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IKEA Accused Of Putting Low-Wage U.S. Employees In Unsafe Conditions

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First Posted: 07/24/11 02:58 PM ET Updated: 09/23/11 06:12 AM ET

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -- The union attempting to represent workers at IKEA's only U.S. plant is challenging the Swedish furniture giant's vaunted corporate ethos, accusing the retailer of paying its American workers low wages and tolerating unsafe working conditions.

Approximately 320 workers at IKEA's Swedwood Danville plant will vote Wednesday whether to join the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers.

The machinists union has put IKEA's reputation as a labor- and environment-friendly Swedish employer at the forefront of its organizing drive as it attempts to organize workers at the company's subsidiary, Swedwood. They assemble the sleek, low-cost bookshelves and coffee tables that the big-box retailer sells in its distinctive, cheery, blue-and-yellow stores.

IKEA's corporate conduct is guided by its so-called IWAY Standard, which outlines environmental, social and working rules -- an 18-page document governing everything from drinking water supplied to workers to lighting levels to a ban on child labor. The company says the standards follow a directive that "the IKEA business shall have an overall positive impact on people and the environment."

Many of the company's high corporate standards stop at the U.S. border, the machinists' lead organizer said. The union said workers are grossly underpaid compared to their Swedish counterparts, suffer high injury rates, are forced to work overtime, and demoted or fired for expressing union sympathies.

The IWAY standards say overtime must be voluntary and ban employers from preventing workers from associating freely and collective bargaining. They also require workers be protected from "exposure to severe safety hazards."

"You should not be able to reap the economic benefits of an image if that image is not true," said Bill Street, director of the woodworkers department of the machinists international. "When you walk into an IKEA store, you're walking into a little bit of Sweden."

The Associated Press was not able to talk directly with workers involved with Street in organizing the Danville plant. He said workers feared retaliation.

An IKEA spokeswoman denied the union allegations that the Virginia plant operates in conflict with IKEA's principles, saying the Danville operation has consistently measured up to its own internal and third-party audits.

"Swedwood Danville operates according to the same principles as all Swedwood plants," Ingrid Steen said in an e-mail.

Steen also said IKEA will honor the union vote. "Swedwood respects the right of co-workers to join, form or not to join a co-worker association of their choice," she wrote.

IKEA's selection of Danville for its first U.S. factory came with $12 million in incentive grants and the goal of ultimately hiring 780 people in Southside Virginia near the North Carolina line. The region has one of the bleakest economic landscapes in a state that traditionally has an unemployment rate a couple notches below the national rate.

The last capital of the Confederacy, the city of approximately 43,000 has struggled as tobacco and textiles declined. The jobless rate has hovered around 10 percent in recent years.

IKEA, which has 26 Swedwood plants in Europe and saw profits rise 6 percent in 2010, was welcomed by accolades from the Capitol in Richmond to local economic officials, none of whom would publicly discuss the union drive with the AP.

Street, who brought in a union official from Sweden to talk to Danville workers this year, said he quietly began his organizing at Swedwood three years ago mindful of IKEA's reputation for paying and treating its workers fairly.

"We thought to ourselves this was going to be a very simple, straightforward campaign," he said in an interview amid one of his many trips to Danville from his home in Oregon. "After all, this was IKEA."

Ultimately, he said, he concluded the message from IKEA was "Sure, no problem. As soon you get 51 percent of the workers, we'll come back and bargain."

Street was able to get the necessary 30 percent of the workers to support a union vote, and the National Labor Relations Board scheduled the balloting at the plant.

One of the union's complaints is that starting pay at Danville of $8 an hour is approximately half of what their Swedish counterparts earn.

"We know in terms of safety, in terms of health care, in terms of pension, their European counterparts are treated vastly superior than the workers in Danville," Street said.

IKEA's Steen described the pay and benefits of Danville workers as "very competitive in the region." She said many of IKEA's 16,000 workers worldwide are members of unions or worker associations, adding it's difficult to compare U.S. workers with workers in Europe.

"Conditions of different countries are very complex questions," she wrote. "It is difficult to compare different national systems (such as) taxes, cost of living, systems of social insurances, etc."

Street and the machinists union face an uphill battle in a right-to-work state and amid a period of some of the lowest private-sector union membership in the United States. Union membership fell to 7 percent in 2010, the lowest in decades, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Arthur B. Shostak, professor emeritus at Drexel University and an expert on the American work force, said the union is smart to target IKEA's image to make its case, which has received the attention of international union organizers. He said young, hip shoppers might not be inclined to shop at IKEA if they were aware of the union allegations in Danville.

