View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

Bargaining CaBdincfeir
1983
U.S. Department of Labor
Bureau of Labor Statistics
March 1983
Bulletin 2165




Bargaining
1983
U.S. Department of Labor
Raymond J. Donovan, Secretary
Bureau of Labor Statistics
Janet L. Norwood, Commissioner
March 1983
Bulletin 2165




For sale by the Superintendent of Documents. U.S. Government Printing Office
Washington, D.C. 20402 - Price $5.00




This bulletin presents information assembled by the
Bureau of Labor Statistics on anticipated labormanagement contract developments in 1983. As in
previous years, the inform ation—identified by
employer and union name—relates to major bargaining
situations (covering at least 1,000 workers) in which
contracts expire or are subject to reopening, deferred
wage changes come due, or wages are subject to change
under cost-of-living adjustment clauses.
The bulletin includes an analysis of 1983 bargaining
that first appeared in the January 1983 issue of the
Monthly Labor Review, and detailed information from
the Bureau’s file of major agreements (covering 1,000
workers or more) and published sources. The data
presented are limited to private industry.
Tables 1 through 4 summarize data on contract ex­
pirations, reopeners, deferred wage changes, and costof-living clauses by industry, month, and other charac­
teristics. Tables 5 and 6 indicate the prevalence, timing,
and frequency of cost-of-living adjustments. Table 7
presents the expiration and wage adjustment provisions
of selected agreements. Tables 8 and 9 list all the major




agreements on file with the Bureau to expire in 1983, ar­
ranged by month and industry and tables 10 and 11 list
all additional major bargaining situations (defined in
appendix C) scheduled to expire in 1983, arranged by
month and industry. Table 12 lists agreement reopen­
ings by month.
Appendix A lists abbreviations used in this bulletin;
appendix B identifies codes used in the tables; and ap­
pendix C gives a technical description of the data.
This bulletin was prepared in the Division of
Developments in Labor-Management Relations. The
analysis was written by William Davis. Jane Greene and
Clarece Lee refined and entered much of the informa­
tion into the computer system. Richard Schildt (of the
Division of Directly Collected Periodic Surveys), Larry
Adams, and Douglas LeRoy designed the computer pro­
gramming and processed the data.
Agreements on file with the Division of Develop­
ments in Labor-Management Relations are, with few ex­
ceptions, open to the public. Material in this publication
is in the public domain and may, with appropriate
credit, be reproduced without permission.




©©mtdiratg

Page
Contract expirations and reopenings .............................................................................................
Steel ...........................................................................................................................................
A lum inum .................................................................................................................................
Telephone industry...................................................................................................................
C onstruction.............................................................................................................................
Longshoring...............................................................................................................................
Aerospace...................................................................................................................................
Wage changes of expiring c o n tra cts.......................................................................................
1983 scheduled wage changes...........................................................................................................
Cost-of-living adjustments...............................................................................................................

1
2
3
4
5
6
6
7
7
8

Tables:
1. Calendar of major collective bargaining activity...........................................................
2. Major contract expiration and wage reopening dates, by industry................................
3. Workers scheduled to receive deferred wage adjustments in 1983, by major
industry group and size of in crease.................................................................................
4. Deferred wage increases scheduled in 1983, by m onth...................................................
5. Prevalence of cost-of-living adjustment clauses in major collective bargaining
agreements, October 1982.................................................................................................
6. Timing and frequency of 1983 cost-of-living reviews......................................................
7. Expiration and wage adjustment provisions of selected collective bargaining
agreem ents.........................................................................................................................
8. Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1983 covering 1,000 workers or
more, by m o n th .................................................................................................................
9. Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1983 covering 1,000 workers or
more, by industry...............................................................................................................
10. Collective bargaining situations covering 1,000 workers or more with agreements
expiring in 1983, by m o n th ...............................................................................................
11. Collective bargaining situations covering 1,000 workers or more with
agreements expiring in 1983, by in d u stry ........................................................................
12. Selected agreements covering 1,000 workers or more subject
to reopening in 1983, by m o n th .......................................................................................
Appendixes:
A. Common abbreviations.....................................................................................................
B. Identification of c o d e s.......................................................................................................
C. Explanatory note.................................................................................................................




