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At the outset of Labor Day weekend a worker prepared to end his shift at the Trafton Science Center construction site at Minnesota State University.
Pat Christman


Published September 01, 2007 11:39 pm - To some, Labor Day caries a meaning beyond cookouts and the end of summer.

Labor Day: The holiday of work
Union officials see it as celebration of middle class

By Brian Ojanpa
Free Press Staff Writer

MANKATO

Ask 100 people the meaning of Labor Day and they’re apt to return blank stares.

Conventional wisdom says it’s about beer, brats on the grill, and a holiday marking summer’s swan song.

All that is true, but Paul Marquardt has a more authentic take, as befits a labor union official.

“I’d like people to think of the struggles that our grandparents and great-grandparents endured to create a middle class in this country,” says the local AFL-CIO president.

“Without unions, we wouldn’t have a middle class in this country. You’d have the rich, and you’d have the poor.”

What many American workers take for granted — the 40-hour work week, unemployment insurance, pensions and workman’s compensation — are the fruits of a 19th century labor movement that led to a federal designation:

The first Monday each September shall be set aside to celebrate the workingman and the social and economic achievements of American workers.

“People should take the day to reflect and be proud of what they do. Without the union movement, we’d all be working longer hours for less pay and less fringe benefits,” says Mark Maguet, business agent for Electricians Local 243, which has 980 members in southern Minnesota.

Some say those conditions are filtering back into the American workplace.

Marquardt, for one, sees a lot of similarities now between employers, immigrant workers, and the exploitive working conditions that spawned most of our nation’s labor laws in the 1930s.

“It’s basically 1938 all over again,” he says. “And we have corporate America shipping our jobs to communist countries. We’re supposed to feel good about it?”

John Nowak, area field agent for United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, says the current issue of Hispanic rights in the workplace hearkens to earlier eras when immigrant workers proliferated.

“Every 30 to 50 years you’re fighting the same battles we did early in our history,” Nowak says.

If union polemics such as these carry a note of defensiveness these days, it’s because unions’ once-strong grip has loosened in the decades since their high-water mark in the late 1970s.

The power of union-aversive corporations, plus the missteps of unions themselves, have kept unions treading water.



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