A less perfect union
At a time when organized labor is slipping, SEIU's national leaders are wasting their resources trying to discredit Sal Rosselli


Sal Rosselli
Photo by Charles Russo

jesse@sfbg.com

By nearly every measure, the Service Employees International Union has become a juggernaut. As the rest of organized labor has seen its share of the American workforce continue to dwindle, SEIU has brought in some 800,000 new dues-paying members in recent years. With the Democratic Party taking over Congress in 2006, the 1.9 million-member organization, rich with campaign funds, wields enormous political clout, and it will only become more formidable if Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama wins the White House in November.

But all is not well inside the labor giant. Andy Stern, the union's president, has pushed hard for merging and consolidating local chapters into larger operations — and many SEIU members, especially here on the West Coast, say that's turning the union into a top-down autocracy in which Stern loyalists wield undue influence and meddling officials from Washington, DC squelch dissent.

A D V E R T I S E M E N T


And now, the Guardian has learned, Stern operatives are using their money and organizing clout in a hard-hitting campaign — not to force an employer to the table or to toss out an anti-union politician, but to discredit another labor leader.

The campaign is part of a bruising power struggle between Stern and dissident local leader Sal Rosselli, who runs the Oakland-based SEIU affiliate United Health Care Workers West. In the past few months, union insiders say, SEIU officials, including a senior assistant to Stern, set up what one leader called a "skunk team" to undermine Rosselli's efforts at winning key union delegate elections. At one point, the team — which involved a political consulting firm linked to big downtown businesses — discussed an opposition research file compiled on Rosselli by a health-care giant his union was fighting

And leading up to the delegate elections last month, SEIU staffers worked to promote Stern-supporting candidates, possibly in violation of union rules, while actively discouraging other union employees from campaigning. That's led to a formal complaint alleging improper involvement by Stern's staff in a local union election.

EMERGING TENSIONS

In 2005, Thomas Dewar went to work as a press secretary at Local 790, formerly SEIU's biggest San Francisco outlet, which represented approximately 30,000 workers, most of them public employees. Local 790 was among the most politically progressive union shops in the country, supporting left-leaning candidates for office and progressive causes like public power. In early 2007, Andy Stern initiated a merger of 790 with nine other regional locals. The move was part of a larger consolidation in the state that saw the number of California union affiliates reduced by nearly half.

The new Northern California superlocal was dubbed 1021, as in "10 to one." Local 1021 has continued 790's liberal activism. But right after the merger was finalized, Dewar and other sources told the Guardian, the atmosphere around the union changed for the worse.

"A lot of members had anxiety," Dewar recounted. Most troubling, he said, was the insertion of Stern ...

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( 3 comments | Comment on this article )
Mamaof3gs on Wednesday, April 9, 2008 at 09:23 AM
Here's a message to all those in 1021. Your fellow brothers and sisters in 521 and 721 are feeling the same way you are! This whole reorganizing to form 3 larger locals was nothing but another way for the big guys to get more members then screw us at the same time.
timfox on Thursday, April 10, 2008 at 05:08 PM
It's sad that the touted reason for the consolidation of local unions was to build workplace and political power for the represented workers. In SF that has translated into indifference with the gutting of public health jobs, the closing inpatient and outpatient services in DPH and the downsize of Laguna Honda. None of the leadership for SEIU 1021 lives in SF. Mr Dewar sells his principles, then seeks redemption by double crossing Stern. This is the same Josie Mooney that wanted to be a SF supervisor or board of education member, but was too disorganized to file on time because she was off in China spending member dues money. It's indeed reassuring that when members are losing their jobs, union brass are dining high on the member dues, with historical anti-union, anti-worker lobbyists, as they decide which one of their ilk will control the union treasury. It's easy to see where the antiunion sentiment among members has it's base. Rosselli and Stern are cut from the same cloth. Valdez, Oscherwitz, Tamura are hacks that owe their paycheck and pension to Stern and his organization. As long as Kinchley gets his stipend and a tick to San Juan, paid by union dues he's on board.
laborforce on Thursday, April 10, 2008 at 08:21 PM
My name is Roberto Alvarez, I am a surgical technologists and work at Kaiser Permanente Bellflower also I am an Executive Board Member from UHW. This article demonstrates one of the most despicable acts from a group of people that should represent honesty, trueness, transparency and up hold to the highest standard the position of Executive Board of the SEIU International Union.

It is a violation of the oath they pledged to the office they were given by the workers of this union, "Do not wrong a member or see a member wrong if is in my power to prevent it". Expending the union dues in a "skunk campaign against Sal Roselli', is a fiduciary breach of union constitution and bylaws and other members of the international executive board should demand an investigation and an explanation of Andy Stern's "Skunk team" acts and hold them accountable to the principles and values of the international code of conduct, if they truly represent the workers that elected them to this high office.

Workers from SEIU, the ones that pay these people's salary, have to hold them accountable from the leadership position these persons has made a sham of it and demand an investigation in the mismanagement of the union resources and these antiunion activities.

Workers chose to align with SEIU because they see a brighter future uniting forces with other workers. And this misrepresentation from a few "so call leaders" should not stop them from doing so because justice will be serve and the true will prevail. I demand a true investigation of the "Skunk team" and challenge the International Executive Board of SEIU to conduct an exhausted investigation and hold accountable the people that was involved.

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