Not long for the DUmp world......
surprisingly he has made it to 19,000+ posts.
My one brief fleeting experience with the unions (IATSE, stage hands union) was a few years back when a few misguided fellow cast members at the Company I work thought the pyro department would be better off under a union so they did the card count thing but told us that signing the cards didn't indicate we wanted to join the union, just the cards were to show interest in the union coming on property and giving us their dog and pony show after which we would be able to vote yea or nay on becoming union members.
Turns out the union lied to us and the people who returned the signed cards were a simple majority (not hard to do in a department of 27 people) and the next thing we were having a meeting with the union where they told us that they now represented us and they were there to answer any questions we had about our new union. There was alot of push back from the majority of the dept, when asked what the union would do for us we were told make our lives easier (whatever the hell that meant, since we are treated very well by the Company) and when questioned about dues, they couldn't answer what our dues would be but said with the salary increase they would negotiate for us, the dues would be "revenue neutral" (which meant we would net 0 $$ increase since any raise would be absorbed by the dues).
After about an hour of hearing our objections to being railroaded into the union, the head union boss stood up and said "Well I've heard alot of words said today and frankly it's all water under the bridge. We represent you now and there's no backing out of it now". Wrong thing to say to a group of people who pride themselves on being professionals and who don't flinch at working long hours to get the job done. We pushed back, took it the NLRB who deposed several of us (myself included). The conclusion that the local NLRB office came to was that there was deception and fraud in the card count process and kicked our case to Washington DC, who took an interest and was going to hold a hearing with possible criminal charges against the union for deceptive practices. I was on my way into work one day when I got a call from my co-worker who filed the case with then NLRB and he said he had just received a call from the union boss who said that they had reviewed our "relationship" and didn't think it was in either partie's best interest to continue a relationship and that they wanted out of representing us. We fought the union and won.
Since then we hired a person who also works at Universal Studios. One day he mentioned that if we were interested in us being represented bu IATSE like they are at Universal Studios that he could put us in touch with their people. He was promptly told never to bring up the subject of unions in our department again.