HOW TO JOIN OR FORM A UNION
Working people from all walks of life join together in unions to obtain a voice at work. Union members have a say about pay, benefits, working conditions and how their jobs get done.
If you do not have a union at your job, find out more about how to form one. Today, more people are taking the step to form unions on the job than at any time in recent history. You can be one of them!
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Four steps to get you started. Check them out below.
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Contact a union organizer.
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Your Rights at Work
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Collective Bargaining
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Explore the Links Between Faith and Worker Justice
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Become an Organizer
STEP ONE: KNOW YOUR RIGHTS
Federal and state laws guarantee the right to form unions. Eligible employees have the right to express their views on unions, to talk with their co-workers about their interest in forming a union, to wear union buttons and to attend union meetings. (Supervisors and a few other types of employees customarily are excluded from coverage.)
Despite these laws, many employers strongly resist their employees’ efforts to gain a voice at work through unionization. So, before you start talking union where you work, get in touch with a union that will help you organize.
STEP TWO: FIND OUT WHICH UNION IS RIGHT FOR YOU
To form a union on the job, you need the backup and hands-on help from the union you are seeking to join. If you don’t already know which union is most able to help you, find out more about the unions affiliated with the AFL-CIO by visiting their websites. Many of these websites enable you to contact the right person there directly to help you form a union.
In communities across the country, the AFL-CIO has local and state councils where unions come together to work toward common goals. To find out about union activity in your community, contact us for more information. Staff members at these offices can put you in touch with a local union that is right for you.
STEP THREE: FIND OUT ABOUT WORKING AMERICA
If forming a union with your coworkers isn’t a real possibility for you, you can still be a part of the union movement by joining Working America, the AFL-CIO’s community affiliate for people who don’t have a union at work.
STEP FOUR: GET IN TOUCH WITH A UNION ORGANIZER
Union organizers assist employees in forming unions on the job to give them the same opportunity for a say at work, good wages and decent working conditions.
FIND OUT WHICH UNION IS RIGHT FOR YOU
The AFL-CIO is a federation of labor unions that are building power for workers in their industry or sector. The list below can help you find which union to contact.
Find links to our unions. If you are not sure which union to contact, we can help.
UNION |
INDUSTRIES REPRESENTED |
AFSCME | State, county and municipal employees |
AFT | Teachers; higher education, education support staff; education paraprofessionals |
AIR LINE PILOTS | Airline pilots ( Membership application ) |
AMALGAMATED TRANSIT UNION |
Metropolitan, interstate and school bus drivers; paratransit, light rail, subway, streetcar and ferry boat operators; mechanics and other maintenance workers; clerks, baggage handlers, municipal employees |
BAKERY, CONFECTIONERY, TOBACCO WORKERS AND GRAIN MILLERS |
Manufacturing/production; maintenance and sanitation in the bakery, confectionery, tobacco and grain milling industries in North America |
BOILERMAKERS | Construction, shipbuilding, railroad, manufacturing and mining industries throughout the United States and Canada Contact: https://www.boilermakers.org/organize |
BRICKLAYERS | Craftworkers in the trowel trades across the United States and Canada, including bricklayers, stone and marble masons, cement masons, plasterers, tilesetters, terrazzo and mosaic workers, and pointers, cleaners and caulkers Contact: snelms@bacweb.org; 202-383-3210 |
COMMUNICATIONS WORKERS OF AMERICA |
Telecommunications; broadcasting; cable TV; journalism; publishing; manufacturing; airlines; customer service |
ELECTRICAL WORKERS | Utilities; construction; telecommunications; broadcasting; manufacturing; railroads Contact: troyjohnson@ibew.org; 202-728-6280 |
INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF SHEET METAL, AIR, RAIL AND TRANSPORTATION WORKERS |
Sheet metal workers in the construction, manufacturing, service, railroad and shipyard industries; railway workers Contact: richardrossutu@msn.com; 708-446-6299 Contact: jwhite@smart-union.org; 717-579-3480 |
INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION OF PROFESSIONAL AND TECHNICAL ENGINEERS |
Professional, technical, administrative and associated occupations in the private and public sectors Contact: clangford@ifpte.org; 202-239-4880 |
IRONWORKERS | Ironworkers in building, bridge and industrial structures Contact: dgornewicz@iwintl.org; 202-383-4817 |
LABORERS | Building and construction trades workers :302-654-2880 |
MACHINISTS | Aerospace; transportation Contact: gmyers@iamaw.org; 301-967-4750 |
NABET/CWA | Broadcasting, telecasting, recording, cable, video and sound recording |
NATIONAL NURSES UNITED | Nursing and health care Contact: organizing@nationalnursesunited.org |
NATIONAL TAXI WORKERS ALLIANCE |
Taxi industry in New York City and other areas |
OPERATING ENGINEERS | Operating engineers—heavy equipment operators, mechanics and surveyors in the construction industry—and stationary engineers in maintenance and operations in building, industrial and service complexes |
PLUMBERS AND PIPEFITTERS |
Workers in the fabrication, installation and servicing of piping systems: 302-636-7400 |
THEATRICAL STAGE EMPLOYEES | Theatrical stage employees, including animation, motion picture and television production, stagehands, ticket sellers and animation Contact: ditolla@iatse-intl.com; 212-730-1770 |
TRANSPORT WORKERS | Railroad; gaming; airline; transit; utility, university |
UAW | Auto, aerospace and agricultural workers, graduate teaching assistants, writers |
UNITE HERE | Hotel; motel; gaming; food service; manufacturing; textile; laundry; airport Contact: ccarrera@unitehere.org |
UNITED FOOD AND COMMERCIAL WORKERS |
Grocery; retail; wholesale and department store workers; food and food processing; service, manufacturing and warehousing industries; chemical industry; poultry workers; marijuana and hemp workers Contact: estewart@ufcw.org; 202-466-1506 |
UNITED STEELWORKERS | Steel; glass and metal; oil refineries; chemical plants; pharmaceutical; rubber; paper; energy-saving wind turbines |
UNITED UNION OF ROOFERS AND WATERPROOFERS | Roofers; waterproofers Contact: gigr@unionroofers.com; 740-649-6578 |
UTILITY WORKERS | Workers in electric, gas, water and nuclear industries across the United States Contact: bobhouser@uwua.net; 888-843-8982 |
WRITER’S GUILD OF AMERICA, EAST |
Writers living east of the Mississippi River Contact: organizing@wgaeast.org; 212-767-7808 |