v

1
2
5
7
8
9
10
14
25
38
45
54

55
56
61

in

m

and gulf coast longshore (in September), and aerospace
(in October). Contracts expiring in the construction in­
dustry (typically in spring and summer) involve large
numbers of workers each year, but more workers will
be affected in 1983 than in any year on record. A sum­
mary of the bargaining climate for these major negotia­
tions follows.

Collective bargaining activities in 1983 follow a year of
unprecedented developments. Settlements in major pri­
vate industry collective bargaining situations (those cov­
ering at least 1,000 workers) reached in the first 9
months of 1982 provided the lowest first-year and overthe-life average wage adjustments since the Bureau of
Labor Statistics began compiling such data in 1967.
Moreover, two-fifths of the 2.7 million workers covered
by the 1982 settlements are not scheduled to receive a
specified wage increase in 1983. Unless the economic
health of some industries improves, questions of job se­
curity and company survival are likely to overshadow
wage and benefit improvements on the 1983 bargaining
agenda.
This article discusses major collective bargaining situ­
ations in private industry covering 8.5 million workers,
or about 1 in 8 wage and salary workers, and focuses
on scheduled negotiations, deferred wage adjustments,
and cost-of-living adjustments ( c o l a ).
Economic conditions that will exist at the time of ne­
gotiations are unpredictable, of course. However, eco­
nomic forecasts generally range from moderate recovery
to continuing recession. In November 1982, the unem­
ployment rate reached 10.8 percent, the highest since
1940. Industrial production in October was down 8.6
percent from a year earlier, accompanied by a drop in
the factory utilization rate to 68.4 percent, the lowest
rate since the Federal R eserve Board began the series in
1948. The rate of increase in the Consumer Price Index
has been declining; in October, the CPI for all urban
consumers was 5.1 percent above the year-earlier level,
compared with 8.9 in 1981 and 12.4 percent in 1980. At
the same time, interest rates began dropping from re­
cent high levels.

Table 1.

Year and month

Contract expirations
and/or scheduled
wage reopenings'
Contracts

8,484.3

Total 1983 ............
J a n u a ry ..............................
February ...........................
March ................................
April ...................................
M a y .....................................

845
37
39
81
113
123

3,615.6
98.6
149.4
266.6
305.3
413.2

June ...................................
J u ly .....................................
A u g u s t................................
S ep te m b e r.........................

134
48
103
53

517.9
114.3
1,151.3
190.8

O c to b e r..............................
November .........................
December .........................

55
19
41

235.0
50.9
127.3

Total 1984 ............
J a n u a ry ..............................
February ...........................
March ................................
April ...................................
M a y .....................................
June ...................................
J u ly .....................................
A u g u s t................................
S ep te m b e r.........................
O c to b e r..............................
November .........................
December .........................

528
31
31
55
100
74
109
28
23
30
23
12
12

2,588.3
75.8
92.9
156.6
273.2
173.2
618.3
147.0
65.5
870.9
53.2
30.5
31.3

Total 1985 ............
January^June....................
July-December ...............
Year unknown or in
negotiation2 . . .

About 3.6 million workers are under major contracts
that will expire or are subject to reopening in 1983, a
heavy bargaining year. (See tables 1 and 2.) Although
approximately the same number of workers were cov­
ered by 1982 negotiations, 845 agreements will be up
for negotiation— 200 more than in 1982.
Industries with large numbers of workers covered by
contract expirations in 1983 are aluminum (in May),
steel and telephone communications (in August), east

1,772

216
177
39

1,451.4
1,269.6
181.8

217

Principal industries

Workers
covered

All years ...........................

