that has
happened since 2017.
The report cites an August 2022 Gallup poll that found 71 percent of
Americans say they approve of labor unions, up from 68 percent the
year before and the highest union approval rating Gallup had
recorded since 1965.
The demographics of union membership have also been changing, with
younger workers aged 25-34 making up a larger share of the total.
Since 2019, that age group saw a 2.3 percentage point increase in
unionization. By contrast, there were declines in unionization among
workers aged 35-44 and older workers over 65.
Unionization rates were highest among people with master’s degrees
but lowest among people with less than a high school diploma as well
as people with professional or doctorate degrees.
The top four industries by unionization rates were public
administration, construction, transportation and utilities, and the
combined educational and health services industry.
The report notes that the manufacturing workforce, historically a
leader in industrial unionization, is now only 8.8 percent organized
in Illinois.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit,
nonpartisan news service covering state government. It is
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and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation, along with major
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Illinois Editorial Association. |