robnokshus06 said:
I've been watching the union debate taking place in state houses across the country. This debate further illustrates the importance of getting what you want UP FRONT and in writing. I feel for many of these union workers who negotiated in good faith, put off immediate monetary reward in exchange for deferred pension benefits, only to have their employers renege on that promise. Not trying to be political, but it is a perfect example to get what you want/need NOW.
I watch the "union debate" with much personal interest. I used to live in Indiana and have spent some time in the gallery there during General Assembly and participated (with testimony) at some committee hearings. I am just amazed at the change in the political atmosphere in that state in the last 30 - 40 years.
I have children in Wisconsin
so I gulp in the whole enchilada on that fight. I'll be glad when it finally settles down and gives birth to something. I am currently addicted to cable TV channels on that one and my studio work and other personal interests are being neglected.
No matter what a person's politics may be, it is instructive to take a look at the sea-change in the United Auto Workers union in recent years. As the American auto industry teetered on the edge of implosion, the president of the union made some of his members angry but he took off his jacket, rolled up his sleeves, and sat down with the manufacturers as said: It looks like were in this together. Let's figure out what labor needs to do to save YOU and save OURSELVES.
Radio people as a whole do NOT have an organization to front the struggle. The radio industry has changed in the last 40 years as rapidly and an radically as the automobile business has. Like the computer programmer work and like a lot of people in architecture, there is no longer a lifestyle available where you go to work with the right company and you put in a career. Some of you who participate in this forum had RADIO JOBS back in the heyday of a previous kind of radio. You can survive and succeed particularly if you developed good contacts during those days which gives you a "foot in the door" of many opportunities. What is lacking is a good pantry full of knowledge to pass along to the younger folks who are trying to build a business of voice-overs and production but never worked with any of the people currently working on the buyer side of the transaction. Besides learning good voice technique and learning good studio technical skills, these people are having to "hack a trail through the forest" of today's industry just like Daniel Boone heading over the Appalachians the first time. There are few or no trail markers. (Would Daniel Boone call the thru-hikers on the AT a bunch of sissies? ;D ).
The union people had the union managing their retirement funding for them. If you work for a large company you will find your H.R. Department pulling together a good vehicle to haul your retirement savings (401k, etc) for you. If you are young and you are going to hack your way through self employment and semi-self employment and some employment from time to time at radio stations,
nobody is hauling your retirement! If you could look over my shoulder as I go on line to monitor my own funds, you would understand why I somewhat SHOUTED that last phrase.
By the way, I appreciate the kind words about my posts. When I get something close to an equal number of kind words to match those who attempt to "verbally skin me alive" I assume I am close to staying on the marked trail. I hope to run into D. Boone one of these days on the trail.