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The Raiding Party: SEIU attacks another union for deal with city of LA
As cities across California and moreover, the entire state face financial obligations they can’t meet, the city of LA was on the cusp of reducing costs when the SEIU stepped in to bully another union. Heaven forbid that the city of LA should be able to reign in employment costs and that another union be [more...]

Posted Wed, 28 Jul 2010 .

It’s settled: SEIU and UNITE-HERE comes to terms with reality, each other
The SEIU and UNITE-HERE have settled up. Made peace. Cut ties. According to the press release from the SEIU: “The Service Employees International Union (SEIU), Workers United and UNITE HERE today announced a settlement agreement on behalf of the unions’ members and elected leadership that will bring to a close the protracted dispute between the [more...]

Posted Wed, 28 Jul 2010 .

 Read more at LaborPains.org

Union Profile

2005  |  2006
Basic Facts
[click on the text below for more detailed information]
Total Assets: $ 164,700,021 
Members: 1,505,100 
Employees: 914 
Employees earning over $75,000: 196 
Total Political Funds: $ 6,166,956 
ULPs Filed Since 2000: 3,821 
Decertification Petitions Filed: 504 
Service Employees (SEIU)
National Headquarters
1313 L STREET, N.W.
WASHINGTON, DC 20005


The Service Employees International Union (SEIU) represents 1.7 million employees in the U.S. Its president, Andrew Stern, is credited with (or blamed for) leading dissident unions to split away from the AFL-CIO in 2005 to create the Change To Win coalition.

Card Check Flip-Flop
The SEIU is a leading proponent of an organizing process known as “card check.” Rather than relying on the traditional method of a government monitored secret ballot, card check stipulates that if union representatives persuade more than 50 percent of the workers to sign a union authorization card, the employer can choose to recognize the union as the representative of 100 percent of the workforce. This method is susceptible to fraud and intimidation, as paid organizers have a documented history of using deceptive and coercive tactics to “persuade” workers to support the union.

SEIU will go to seemingly any length to achieve this anti-democratic organizing method. In 2006, SEIU’s staged a number of publicity stunts at the University of Miami -- which employs personnel from a janitorial company called UNICCO -- including a dangerous hunger strike; one protestor had to be taken to the hospital after a drop in his blood pressure, and another suffered a stroke. SEIU’s campaign was carried out solely to get the company to accept card check.

As the president of the university, and former Clinton administration cabinet member, Donna Shalala wrote in TheMiami Herald:

The SEIU wants a process called a ''card check'' that does not guarantee participation by all Unicco employees, and Unicco wants an election for all employees -- supervised by the federal government via the National Labor Relations Board. The SEIU and its supporters are pressuring the university to require Unicco to accept the method that does not guarantee participation by all employees -- part of a national campaign by the union. We have said No. The University of Miami -- no university, for that matter -- could ever argue against an uncoerced election for all workers…

Hunger strikes have never been used in this country to oppose an election. We have urged both parties to continue daily discussions until this issue is resolved. A free election for or against unionization is a federal statutory right.

In 2006, SEIU teamed up with UNITE HERE to pressure hotel and convention center proprietors in Hartford, Connecticut to sign a “labor peace agreement,” which included a provision excluding every organizing process except card check.  The unions’ incessant picketing in favor of the agreement caused the cancellation of more than a dozen convention center events and -- according to a petition delivered to Mayor Eddie Perez -- cost local workers thousands of dollars in salary and tips. One non-union convention center employee protested a joint SEIU-UNITE HERE press conference in late July 2006, telling union organizers: "You're basically strangling our income. Why would we want to join a union that wants to choke us into submission to let you in? You're not the union I want."

The irony of these disputes is that SEIU’s support for card check contradicts the tactics it used in a campaign it ran in Texas. In March 2006, after unsuccessfully attempting to unionize Houston’s municipal employees by gathering signatures, SEIU called for a secret ballot election. As reported in the Houston Chronicle, SEIU’s top brass sent a letter to the rival American Federation of State, County, & Municipal Employees (AFSCME) -- which is also trying to organize Houston’s government employees -- which read, in part: “Will you join SEIU in supporting an employee election so that we can make the true will of the majority known …”

Inconvenient Truths
Few Americans know much about the SEIU, but they should. Here's why:

  • On June 20, 2006, a California district court ordered the SEIU to pay $37,000 in compensation to a class of state workers who’d sued the union for failure to provide adequate information about its membership fees or the “fair share” expenses related to its representation of employees.
  • Andrew Stern has called the AFL-CIO the Democratic Party's bank -- but his own union is regularly a top political spender, most recently through its powerful "527" committee, which gave millions to political candidates. In 2004, Stern spent at least $65 million of his members' money, much of which supported his favored (but ultimately unsuccessful) presidential candidates. A powerful local of Stern's SEIU budgeted another $35 million of its members' money on political advocacy in 2004, according to union activist and lawyer Nathan Newman.
  • SEIU Local 880 (which represents workers in Illinois) and Local 100 (representing New Orleans, Texas, and Arkansas) are both run by the often-in-trouble "community group" ACORN -- an organization that has been tied to government fraud, Teamsters election fraud, and recurring voter fraud. Local 100 is run by Wade Rathke, ACORN's head organizer and a chief strategist in the multi-union PR campaign attacking Wal-Mart.
  • The SEIU seeks to unionize just about anyone. In 1997 Local 790 organized strippers from the Lusty Lady peep show in San Francisco.


