Isn't that the station where the response of management was to reduce the staff size considerably? You can't tell me that management did not know that a union vote was coming, so this looks to be a response to avoiding increased costs and regulations due to a union "agreement".Just last week, WFMT announcers voted to join AFTRA. The point of the union is to be united. It doesn't have the strength to negotiate if employees aren't united.
There are so many instances in radio where unions have done nothing but perpetuate over-staffing that I am inherently skeptical of the "benefits" that are achieved under most agreements.
My example of "over-staffing" lies in the multitude of stations required to have a union board op when the format and the technology did not require one... and having one just made the operation less dynamic and agile.
At a station in LA in the 70's, I showed up for a "surprise visit" on a Sunday. I was going to meet the PD in the parking lot and go to get a meal together. But I arrived a bit early, and was surprised to see a big cable extending from the studio exit door to a car in the parking lot. When I went in, the union board op was not there, but the mike would be opened and close and carts triggered.
At the other end of the cable, the board op was working under his car in the parking lot. He had rigged up a long remote control and was "running the board" from under his car. When the PD arrived, I was told to ignore it as a complaint might trigger a union work stoppage or fabricated grievance.
In factories, large warehouses, mines, oil fields, ports, major retail companies and the like unions give a voice to big groups of people who could never negotiate on their own. In radio, in most cases, unions make management harder and less productive.