"Ikea has a big stake in protecting its brand," Shostak said. "Brand protection is very, very important. This is a mess, and not for the union."

Paul A. Argenti, a professor of corporate communication at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College, said it's a reach to compare workers in Danville's rural economy with highly industrialized workers in Europe.

"We're a developing nation to them," he said. "Sweden is ridiculously expensive."

While the union claims have some basis in fact, he said, the machinists are attempting to "paint IKEA as a monster."

Street said he's confident, despite declining union numbers and concessions by public sector workers.

"It's been one of the best times to organize because employers have been overreaching. It's kick `em when they're down," he said.

Online:

International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers: http://www.goiam.org

IKEA: http://www.ikea.com/us/en/

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mikeinSeattle
02:07 PM on 07/26/2011
I wonder what the Swedish workers think of jobs being outsourced to lower paid workers in another country. Oh the IRONY!!
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ErnestineBass
No longer a cog in The Machine.
11:08 AM on 07/26/2011
"IKEA came to Danville in 2008, promising 740 new jobs for an area of the state whose two main industries, textile and tobacco, were in decline. In return for the promise of new jobs, IKEA received $12 million in local and state incentives. Three years after opening shop, the plant employs 335 workers, and as the Los Angeles Times reports, relies on temporary agencies to fill about one-third of its positions."

Annnnnnd just where did that $12 million in "local and state incentives" come from?

Straight out of the pockets of TAXPAYERS pulling down a measly $8 an hour.

What a racket.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mtrav
02:39 PM on 07/26/2011
Are we surprised. Lots of promises that are never fulfilled.
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dadw5boys
Disabled Vietnam Vet
10:32 AM on 07/26/2011
They built the plant near a needed resource TREES !
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
edmundavolio
08:02 AM on 07/26/2011
If Unions would direct their efforts to changing MADE in America laws regarding minimum wages, environmental and safety law, workers comp etc. to SOLD in America, it would protect more jobs than all the Union activity currently in the nation.
As it stands now, Multinationals simply shift their production offshore when confronted with increasing labor and other mandated Made in America laws.
Multinationals love union demands, it helps them make more money by getting an excuse to move production offshore.
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dadw5boys
Disabled Vietnam Vet
10:36 AM on 07/26/2011
so when the U.S. Dollar crashes China's Yuan will explode in Value making it too expensive to import stuff from China ?
Right now the Yuan is like a beachball being held down in the water by the Chinese Government and they will not release to rise.
So we force them to release it ? Or they lose all the Money they have invested in U.S. Treasury's ?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
edmundavolio
08:40 PM on 07/26/2011
I hope the US can wait until the Yuan is appreciated. I don't think it will happen, China loves the US dollar.
02:23 AM on 07/26/2011
I think just assembling some of the IKEA products are unsafe - have you ever tried. There is a reason "The Amazing Race" once tasked contestants to put together a product as a challenge. Its pretty humorous - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Or8Qs9mc7o8
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
northcntrlcoast
02:22 AM on 07/26/2011
Most union workers are obese and talk like birds while they work.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
northcntrlcoast
02:21 AM on 07/26/2011
I am a business owner and if those workers at I K E A dislike working for I K E A they should quit snibbling like babies and go search for another job.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
morgansher
just disgusted in general
02:18 PM on 07/31/2011
No company has the right to endanger its employees as a condition for keeping their jobs.
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01:53 AM on 07/26/2011
Some employers are cutting wages

http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2010/11/24-2
Firms See Long-Sought Goal in Sight: Major Pay Cuts | CommonDreams.org

"...These firms are systematically implementing a major strategy to permanently drive down wages far below anything considered "middle class." The key tool for corporations: forcing acceptance of permanent two-tier wage structures and the insertion of nonunion casual workers into union plants to drive down union pay to levels unimaginable a couple years back. Big business is essentially trying to take back the hard-won gains of working people won over generations.

[snip]

Expect the downward wage spiral to continue under relentless pressure from corporations who see an endless surplus army of labor with 9.6% unemployment and benefits running out for two million in December..."

The Deficit Commission is considerin­g the eliminatio­n of the tax deduction for job-based health insurance:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/11/28/health-care-tax-break-deficit_n_788852.html
Job-Based Health Care Threatened

http://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_thelookout/20110614/bs_yblog_thelookout/workers-share-of-national-income-plummets-to-record-low
Workers' share of national income plummets to record low - Yahoo! News

"Over the last decade, the share of U.S. national income taken home by workers has plummeted to a record low.

