Employers Group

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The Employers Group is a nonprofit association of employers based in Los Angeles, California. Founded in 1893 as the Merchants Association, the organization's initial goal was to secure the open shop in all workplaces in the city.[1][2][3] In the latter half of the 20th century, the organization became a human resources consulting firm. In 1993, the Merchants and Manufacturers Association merged with the Federated Group of San Francisco to create the Employers Group. The organization's current president and chief executive officer is Mark Wilbur.

Contents

[edit] Formation and early history

Employers Group was founded in 1893 in Los Angeles as the Merchants Association. Its goal was to promote local products, and manufacturing companies, railroads, shipping companies, department stores, breweries and food markets were some of its charter members. One of its most prominent members was the Los Angeles Times.[4][5]

The association launched a number of civic projects early in its history. In 1897, it created the annual Fiesta de las Flores to promote locally produced goods and services. The festival eventually merged with the Tournament of Roses Parade in Pasadena, California.[5][6]

[edit] The open shop battle

M&M's focus over its first three decades was primarily on industrial relations. The Merchants Association had acted primarily as a promoter of local industry. But when Harrison Gray Otis, publisher of the Los Angeles Times, joined the body in 1896, the association underwent a transformation. It adopted a new name (the Merchants and Manufacturers Association, or M&M), and began vehemently promoting the open shop.[7] The nascent labor movement in Los Angeles collapsed, and Los Angeles remained largely union-free until the 1930s.[1][2]

On October 1, 1910, a bomb exploded at a printing plant owned by the Times. Twenty-one workers were killed in the fire which followed. Otis declared the bombing the "Crime of the Century" and used his newspaper's large circulation to whip up public sentiment against unions. A second bombing at an iron works in the city on Christmas Day worsened the hysteria in the city. The M&M contributed $50,000 ($1.1 million in 2007 dollars) to a city effort to hire private detectives to track down the perpetrators. In April 1911, Ortie McManigal, a staff representative with the International Association of Bridge and Structural Iron Workers, was apprehended by private detectives in Illinois. McManigal confessed to bombing the iron works and implicated the union's national secretary-treasurer, James B. McNamara, and his brother, John J. McNamara, in the Times bombing.[2]

The American Federation of Labor (AFL), Eugene Debs and others rallied to the defense of The McNamara Brothers. The brothers were defended in court by famed attorney Clarence Darrow. Darrow was increasingly skeptical of the chance for an acquittal. Darrow attempted to arrange a plea bargain. The state of California was on the verge of accepting the plea bargain when Darrow was arrested for attempting to bribe a member of the jury. The state rejected the plea. James McNamara was sentenced to life, and died in San Quentin State Prison of cancer in 1941. His brother John McNamara served seven years, and died a few months after his brother of a heart attack in Butte, Montana.[2] Darrow was tried for attempted bribery. The first trial ended in a mistrial, the second in a jury deadlock. The state dropped the charges against Darrow.[8]

In 1921, the Industrial Relations Committee of San Francisco formed to promote the open shop in San Francisco. In time, that organization changed its name to the "Federated Employers of the Bay Area" and merged with the M&M in 1993.

[edit] 1930s

In 1937, M&M was joined in the labor relations field by a new organization, Southern Californians, Inc. Sponsored by the Los Angeles Times, the group was led by Paul Shoup, a retired vice chairman of the Southern Pacific Railroad. Southern Californians was founded ostensibly to promote the welfare of Los Angeles, but in testimony before the United States Congress later that year its leaders admitted that its sole goal was the preservation of the open shop.[9] In less than three years, it had collected more than $523,000 from 12 major Los Angeles companies to fight the city's unions. Southern Californians spent $48,000 create two other front-groups: "The Neutral Thousands" (which claimed 109,000 members but had had only 250; it had copied names out of the telephone book and put them on its "official" membership list) and "Women of the Pacific" (led by a strikebreaker from Seattle).[10]

M&M and Southern Californians decided the best way to stamp out unions was to remove the unions' most powerful weapons: The strike and picket line.[9] M&M quickly established its own front group, the Employers' Advisory Service, to help employers set company unions. Both Southern Californians and M&M spent more than $123,000 in 1937 to promote a voter referendum which would outlaw the strike and picket line.[10] Their opportunity came when a Republican Party group began digging up dirt on Republican Mayor Frank L. Shaw. Voters were outraged when a private detective employed by the reform group was nearly killed by a car bomb planted by Shaw's organization. Another Republican, Superior Court Judge Fletcher Bowron, began a recall effort against Shaw. M&M and Southern Californians used the recall election to push through their ordinance. The new law explicitly outlawed picketing entirely unless a majority of a firm's employees was on strike, made it illegal for anyone except a striking employee to picket a firm, limited pickets to one person per entrance or pickets at least 25 feet apart, prohibited coercion and intimidation by unions, forbade unions to talk to workers at home, and even outlawed unions' use of abusive or foul language. A compromise referendum pushed by the AFL prohibited public disorder and intimidation but not picketing. The voters approved the M&M referendum, turned out Mayor Shaw, and elected Judge Bowron (who had flatly condemned the M&M referendum as blatantly unconstitutional).[11]

