During
the Industrial Revolution from 1820 to 1900, the US began to establish
factories in big cities and expanded resource extraction to secure oil, coal,
minerals and wood. The demand for steel was increasing. Railroads, bridges,
dams and other big jobs needed to be completed to sustain growth.
The lack
of mechanization made big jobs labor intensive and dangerous. Productivity was critical to staying in
business. The Leaders in major industries were inventing solutions to their
problems and had no time for “employee relations”. Labor was a commodity and many workers were
injured, became disabled and died. Plagues claimed thousands of lives each year
before the invention of penicillin in 1928. Families and communities cared for
widows and orphans.
Karl Marx
published his Communist Manifesto in 1848 suggesting that the working poor in
British factories could use democracy as a way to increase their family
incomes. Socialism would destroy individual property rights, but the poor had
little or no property. The Poor have
always outnumbered the Rich, so collective action looked feasible.
But
Socialism creates tyranny with murder and ends in bankruptcy.
The Labor
Unions were formed as part of the Marxist inspired Socialist Movement and
employed all the violence associated with Communist takeovers. This violence
was codified into law as a “right” in the 1930s, by Socialist US Politicians.
By the
1960s, US companies had reflected on the damage Unions could do and knew the
causes of unionism. They were looking
for managers who could treat employees well and still get the job done. I
trained to do this in college with courses in science, math, literature,
philosophy and theology and graduated in 1965. I already had a good understanding
of science, math, business, finance, accounting and economics from high school
and my family.
I had
seen companies fail, because they were divided between Union and
Management. I saw Union violence in car
bombings and Mafia tactics. I concluded that
companies could do better by adopting better treatment of employees to avoid
unionization. We called it “making
unions unnecessary”.
In the
1960s, I entered the Personnel Field to make Unions unnecessary. I wasn’t
alone. From 1960 to 2020, we all but eradicated unions from the US
Manufacturing Private Sector.
Employees
appreciated policies that led to hiring the best co-workers. Pay had to be
competitive for each level of skill. Employees had to assimilate and work well
with others. Supervisors had to communicate, appreciate their employees and
treat them with respect.
My
activities required an accurate read on human nature and a solid world-view. To
hire employees, I studied their jobs and wrote job descriptions. I used multiple salary surveys to determine
“competitive pay”. I called employees
“sir” and “mam”. I used humor to keep people “real” and make work more
fun. I hired the best employees I could
find. I tested all applicants. I
promoted automation of boring tasks and added more interesting job content to
increase job satisfaction.
I refused
to work in a restrictive bureaucracy. I
chose my jobs with emerging companies where I could do the most good.
My take
on Unions was negative. I saw their anti-company propaganda as sabotage. Unions
encouraged the “entitlement mentality” common in socialist states.
In 1967,
I pushed to get rid of the Teamsters at Kearney by closing the plant in St.
Louis and moving to Atlanta.
In 1968,
I joined Monsanto HQ to ensure that pay was competitive to continue defeating
union attempts by OCAW
In 1971,
I defeated the SEU organizing attempt at Washington U. Medical Campus and
established HR.
In 1972,
I handled Union negotiations at Washington U Main Campus and the unions
decertified. I automated HR data.
In 1975,
I joined Schwan Foods in Salina KS to automate the plant and upgrade systems.
We had a no layoff policy and promoted from within. We remained union free.
In 1982,
I decertified the UAW from Rickel Manufacturing in Salina KS to sell it to a
competitor.
In 1983,
I stopped CWA from organizing Hayes Microcomputer Products in Atlanta, ramped
up employment and improved systems. We remained union free.
In 1986,
I joined Electromagnetic Sciences in Atlanta to ramp up employment for the
Reagan defense build-up. We remained union free.
In 1993,
I was kidnapped to form my own private consulting practice for the electronics
manufacturing companies in Atlanta.
In 2017,
I closed this consulting practice to write this blog.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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