Reform is needed for
all groups, because groups tend to drift away from the best reasons for their
formation to the worst reasons. This occurs when they are infiltrated by those
who have a different agenda.
Labor Unions started
out as groups of people in the same profession, sharing knowledge to perfect
their processes. These were “Guilds” and membership required verified
credentials and knowledge of the craft.
It was also common for
children of their families to learn their craft as children and become
apprentices for their parents. This formed an occupational home school for
family businesses. This started thousands of years ago with farmers, miners,
chemists, carpenters, ship builders, tent makers, inventers and stone masons. I
believe the formation of Guilds was crucial to the improvement of processes for
all crafts.
I would rather see
Labor Unions involved in the development of curriculum for trade schools and
the publication of innovations in their respective professions.
Instead, Labor Unions
were infiltrated by Marxists after 1850 in reaction to industrialization and
the elimination of many of their family cottage manufacturing businesses.
The Guild members
abandoned these Labor Unions. The best of them formed and joined companies that
produced what they were masters of. The
Labor Unions remained, but they shifted their focus to political activism and
adopted violent tactics. Their membership peaked in 1950 and dropped by 90% by
1980.
Guilds became
“Professional Associations”.
Organizations that are
created need by-laws that include requirements for membership and a termination
clause.
When I wrote the
by-laws for the St. Charles County Council of Homeowners’ Associations in 1966,
I required membership to include homeowners’ associations in St. Charles
County. My termination clause said we should dissolve as soon as St. Charles
County expansion had been accomplished.
I had moved to Kansas in 1975 and I got a call from the current
President of the Council in 1977 asking for my opinion about termination. I
asked many questions and voted to terminate, which they did.
When I wrote the
by-laws for the Metro Atlanta High Tech Personnel Association in 1983, I
restricted membership to the Personnel staffs of electronics and software
companies. I also included a termination clause. In 1993, I formed my own private consulting
practice and resigned. I got a call in
1996 from the current President asking me to rejoin the Board to help them
terminate the association. I did rejoin and chaired Programs and we terminated
the association to consolidate as the Northeast sub-chapter of SHRM. Most of our 40 member companies were going
off-shore and closing. Those companies who remained had found wage surveys that
correlated with our survey. Gridlock had become critical and SHRM needed to
establish local organizations and meeting places. Membership could be opened to
all to expand meeting attendance.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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