Membership
Total Membership:   1,505,100




Financial Information
Total Assets:  $ 164,700,021
Total Receipts:  $ 258,844,884



Source: Department of Labor, Office of Labor Management Standards LM filings

Financial Disbursements
 Search Financial
 Disbursement Records


 

 

  search this union search all 
Representational Activities ( 85.9%) $ 128,899,855 more detailed information
Political Activities & Lobbying ( 17.3%) $ 26,008,294 more detailed information
Contributions, Gifts & Grants ( 5.4%) $ 8,031,767 more detailed information
General Overhead ( 18.3%) $ 27,419,132 more detailed information
Union Administration ( 9.1%) $ 13,725,244 more detailed information
Strike Benefits ( 6.9%) $ 10,302,326 
Total Compensation ( 35.5%) $ 53,344,487 
Per Capita Tax ( 2.8%) $ 4,226,376 
Source: Department of Labor, Office of Labor Management Standards LM filings


Locals & Other Affiliated Organizations
Top 10 Locals (by Members)
Local Members
SEIU Council (Sacramento, CA) 611,235
SEIU Conference (Los Angeles, CA) 601,379
SEIU Council (New York, NY) 350,000
SEIU Local 1199 (New York, NY) 240,000
SEIU Local 434 (Los Angeles, CA) 118,410
SEIU Council (Chicago, IL) 105,000
SEIU Local 250 (Oakland, CA) 92,294
SEIU Local 32 (New York, NY) 76,174
SEIU Council (Boston, MA) 66,667
SEIU Joint Council 45 (Harrisburg, PA) 60,000
[show all locals & affiliates]
Source: Department of Labor, Office of Labor Management Standards LM filings

Leadership
Top 10 International SEIU Leaders & Staff (by Salary)
Name Title   Total Compensation
Andrew Stern   International President     $ 249,599
Anna Burger   Intl Secretary Treasurer     $ 221,886
Gerald Hudson   Ex Vice President     $ 220,984
Mary Kay Henry   Ex Vice President     $ 209,443
Eliseo V Medina   Ex Vice President     $ 203,623
Tom Woodruff   Ex Vice President     $ 203,436
Dimitrios Philliou   Local Union Org Dir     $ 174,791
George Francisco Jr   F&o Int'l President     $ 174,295
James Johnston Jr.   2004 Election State Coord     $ 170,606
Gina Glantz   Atp/strat Issues Pol Act     $ 169,645
[show all officers & salaries]

Source: Department of Labor, Office of Labor Management Standards LM filings
UnionFacts.com is committed to 100% accuracy. Please contact us with factual corrections & comments.

Political Money

Political Action Committees (PAC)
Unions typically use PACs to make "hard money" contributions to specific candidates they support. Each PAC can donate up to $5,000 per candidate per election. PACs are highly regulated under the Federal Election Commission.

Featured PAC: SERVICE EMPLOYEES INTERNATIONAL UNION COMMITTEE ON POLITICAL EDUCATION (SEIU COPE)
Total Given: $ 5,259,205


Other Affiliated PACs
TAKE BACK AMERICA SERVICE EMPLOYEES INTERNATIONAL UNION $ 907,751 

Source: 2003-2004 Federal Election Commission PAC data.


527 Money
In most cases, unions use 527 organizations to make unlimited "soft money" donations to campaigns or candidates they support. Unlike PACs, 527 organiztions do not coordinate with specific candidates, and as a result, are not regulated by the Federal Election Commission.

Total Affiliated 527 Receipts:  $ 50,594,591
Total Affiliated 527 Disbursements:  $ 53,872,198
[show all funds]
Source: Internal Revenue Service 527 electronic form 8872 filings

Lobbying Money
Unions often employ lobbyists to influence legislation in their favor. The amount below represents total lobbying expenditures reported to the Senate. It does not represent the total amount spent lobbying federal, state, and local officials.

Total Senate Lobbying Expenditures: $ 3,454,687
(from 1998 to 2005)
[show all lobbying expenditures]

Source: Senate Lobbying Disclosure Records

Unfair Labor Practices

The National Labor Relations Board investigates instances of union violations of the National Labor Relations Act and other labor laws. Unfair Labor Practices include instances of bad faith bargaining, excessive dues, violence, threats and many other violations.


Unionization Elections
The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) oversees union representation elections, or "R Cases." To call an election, 30 percent of affected employees are required to sign a petition for an election. Elections can be used to both certify and decertify union representation. Increasingly, unions are avoiding the NLRB election process, instead opting for "Card Check" unionization.

Decertification Elections
Union members unhappy with their current union can opt to decertify it as their exclusive bargaining representative. These are known as "RD" cases.

Decertification Petitions Filed: 504
[see decertifications]

Source: National Labor Relations Board's Case Activity Tracking (CATS) database

Elections Records
Despite the commonly held belief that most workers would like to join a union, union representation elections—also known as "RC Cases"—often fail.

Certification Elections since 2000