Check out the chart below, compiled by the Labor Department, and posted this week by conservative writer David Frum..."
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ErnestineBass
No longer a cog in The Machine.
11:26 AM on 07/26/2011
The multinational corporations that currently run our government won't be satisfied until the American working class has been reduced to such a level of poverty that they'll grovel in gratitude for the fishhead some magnamimous master drops into their gruel bowl once a week.
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12:13 PM on 07/26/2011
Agreed.

They are repealing the Iron Law of Wages:

http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/iron+law+of+wages
Iron law of wages | Define Iron law of wages at Dictionary.com

"the doctrine or theory that wages tend toward a level sufficient only to maintain a subsistence standard of living. "

The proof is paying less than a subsistence wage in third-world countries.

In one country, workers are paying to work for free:

http://www.gmanews.tv/story/213475/oversupply-of-nurses-forces-them-to-pay-to-work-for-free
Oversupply of nurses forces them to pay to work for free - Special Reports - GMA News Online - Latest Philippine News

"...The scheme has been “rampantly practiced all over the country" for many years now, added Alvin Cloyd Dakis, national president of the Alliance of Young Nurse Leaders and Advocates International (AYNLA).

Citing statistics from the Professional Regulatory Commission, Dakis said the number of unemployed and under-employed registered Filipino nurses is estimated to range from a low of 160,000 to a high of 200,000.

“With hundreds of thousands of unemployed licensed nurses desperate for work, thousands of them went to hospitals to pay for the limited volunteer nurse slots or to train in order to gain bedside clinical experience in exchange for certificates stating that they were nurse volunteers or trainees for a specific period of time," said Dakis..."
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Quitcherbichin
If you are posting here, thank a veteran.
12:29 AM on 07/26/2011
I have been seeing a lot of comments on here about the bad name that the unions have acquired. The reason that is true is that 99% of union members give the rest a bad name.
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Kai-HK
Don't Share My Wealth! Share My Work Ethic!
11:45 PM on 07/25/2011
Another example America NOT welcoming investment in our manufacturing sector. A company comes here, invests, pays taxes, creates good-paying jobs, in a safe environment (despite the propaganda saying otherwise) and we repay them by trying to extort more than the fair wage they are paying. I hope they pick up and move to Mexico, where much of the furniture manufacturing business has already gone.

Kai
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clemmers
The rich require an abundant supply of the poor.
02:36 PM on 07/26/2011
Well, IKEA is NOT paying taxes, but instead getting millions in tax breaks.
They are NOT paying well at all - barely above minimum wage and half of what they pay in Sweden.
They are NOT providing a safe environment, per the first-hand account from people on the scene.

Apparently you accept America's new status as third world country, where the wages are low, the workers exploited because they've got nothing better, and an unsafe environment is just too bad. American workers deserve to be exploited and should be darn thankful for it.

Or maybe you are new to this country and don't realize how far we've fallen.
02:58 PM on 07/26/2011
What you do not seem to take into account is that those paychecks in Sweden are taxed 49 to 60 per cent through a combination of local government and state income tax. That all comes out before they see a single kronor. Currently gasoline prices in Sweden are 14.58 kronor per litre which comes to $8.82 per US gallon.

I cannot speak as to the working condition issues being cited (and it definitley must be looked into), but if you look strictly at pay, the US employees may actually be getting a little more.
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Kai-HK
Don't Share My Wealth! Share My Work Ethic!
10:54 PM on 07/26/2011
Clemmers:

a) Actually, the economic activity that IKEA creates is taxed on several levels, not just corporate tax, which is de minimus compared to all the other taxes that get levied against it and its business.

b) They are paying an above market rate for wages, American wages are determined by the market fundamentals that price labor in America, not other countries. If that was the case, the new steel mill that China is opening in Texas would pay $0.40 per hour instead of a prevailing market wage, same goes for Japanese cars in Alabama, etc. Our markets determine our wages.

c) IKEA is not a Swedish company, it is a Dutch company. It moved there to avoid the rapacious Swedish taxes, and now pay a very low rate for their international businesses. Good for the Netherlands since it results in more tax, more high-level high-paying high-spending high-tax-paying management jobs, bad for Sweden that is left with just a domestic business. Note to America: High Corporate Taxes have consequences…but do we really need that warning, it is already proving itself as companies locate to RTW states and to other countries to get away from greedy governments.

d) America is becoming third world because workers would rather rely on government protection instead increasing competitiveness, workers would rather see no jobs rather than ‘fair market wage’ paying jobs, would rather demand more reward without risk.

No wonder companies leave; it is what the workers want.

