LERA PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS
“Rebuilding
January 6, 2008
I am pleased to in
We are also entering the 60th year of the Taft-Hartley Act, enacted in the spring of 1947 to deal with labor-management relations after a tumultuous strike-prone post-war year as well as the 60th anniversary of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service (FMCS) which was as established as an independent federal agency. The Industrial Relations Research Association (IRRA) now called LERA turns 60 and this means that all those organizations, such as industrial relations schools and colleges, are all “baby boomers”. This also gives us a chance to reflect on what has happened and where we go forward. For whatever its worth, Farah Fawcett, Larry David, Meat Loaf, David Letterman, and Glenn Close, also hit the 60th mark this year, along with Bill Richardson and Hillary Clinton.
Last year, outgoing president David Lipsky focused on the end of the long-existing social contract in the American workplace and sagely assessed both the impact of that change and what might result from it. My subject today is something else David initiated but did not speak about last year, namely, the future of this organization.
It’s now been several years since we changed the name of this organization, which was all to the good, but to nobody’s surprise, changing the name was merely the first step in a total review of our purpose, our structure, our functions, and our future. David put together a strategic planning group to come back with some clear ideas and strong medicine that would be needed to turn around what increasingly appeared to be an unclear purpose, an outmoded governance structure, and a decline in membership.
Planning of course is not very useful in any organization if the leadership does not play a key role in working closely with the planners. We also have had to contend with the old adage that “day to day operations drive out planning.” That can be interpreted also to mean that no one engages in truly serious planning until they believe there’s a real problem that planning can help resolve.
The planners – led by Joel Cutcher-Gershenfeld. Who will soon become our president-elect, and Nancy Peace – confirmed for us those new ideas and structures were indeed necessary. In carrying this forward, my role began with forming an informal working team of our outgoing and next two presidents, along with myself, to ensure some continuity beyond the one-year span of anyone’s term.
Thankfully, David Lipsky agreed to continue to be involved as immediate past president, and Tony Oliver and Joel, as the next two presidents also realized the need for this new degree of coordination.
We need to renew the value of LERA to each segment of our membership. Our academic members need to know that they are participating in a high-level organization in which scholarship is recognized as the route to generate new ideas and confirm what really works in the real world of the workplace. Members from both labor and management need to feel that they are benefiting from learning about new approaches, discussing them amid a widely-respected group of informed “insiders” and finding out how colleagues have fared—again, knowing what is working and what isn’t. Neutrals—both private and government—need also to be aware of trends in the workplace and ideas from the academy; they too will contribute from their experiences.
But none of this can happen if we do not confront and meet our current challenges—we need to reverse a decline in membership by making LERA something that is invaluable to all who are connected with it. We need to integrate the highly effective ope3rations of our many local chapters in a way that encourages local participation in the national organization and vice-versa.
This year we rolled up our sleeves and got started. We managed to continue founding funding for the industrial councils program and we integrated the councils into our National Policy Forum last June—which was held in Washington, DC and whose theme was “Searching for the New American Dream’. That forum drew more than 250 members and attendees from councils and interest groups to deal with such issues as labor relations in the airlines, autos, and utilities industries, as well as pensions, retirement, and the role of states and Congress in health care and family and medical leave.
We interrupted this exciting but admittedly somewhat dry task by publishing a cartoon book of New Yorker cartoons with laughs about the world of work and our ability to see the highs and lows over the past sixty years.
There are many new ideas percolating too---including the idea of a Fellows program for mid-career academics and practitioners; more publishing opportunities for both; and the idea of forming a National Labor-Management Leadership Forum for there is now no central body where these groups can talk away from the collective bargaining table. This is a chance to lower the temperature on what is often a lack of consensus and heightened tempers. We are hopeful that we can do this with some additional support from you and others. The Collective Bargaining Forum, the National Policy Association, and other groups are gone. Such a focus is needed to have the dialogue that encourages creative problem-solving.
