History of the CWA
The organization of the Communications Workers of America (CWA) in 1947
was the culmination of nearly a half-century of struggle for telephone
unionism. Until the middle 1890s there was very little union activity
among telephone workers. In 1898 the International Brotherhood of Electrical
Workers (IBEW) began to try to organize some of the telephone linemen
and cable splicers. Numerous strikes by the IBEW in the 1910s were
unsuccessful as the Bell Telephone Company used its monopolistic control
over the industry to defeat telephone unionism. However, during these
years there was an upsurge of union membership among telephone operators
mostly centered in Boston. A joint organizing campaign by the IBEW
and Women's Trade Union League was very successful and won major concessions
in 1914-1915. However, after a failed strike in 1919, the Bell Company
began to aggressively promote company unions and aggressively fought
all organizing drives.
Telephone unions found that it was very difficult to organize an industry
in which the Bell Company had monopolistic control and almost unlimited
resources. The company took advantage of the fact that telephone workers
were geographically dispersed and the conversion to dial telephones made
the system less vulnerable to labor slowdowns. Bell's hiring practices
assured that the vast majority of telephone workers were relatively highly
educated, native born Caucasians who were well spoken in English. Telephone
operators were predominately young women who tended to work for only
a few years before marrying and having families. These workforce demographics
made union organizing difficult.
The passage of the Wagner Act in 1936, which removed all the legal barriers
to industrial union organization, reinvigorated the campaign for telephone
unionism. However, progress was slow as telephone workers were for the
most part insulated from the worst effects of the Great Depression. The
Bell Company's response to the Wagner Act that outlawed company unions
was to transform them into so-called independent labor organizations
(non AFL or CIO) that could claim to be in compliance with national labor
laws. During the early CIO years from 1937 through 1942 union organizing
proceeded slowly in the telephone industry. The focus was on amalgamating
the various local unions that were plant, craft, or district based into
a national federation.
In 1939 the National Federation of Telephone Workers (NFTW) was formed
but this organization was weak and decentralized. Stagnant wages and
deteriorating working conditions during World War II stimulated telephone
worker solidarity and union amalgamation. When Joseph A. Beirne was elected
President of NFTW in 1943 the union began a full-scale organizing campaign.
In 1946 there was a nation wide strike that led to the first national
agreement with the American Telephone and Telegraph Company (AT & T).
However, recognizing the weakness of the NFTW structure AT & T forced
another strike in 1947. When this strike collapsed the NFTW structure
fell apart and the CWA was born.
During the next twenty-five years the CWA under the leadership of Joseph
A. Beirne moved aggressively to organize all the telephone workers in
the United States. AT & T with its monopolistic control resisted.
It was, however, not until 1974 after years of labor-management unrest
and a series of strikes that AT&T agreed to system wide collective
bargaining. Shortly after the national contract was signed Joseph A.
Beirne died and was replaced as President by Secretary-Treasurer Glenn
E. Watts.
In the 1980s the CWA began to expand beyond telecommunications creating
a Public Employees Department that successfully organized 34,000 New
Jersey state workers in 1981. In 1985 Morton Bahr became the CWA President.
In 1987 the CWA merged with the International Typographical Workers
Union. In 1992 it absorbed the National Association of Broadcast
Employees and
the Newspaper Guild merged with the CWA. Today the CWA is one of the
United States' strongest unions with more than 600,000 members.
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CWA's Mission Statement
* Improve the standard of living for our current and future members;
* Organize new workers into the union to bring the
benefits of collective bargaining to the unorganized;
* Reaffirm our commitment to universal service so that all
Americans have equal access to the information highway;
* Educate our members to vote in their own best interests
and to build community coalitions at the national and local
levels to support workers' rights.
--from President
Morton Bahr's
Opening Address
at CWA's 56th Annual Convention
June 13, 1994
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