Why labor and environmental movements split—and how
they can come back together
Unions and greens have
had a very public divorce—but rethinking their relationship is now more
critical than ever.
Neither the labor
movement nor the environmental movement has the power that it did four decades
ago.
Economic instability and
the rise of conservative politics have undermined public support for
environmentalism while making successful unionization efforts hard to achieve.
Looking back on the
1960s and early 1970s, when both movements were at or near historic heights of
public support and political success, shows how these two great movements once
worked together on many issues and how that has become harder over the years.
Moreover, as the nation
fights an unprecedented attack from right-wing forces that threaten our basic
freedoms, both the labor and environmental movements provide critical
organizing to preserve the best of our democracy.
If they are fighting amongst themselves, it makes a full-throated effort to turn out progressive voters for the midterm elections this fall all the more difficult.
If they are fighting amongst themselves, it makes a full-throated effort to turn out progressive voters for the midterm elections this fall all the more difficult.
Rethinking the
relationship between the labor and environmental movements is critical for both
unionists and greens as they mutually struggle for power in this
corporate-dominated era.
Workplaces of the
mid-twentieth century faced multiple environmental problems, with pollution,
toxic emissions, and unsafe plant conditions.
Steel mills were hot and
filled with molten metal. Paint workers breathed in toxic fumes. Workers in all
sorts of industries dealt with the thousands of new industrial chemicals
developed each year — employers provided no information about health hazards or
even what they were.
Unions and
environmentalists found ways to come together to fight together for a safer,
greener world, including at the workplace.
The most famous example
of this was the Oil, Chemical, and Atomic Workers (OCAW), whose leadership
crafted alliances with greens.
OCAW president Al
Grospiron said, "Organized Labor must emphatically support environmental
efforts and must never get into the position of opposing such efforts on the
grounds of economic hardship. Our position must be that nearly all polluting
facilities can be corrected without hardships to the workers and that in those
few cases where corrections are not possible new job opportunities or
compensation must be provided for the workers."
That commitment paid off
when OCAW went on strike against Shell in 1973 and 11 of the nation's largest
environmental organizations declared a boycott against the company, urging
members to cut up their Shell credit cards.
Other unions engaged in
these alliances as well. The International Woodworkers of America supported
wilderness preservation to give its members a place to play in their free time
while green organizations assisted the union in trying to clean up the toxic
workplaces that impacted its members.
In steel, auto, and
other industries, workers and greens found places where they could ally.
Both movements share
some blame
That world has
disappeared. Today, environmentalists and labor are often seen as enemies.
The Keystone XL
Pipeline, supported by the Laborers and other building trade unions for
creating jobs but strongly opposed by environmental organizations for
channeling dirty, climate-altering Canadian tar sands oil to processing
facilities on the Gulf of Mexico, is but one example of this problem.
Environmentalists often
seen unions as reactionary conservatives holding on to a disappearing
industrial past while unions seen greens as elites who don't care about jobs.
There is a bit of truth in each perspective.
This split happened for
reasons perhaps out of either movement's control: structural shifts in the
economy beginning in the 1970s that moved the nation toward financial
capitalism and the outsourcing of industrial labor overseas.
The recessions of that
decade only put greater pressure on workers to make a living while the
union-busting and anti-environmentalism of the Reagan administration put both
movements on the defensive.
Soon, employers
threatened to shutter factories if environmental regulations passed, cleaving
the tentative alliance between the two movements. Worker support for clean
workplaces rested on the belief that factories would stay open and the economy
would continue to grow.
Once that world
radically changed, workers put the fear of job loss over the desire for a clean
workplace and natural world.
At the same time, both
movements deserve blame for these unfortunate tensions. By the 1980s,
environmentalists moved into the courts to protect their gains of the past two
decades, prioritizing fundraising over grassroots alliance-building.
As environmentalists
became more reliant on big donors, they largely became indifferent to the lived
experience of working Americans. The open hostility of many environmentalists
to loggers in the Pacific Northwest during the battles over the spotted owl
continues to resonate in that region today.
Greens have also failed
to articulate what the green economy would look like for the working class.
After all, a green capitalist is still a capitalist, who wants to profit off
paying workers as little as possible.
Meanwhile, while some unions have become strong progressive allies on many issues, the building trades' open hostility to environmentalism gives the entire union movement a bad name.
Meanwhile, while some unions have become strong progressive allies on many issues, the building trades' open hostility to environmentalism gives the entire union movement a bad name.
The aggressive hostility
of union leaders such as Laborers' president Terry O'Sullivan on Keystone to
those seeking to protect the planet makes progressive allies feel unions do not
stand with them.
Re-building the
relationship
Rebuilding this
relationship is crucial for both movements.
Unions need to do more
proactive work to reach out to environmentalists and support green policies,
even if at times they might cost some jobs. We cannot expect unions directly
affected by a given project to not advocate for members' jobs, but we can expect
other unions to argue that their own members have a vested interest in a clean
environment.
The large public sector
unions could do much more to build relationships with environmentalists that
would pay off by green support down the road. Unions themselves desperately
need support from other progressive movements.
Meanwhile,
environmentalists must do much more to embrace an agenda of cleaning up the
environment affected by working people, both at work and in their homes.
They need to demand that the green economy include union jobs, that the government invest in the cleaning of toxic landscapes with work that pays a living wage, and that regional economic planning for a sustainable world lifts people and regions out of poverty.
They need to demand that the green economy include union jobs, that the government invest in the cleaning of toxic landscapes with work that pays a living wage, and that regional economic planning for a sustainable world lifts people and regions out of poverty.
Don't just tell miners
that nothing will replace coal— offer something to replace it.
So long as the labor and
environmental movements are at loggerheads, both will remain weaker than if
they can reestablish their alliances and forge together for a future based on
both ecologically sustainable work and living wages.
Erik Loomis is associate
professor of history at the University of Rhode Island. His latest book, A History of America in Ten Strikes,
will be published by The New Press in October.