This Conference itself now hosts a variety of
formats—subject integrations and debates as well as presentations and
discussions---and aims to attract many non-members to see what LERA has to
offer. Yesterday, for example, we heard
our distinguished speaker, Prof. Claudia Goldin from Harvard, talk about wage
inequality and its relation to the race between technology and education—this
was showcased by NY Times columnist Paul Krugman, the same Paul Krugman who
spoke this morning at the AFL-CIO sponsored breakfast at 7am. How is that for planning? And then another
distinguished panel will deal with the use of alternative dispute resolution to
rebuild
Much remains to be done. LERA’s committee structure has not proven responsive to many of the challenges we have asked the committees to address. More positively, our board of directors has wholeheartedly supported what must be changed in order for LERA to prevail as well as endure. As William Faulkner memorably put it in accepting his Nobel prize, which by the way, was in one of those other field they give them in besides Economics. He said, “I believe that man will not only endure but will prevail.”
None of what we have accomplished to date nor what will get done in the future would be possible without a lot of good people in LERA working together. That begins with my thanking both my predecessor, David Lipsky, who, among all his accomplishments, has brought our development program to the $1 million mark, just a start but a big one, and my successor, Tony Oliver, who brings out the best in everyone, as does his successor, Joel Cutcher-Gershenfeld. Joel’s indefatigable leadership and planning is most appreciated. Much support has come from our Board members as well as the local chapter members and presidents, many of whom have been kind enough to invite me to speak at their meetings.
Perspectives on Work –especially the 60th anniversary issue you now have – is a tribute to Charles Whalen’s perseverance and skill. I also deeply appreciate the support I’ve received –for more years than I care to mention—from my colleagues and leaders at the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service.
In my own work, I have seen significant developments that we may find ourselves influenced by and involved in over the next few years. Here are some questions to consider:
We’ve been having workshops and
discussions at many LERA Chapter meetings and I’ve even been able to take this
concept abroad when I worked with other cultures—for example, in Romania, when
I was training lawyers in mediation as part of a project sponsored by the
Romanian Ministry of Justice and US Embassy, I asked my colleagues (of all
ages) who were their heroes growing up?
In the
While some may say that we have always had discussions between generations and this is nothing new, I have found that these workshops are a way to have a creative and constructive problem-solving dialogue to deal with how to communicate on the job and deal with issues of respect and technology too.
Lastly, I would like to engage in a little crystal ball gazing—or taking a careful look at where we’re going and how we might get there. Here are my impressions:
We have yet to see whether the decades of diminishment (decline in real wages) have reinvigorated or dealt a death blow to the American middle class; as
· housing prices decline,
· mortgages come due,
· college tuition zooms past the inflation rate,
· the savings rate is tiny,
· one-job, working-life careers disappear,
· adequate health care and a decent pension are in doubt,
· air quality (pollution as well as high gas prices) falls,
· long daily commutes, and the tensions arising from long hours of commuting.
Technology grows more into the fabric of our lives more than ever:
· the growth of the virtual workplace, countering the commuting needs and strains I just mentioned,
· wider use of PDA’s (personal desk assistants)---be they treos, pilots, or my own: my family calls it my “crackberry”,
· pervasive use of the internet for communication, and, more and more for research. Indeed, the internet has become the “virtual water cooler” and that is why a recent NLRB decision, 2-1 on the use of the internet by workers pointed to how much a part of the workplace it has become.
· constant availability through cell phones and video conferencing, so that privacy and boundaries become an issue,
· working different hours through flextime and location of colleagues throughout the world, and
· the need to develop research and educational niche markets to survive and prosper.
For us in this field, it did not take reading Tom Friedman’s book, “The World is Flat” to realize that the speed of change is sharply rising around us—spurred by the successes of China and India already are gaining as they industrialize, consume more resources, produce cheaper goods and services, and make us take notice of new competition.
So, in sum, what does the crystal ball see LERA in our future—be it three, five, or ten years from now? Where will we all be three or five years from now? I would like each of you to close your eyes for a moment and vision where you would be in three years…that’s 2011…you are three years older, (but you look great)—what do you want to have happen? What can you do to help make that happen?
For me, engaging in this exercise involves answering plenty of questions:
What one good thing can each of us do to make the world a better place?
And lastly, for me, it is to acknowledge someone who has become like a human GPS (Global Positioning System) in my life—who has helped me to focus, to find direction, especially when I get lost, and who has made this year work out—I wish to thank my husband, Richard B. Hoffman, for I couldn’t have done this without him.
And thank you all.
See you next year in