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B.J. Widick

In the Labor Unions

(11 July 1939)


From Socialist Appeal, Vol. III No. 49, 11 July 1939, p. 2.
Transcribed & marked up by Einde O’ Callaghan for the Encyclopaedia of Trotskyism On-Line (ETOL).


Spontaneous and, in several cases, officially called strikes of A.F.L. craftsmen on W.P.A. construction projects began this week in protest against the destruction of the union scales under the new relief appropriation measure passed by Congress.

In the New York area the strikes were so widespread that Thomas Murray, president of the Building and Construction Council of Greater New York, has called a meeting of his organization and says that official strike sanction is likely.

Murray estimated that 90 per cent of the 32,283 skilled workers on W.P.A. in New York City have stopped work.
 

Resent A.F.L. Policy

Resentment against the reduction in wage rates is directed not only against the Roosevelt administration but also – and this is very important – against the A.F.L. top leadership in Washington for having allowed Congress to delete the prevailing wage clause in the relief appropriation measure.

Under the present schedule, thousands of workers have been notified that they will have to work 130 hours a month to get the same pay they have been getting, on a monthly basis.

Under the old rates paid on a union scale, craftsmen obtained from $1 to $2 an hour, and worked much less than 130 hours.

A comparison of the pay received before the reduction on an hourly basis with union scale of wages and the money to be earned under the new schedule shows that most skilled craftsmen will get 60 cents an hour less! And work many hours more!
 

Facts and Figures

Here is what the New York craftsmen got before:

 

Number
on
rolls
May 31

 

Hours
per
fiscal
period

 

Pay
per
four
weeks

Plasterer

   766

39

$78.00 

Stone cutter

   221

42

  81.02

Stone setter

   113

42

  82.19

Electrician

1,514

42

  84.00

Plumber

1,280

42

  84.00

Steamfitter

   627

42

  84.00

Asbestos w’ker

   268

42

  84.00

Bricklayer

2,459

42

  79.21

Stone mason

   415

42

  79.21

Structural iron worker

   931

44

  84.70

Sheet metal w’ker or roofer

   932

46

  85.10

Glazier

   197

48

  79.20

Rigger

   172

48

  79.20

Tile layer

   316

48

  81.02

Marble cutter or setter

   284

48

  81.02

Metallic lath’er

1,090

48

  84.00

Dock builder

   671

48

  84.00

Compressor op’tor (p’table)

   182

48

  84.00

Carpenter

7,981

49

  85.71

Cement mason

1,786

49

  85.75

Ornament’l iron worker

   840

49

   85.75

Paver (block & granite)

   180

52

  86.27

Bluestone and granite cutter

   123

52

  85.80

Blacksmith

   153

52

  84.60

Waterproofer & tar roofer

   604

53

  84.80

Marble polisher

   145

56

  84.73

Painter

2,593

56

  84.00

Burner

   108

56

  78,40

Welder

     91

60

  84.00

Timberman

1,784

68

  81.60

Pipe caulker

   163

72

  82.80

Mechanic (auto)

   190

80

  80.00

It can hardly be wondered that the A.F.L. members are up in arms over this. William Green, president of the A.F.L., and other top leaders have a real explanation to make for their bad mistake in allowing the reduction to go into effect without a serious fight.


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