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Statement on Annual BLS Union Membership Report
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 27, 2012

CONTACT:
Zoe Bridges-Curry
(202) 822-2127 x122
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Washington, D.C. – In stark contrast to the decline in union membership in recent years, union membership levels held steady at 11.8 percent in 2011, falling a mere 0.1 percentage compared to 2010.

Though cash-strapped state and local governments cut jobs, the percentage of public sector workers in unions increased from 36.2 percent to 37.0 percent. In other words, the loss of public sector non-union jobs occurred at a higher rate than the loss of union jobs. Employment loss in the public sector was offset by gains in the private sector, where union membership stayed at 6.9 percent with an increase of 110,000 union members. The construction industry, which experienced one of the greatest drops in unionization in 2010, saw 73,000 union members added in 2011—the largest net gain for any industry.
 
Following the release of the Bureau of Labor Statistics report on union membership, American Rights at Work Executive Director Kimberly Freeman Brown issued this statement:

“The 99 percent can take heart in today’s numbers—a welcome change from recent years.

“Despite the egregious attacks on public sector workers, the continuous assault on collective bargaining from politicians at every level of government, and the obstacles workers still face when they try to join together in a union, Americans are holding their ground.

“Jobs are finally coming back, and with them, an increased number of workers with access to fair pay, decent benefits, and a voice on the job. Many of these new union jobs are a direct result of unions working together with their employers to weather the economic storm. For instance, as the auto industry rebounded, GM and the UAW collaborated to restore production and good, American jobs. 

“That’s not to say we don’t have more work to do. Millions of Americans are still out of work, even more are struggling to make ends meet, and workers are still under attack in statehouses nationwide. At the same time, unscrupulous companies continue to squeeze their employees and lower job standards, furthering the erosion of the middle class.

“But if we’ve learned anything this year, it’s that voters support workers’ right to a voice on the job through their union—as a path to economic security for their families, a boon to their communities, and a much-needed counterbalance to the unbridled influence of the 1 percent. And when legislators attempt to strip away that right, they pay the price at the ballot box.”

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