Kai
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BadHaBritt
Always looking for the broader perspective
11:22 PM on 07/25/2011
We need to start naming names for all these disgusting corporations who abuse their worker. This abuse is growing and the abuse is deepening. ENOUGH IS ENOUGH. TAX THE HELL OUT OF THE MUTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS WHO ARE BANKRUPTING THIS COUNTRY
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Quitcherbichin
If you are posting here, thank a veteran.
12:23 AM on 07/26/2011
I don't think that is what the employees are after there Bad. If that happens they would probably be out of a job.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
zooks1
10:47 PM on 07/25/2011
Ikea products are crap, they fall apart easily and are made with cheap products. I would not pay them more unless they learned their trade first and used real wood.
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moutonnoir
iconoclastic demagoguery
11:55 PM on 07/25/2011
cant blame the freaking workers for the design decisions clearly enforced by management decisions.

the designers are definitely given a specific and ultra-cheap pallet.. they really do wonders considering the source material. and the price points.. (press board, laminate over cardboard, cardboard, pegs, etc)

while there is a certain... interesting elegance... in some of the designs from ikea, most of it is clearly design for manufacture - following dictates of the corporate culture.

in other words, dont blame workers for the presidents bad ideas. it really does show how low-brow you actually are.. how dare you?
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dadw5boys
Disabled Vietnam Vet
10:42 AM on 07/26/2011
yes DESIGNED FOR THE DUMP is what Americans get .

How do you expect Consumerism to work if things did not fall apart ?
Turn over is the key when extracting money from Consumers as fast a possible .
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10:29 PM on 07/25/2011
I like Ikea, I know it's big box if not the biggest box and I know 1/3 of their stuff is super super crappy. But the cheap designs excite me, with that having been said I am in support of the workers getting unionized. Hopefully they vote it in, because it may mean a 3% raise on the products they produce for me, it may mean quality h. insurance and/or something that is slightly closer to a liveable wage as opposed to their current $8 an hour.
09:54 PM on 07/25/2011
My father was a UAW organizer at General Motors in the late 30's, early 40's and a member for many years. However, in the 1950's I remember him saying " I no longer support the unions as they are driving jobs away ". I worked in union plants, in the 50's, as a young man going to college and couldn't believe then or now the power the unions had over the manufacturers - shutting down assembly lines, most often, for ridiculous reasons. The "union floorman" loved to show his " muscle and control ", I even remember his name. The manufacturers that I worked for had to settle with the unions because they had contracts to deliver their manufactured goods. We were at the peak of our US manufacturing capabilities. Well, these manufacturers soon either moved or shut down. I read this article in the Huff Post and am incensed by it. We need manufacturing jobs, starting with the lower level jobs, especially in areas that are depressed. In comes the union and creates problems, I mean, who would ever want to set up a factory like this and deal with the unions ??? Doesn't anybody get it ??? There are many of us just want to have a stable job that offers opportunity. We need to bring manufacturing jobs, like this IKEA plant, back to this country. The entry level manufacturing jobs that IKEA is offering is the very thing that made this country great, we need it now
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moutonnoir
iconoclastic demagoguery
10:53 PM on 07/25/2011
$8/hr to do skilled labor is not what made this country great.

what nonsense..
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Kai-HK
Don't Share My Wealth! Share My Work Ethic!
11:48 PM on 07/25/2011
that is 'unskilled' labor, not skilled...you are right, paying above market wages for unskilled labor is not what made this country great
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Quitcherbichin
If you are posting here, thank a veteran.
12:25 AM on 07/26/2011
Skilled labor? What rock you been living under. Any job skill that takes an employee a week to learn is not skilled labor...to anyone besides a union that is.
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Kai-HK
Don't Share My Wealth! Share My Work Ethic!
11:48 PM on 07/25/2011
Great testimonial. Agree with everything you just wrote.
07:49 PM on 07/25/2011
Unions are ruining this country. Why can't they just leave everyone alone? Maybe these people are thankful to have a job and are appreciative to work. Unions are always sticking their noses in so that they can organize a way to make themselves richer.
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09:09 PM on 07/25/2011
Employers can be trusted to do the right things:

o freeze or cut wages
o eliminate benefits
o ignore safety regulations
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10:31 PM on 07/25/2011
Unions have never been less popular, which means they will become more popular.
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moutonnoir
iconoclastic demagoguery
10:54 PM on 07/25/2011
once these right to work states become hotbeds of union organizing as hundreds of thousands of people work for extremely wealthy companies for below living wages... unions will become more popular.
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Quitcherbichin
If you are posting here, thank a veteran.
12:26 AM on 07/26/2011
More convoluted logic from a union person.