How PATCO Crashed – But Why Unions Don’t Have To


Posted on 10 July 2012

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By Madeline Janis

Much has been said in recent months about the labor movement’s “impending decline,” with the right wing’s unrelenting attacks against collective bargaining rights in states across the country, from Arizona to Wisconsin to New Jersey.  California is facing its own version of this attack with the qualification of the Paycheck Deception initiative for the November 2012 ballot that would dramatically curtail working people’s ability to participate in politics in the state.

Many people in the modern progressive movement date the beginning of these assaults to Ronald Reagan’s 1981 decision to fire 12,000 air traffic controllers after their union, PATCO, went on strike and shut down the nation’s airports. President Reagan’s decision to permanently fire (and prohibit any rehire of) all the controllers destroyed PATCO and served as the starting-pistol shot for three decades of attacks on the right to collective bargaining, that continue today.

A fascinating new book by pro-labor Georgetown University historian Joseph McCartin, Collision Course: Ronald Reagan, the Air Traffic Controllers, and the Strike that Changed America, reminds us that no tragedy is inevitable and that even the most virulent, powerful and overwhelming attack against workers and unions does not have to result in defeat. Workers — and especially their leaders — have a big role to play in the final result. Strategic thinking, flexibility, willingness to both stick it out, and to compromise, depending on the circumstances, are all key ingredients to any result.

In 1981 PATCO controllers struck at every U.S. airport after nearly 20 frustrating years of unrelenting pressures from their employer, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to speed up their work – even as airline traffic grew by leaps and bounds. Federal law at the time recognized the controllers’ right to form a union, but denied those workers the ability to bargain for such bread-and-butter issues as pay and benefits. The union could represent the workers in disputes over safety and some working conditions, but nothing else. This led to enormous frustration over the years and the ultimate decision to go out on strike very early in the first term of the Reagan presidency.

But McCartin’s book reminds us that the strike and the subsequent firing of the controllers and destruction of their union was not – by any means – unavoidable. It’s helpful to remember that President Reagan was not initially set against PATCO or even opposed to the expansion of collective bargaining rights for the controllers. In fact, after positive discussions during the Reagan–Carter campaign of 1980 between Reagan and the controllers, the PATCO leadership endorsed Reagan, despite the pushback from most other unions and the AFL-CIO.

Unfortunately, a leadership struggle within the union led to the subsequent firing of the union president and the election of more militant but inexperienced officers who were determined to go on strike no matter what. So, when the Reagan administration made a surprisingly robust contract offer to the controllers, the PATCO leadership made the ill-fated decision to halfheartedly present it to the membership, and then to embark on the long-planned, but illegal strike. PATCO’S leadership – and much of the membership — was simply hell-bent on showing the FAA that the country’s air travel system could not function without it.

McCartin’s beautifully written book – based on more than 10 years of research – was published after all of the key protagonists in the 1981 strike had passed away. The book reminds us that arrogance – even when based on good intentions – can lead us down the pathway to destruction. And even when the odds are against us – unions can survive and flourish if their leaders are willing to be open-minded and flexible as well as strong and determined.

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Madeline Janis is co-founder of the Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy and serves as its National Policy Director. She is also a Senior Fellow at the UCLA School of Public Affairs and led the historic campaign to pass L.A.’s living wage ordinance, which has since become a national model. This article originally appeared on the Frying Pan.

There are two different labor movements and I think people in the media often don't get this. The first component is public unions that are employed by the government.

The public unions are not in a competitive environment. Afterall, the public doesn't have the choice between different federal governments. There is only one. The same cannot be said about the states, however. People do have a choice of state governments. You don't like the California goverment? Then go to Texas.

The second aspect of public unions is that the unions can, and do, use their influence to affect elections. In effect, the public union can determine who they are negotiating with. Because of the non-competitive nature of their employer and their ability to influence their negotiators, public unions are in a favorable situation. And, this has resulted in agreements with state governments that are very, very generous. It has only been recently with cities going bankrupt and state taxes going out of sight that there has been some pushback from the electorate.

Non-public unions deal with companies that are generally in the competitive marketplace. A good example is the UAW. As powerful as the UAW may be, in the end, if they achieve contracts that are too generous or if their employee quality standards are too low, than the marketplace will take the company down. This is, of course, exactly what happened to the UAW. All of the companies that they provide labor for have lost significant market share. And, this has lowered UAW membership.

The real doom of unions is competition. The more competition, the more of a detriment that a union becomes. Thus, autos, steel, etc. all have been reduced because of this.

Ms. Janis waits until the next to last paragraph to make a passing reference to the fact the PATCO strike was, in fact, illegal per Federal law. That is why the air traffic controllers were fired.