M&M's activities were later exposed before the La Follette Committee in 1937 and 1938.[10]

[edit] World War II and post-war period

The day after the attack on Pearl Harbor, M&M became actively involved in civil defense. The organization also represented employer interests against union in front of the War Labor Board. After World War II ended, M&M worked with federal and state authorities to reintegrate returning military personnel back into the workforce.

In the 1940s, Southern Californians and M&M merged.

[edit] 1950s to 1990s

In the 1950s, M&M began to diversify and expand the scope of its services. Management education, research and publishing replaced much of the anti-union activity of the past. M&M also established an intensive state legislative lobbying effort. In 1957, M&M established an Orange County regional office to serve this fast-growing region. M&M began offering management and human resources (HR) training to O.C. employes, and published the "Shop Talk" column in The Orange County Register.

In the 1970s, M&M began providing members with a telephone helpline to provide answers to human resources questions and introduced compensation, HR practices, budget and management trends surveys.

In the 1980s, M&M added regional offices in San Diego, the Inland Empire and San Francisco. In 1993, M&M merged with the Federated Employers of the Bay Area to become the Employers Group.

In 1995, Employers Group introduced one of the first HR Web sites, hronline.org.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b Cross, History of the Labor Movement in California, 1974.
  2. ^ a b c d Foner, History of the Labor Movement in the United States: The AFL in the Progressive Era, 1910-1915, 1980.
  3. ^ Milkman, L.A Story: Immigrant Workers and the Future of the U.S. Labor Movement, 2006.
  4. ^ The Merchants and Manufacturers Association – Celebrating 90 Years of Service, 1986.
  5. ^ a b Deverell, Whitewashed Adobe: The Rise of Los Angeles and the Remaking of Its Mexican Past, 2004.
  6. ^ America's New Year Celebration: The Rose Parade & Rose Bowl Game, 1999.
  7. ^ Kazin, Barons of Labor: The San Francisco Building Trades and Union Power in the Progressive Era, 1987, p. 203.
  8. ^ Cowan, The People v. Clarence Darrow: The Bribery Trial of America's Greatest Lawyer, 1994.
  9. ^ a b Pichardo, "The Power Elite and Elite-Driven Countermovements: The Associated Farmers of California During the 1930s," Sociological Forum, March 1995.
  10. ^ a b c Pesotta, Bread Upon the Waters, 1987.
  11. ^ "Sun and Shade," Time, September 26, 1938.

[edit] References

  • America's New Year Celebration: The Rose Parade & Rose Bowl Game. Santa Barbara, Calif.: Albion Publishing Group, 1999. ISBN 1880352621
  • Cross, Ira B. History of the Labor Movement in California. Reprint ed. Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press, 1974. ISBN 0520026462
  • Deverell, William. Whitewashed Adobe: The Rise of Los Angeles and the Remaking of Its Mexican Past. Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press, 2004. ISBN 0520218698
  • Foner, Philip S. History of the Labor Movement in the United States. Vol. 5: The AFL in the Progressive Era, 1910-1915. New York: International Publishers, 1980. Cloth ISBN 0717805700; Paperback ISBN 071780562X
  • Kazin, Michael. Barons of Labor: The San Francisco Building Trades and Union Power in the Progressive Era. Champaign, Ill.: University of Illinois Press, 1987. ISBN 025201345X
  • The Merchants and Manufacturers Association – Celebrating 90 Years of Service. Los Angeles, Calif.: Merchants and Manufacturers Association, 1986.
  • Milkman, Ruth L.A Story: Immigrant Workers and the Future of the U.S. Labor Movement. New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 2006. ISBN 0871546353
  • Pesotta, Rose. Bread Upon the Waters. Paperback ed. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1987. ISBN 0875461271
  • Robinson, W.W. Bombs and Bribery: The Story of the McNamara and Darrow Trials Following the Dynamiting in 1910 of the Los Angeles Times Building. Los Angeles: Dawson's Book Shop, 1969.
  • "Sun and Shade." Time. September 26, 1938.

[edit] External links