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From the November - December
2008 issue of Union Democracy Review #176
IAM Local 2339N: Nasty aftermath to a Trusteeship
If you have confidence in the report
of an investigating committee assigned by the international office of
the Machinists union, and there are people with that kind of confidence,
you would agree that there were substantial grounds for imposing an international
trusteeship over Local 2339N, the union which represents airline stewards
in Newark, NJ. However, what followed thereafter is another story: the
heavy hand of the IAM overlords at work.
After open hearings, the investigating committee (official
title: "trial committee") reported that the local was in disarray:
the top officers had resigned, the books were messy, mail not picked up,
bills paid late, no newsletter, and more, including the now familiar charge
of pornography on computers. (The IAM seems to be keeping a fascinated
eagle eye out for pornography. It's not clear whether the trial committee
actually verified the charge by a close scrutiny of the computer contents.)
And so on October 10, International President R.Thomas Buffenbarger dispatched
a trustee to take over. So far, a normal kind of trusteeship. But then
things got IAM-normally nasty.
A year ago, in November 2007, Bob Korzuch, an IAM
member for 16 years and Local 2339N president back in 2005, had opened
what he called a "campaign" website. On November 4, 2008, about
three weeks after the trustee showed up, Korzuch formally announced that
he was a candidate for international president against Buffenbarger. The
ax fell swiftly. On November 24, Korzuch received a short (22 lines) certified
letter from Warren L. Mart, IAM General Secretary Treasurer.
Mart informed Korzuch that an IAM auditor had reported
that, back then, when Korzuch had been local president, the books revealed
a "shortage" of $24,114.72, and that "in order to secure
and preserve the remaining assets of the lodge, you are hereby permanently
disqualified from holding any office or representing members of the IAM
in any capacity
." If Korzuch objected, he could ask for a hearing
before a representative appointed by Mart who obviously had already passed
sentence.
As an explanation or justification of the swift draconian
fall of the guillotine, Mart's letter makes no sense. Korzuch had been
defeated for local president back in 2005; no one had detected any old
"shortage," whatever it may have been, in those three years.
Moreover, he no longer had control over local money, so that peremptory
disqualification to "preserve the remaining assets" was an absurdity.
There was plenty of time for leisurely due process, charges, trial, and
sentence.
But there is another possible explanation: The process
of electing IAM international officers begins on January 1, 2009. The
IAM obviously had to act promptly if it wanted to stop Korzuch from campaigning
for international president against the administration. Only in that context
does Mart's letter make sense.
The IAM elects international officers by direct membership
vote. To be eligible for a spot on the final ballot, candidates must be
nominated by a least 25 locals; the two who receive most nominations are
submitted for vote at membership meetings. Local nomination meetings begin
in January 2009. The IAM had no time to fool around with extended due
process. To keep Korzuch from exercising his LMRDA right to campaign,
he had to be disqualified quickly.
The IAM is not scrupulous about providing due process.
UDR readers may remember its report that negotiations for unification
of the IAM and the United Auto Workers fell through because, according
to the UAW, the IAM would not tolerate the existence of the impartial
UAW Public Review Board. In this case, Korzuch was found guilty and punished
without formal charges or trial. Already sentenced, he asks for an impartial
judge to hear his appeal, not an appointee of Mart, the official who had
pronounced him guilty without trial.
Korzuch has never seen the auditor's report which
allegedly accuses him. To prepare a defense, Korzuch asks for a copy and
time to study it. Secretary Mart, evading the substance of the request,
agrees only to make relevant documents available for "review,"
and only "immediately prior to the hearing.."
Articles on the IAM: IAM election needless. All 20 officers
coast in
IAM Maine
shipyard local reminds us: It's hard to resist a repressive trusteeship
Relentless
attack on democracy in the Machinists Union
IAM
Local 2339N: Nasty aftermath to a Trusteeship
Maine
shipbuilders protest vs. IAM trusteeship
Court to IAM:
Inform members of their rights
U.S. Appeals Court says:
Let your people know!
Update:
Still Subverting Union Democracy in 2005
SHORTS:
photocopying hiring hall records, longshore reform victory, peace pipe
for SEIU and CNA? and more.
Links
to IAM member websites
back
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Previous Article: Free
Speech in the SEIU and MEBA?
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Staff Unionism Advance the Cause of Union Democracy?
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