What is a Union?

Many people don’t understand what a union is, what it does, or how your work environment could change with a union. That leads to a lot of misconceptions and opportunities for outsiders to mischaracterize the facts.

The truth is that a union is a business

That means a union’s top priority is signing up new members so they can start paying fees and dues.

Unions Need Members & Money

Today, under 6 percent of workers like you in the private sector belong to a union. That means over 94 percent have no union representation and work directly with their employers.

If unions could do everything that they promise, wouldn’t those numbers be flipped?

Source: Department of Labor

Unions want your money and will often do whatever it takes to get new members to sign up. This sometimes includes making misleading statements or mischaracterizing the facts.

What Unions Can and Cannot Do

Unions CAN
Unions CANNOT

If you vote at a location other than your designated voting location, your ballot will be challenged. This does not mean that your vote won’t count – it just means that your ballot will be placed in a special envelope before being put into the ballot box. After the polls close, but before the votes are counted, the NLRB will confirm that you were an eligible voter and that you did not vote multiple times.

If you voted at only one polling location, even if it was not your assigned polling location, your ballot will be opened and counted. It will be mixed together with the other ballots so that your vote will still be completely secret.