Contract expirations and reopenings




Calendar of major collective bargaining activity

[Workers in thousands]

954.7

Tobacco
Food stores
Glass, construction
Construction
Aiuminum, lumber, and
construction
Construction, copper
Steel, telephone
Longshoring (east and gulf
coast)
Aerospace

P e tro le u m re fin in g

Construction
Construction
Construction
Railroads, construction
Food stores
Automobiles, bituminous coal

1Totals for contracts for each year and all years are less than the sum of the parts be­
cause 34 contracts have both reopenings and expirations in the reference period.
2 Includes 79 agreements, covering 274,000 workers, which were due to expire between
Oct. 1 and Dec. 31,1982; 68 agreements, covering 463,000 workers, which expired prior to
Oct. 1 but new agreements were not reached by Oct. 1; 58 agreements covering 178,000
workers which expired prior to Oct. 1, but for which necessary information had not been fully
gathered; and 12 agreements covering 40,000 workers that have no fixed expiration or re­
opening date.
N o te : Only bargaining units in the private nonagricultural economy with 1,000 workers or
more are considered in this table. Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not
equal totals.

1

Table 2.

Major contract expiraiion and wage reopening dates, by industry

[Workers in thousands]
Year o f co n tra ct expiration a n d /o r scheduled wage reopening

To ta l1

Industry

C ontracts

19832

W orkers
covered

19843

Unknown or in
negotiation4

1985

C ontracts

Workers
covered

C ontracts

Workers
covered

Contracts

Workers
covered

C ontracts

Workers
covered

All industries ................................................................

1,772

8,484.3

845

3,615.6

528

2,588.3

216

1,451.4

217

954.7

M anufacturing.................................................
Food and kindred p ro d u c ts ........................................
Tobacco m a n u fa c tu re s ............................................
Textile mill p ro d u c ts ....................................................
Apparel and other finished products ......................
Lumber and wood products, except furniture . . . .

799
87
7
17
46
14

3,508.6
252.0
22.3
48.4
347.5
59.9

372
37
7
5
3
10

1,260.3
85.0
22.3
19.5
9.0
54.1

215
25

1,118.4
57.1

106
17

707.7
103.5

111
10

438.5
17.4

-

-

-

-

-

3
2
3

10.5
7.4
3.9

1
21
1

5.0
265.7
1.9

8
20
-

13.4
65.4
-

Furniture and fix tu re s ..................................................
Paper and allied p ro d u cts .......... ...........................
Printing, publishing and allied in d u s trie s .................
Chemicals and allied products ................................
Petroleum refining and related in d u s trie s ...............

15
51
27
34
18

24.5
81.4
53.6
68.1
33.9

6
26
10
16
1

10.8
41.4
16.6
32.2
1.5

3
20
13
7
16

2.9
33.7
32.2
14.4
27.8

4
2
3
3
1

7.7
2.3
7.3
4.5
1.6

2
3
2
11
-

3.1
3.0
1.8
23.2
-

Rubber and miscellaneous plastics .........................
Leather and leather products ...................................
Stone, clay, glass and concrete p ro d u cts...............
Primary metals in d u strie s..........................................
Fabricated metal products ........................................

14
13
35
97
52

65.5
38.4
85.2
437.0
94.5

3
5
18
76
22

4.4
6.0
56.2
405.7
35.8

_

_

6

7
11
13
20

24.4
18.9
19.3
43.2

2
1
5

44.6
2.7
1.4
9.3

5
1
4
7
4

16.5
8.0
7.3
10.5
4.9

Machinery, except electrical .....................................
Electrical machinery, equipment, and supplies . . .
Transportation e qu ip m en t..........................................
Instruments and related products ...........................
Miscellaneous manufacturing in d u s trie s .................

77
77
94
14
10

236.2
372.8
1,126.9
41.8
18.6

38
41
38
8
2

88.8
140.9
200.2
26.3
3.4

21
16
28
4
3

50.3
22.4
736.0
10.4
3.4

10
13
13
1
2

14.0
165.7
63.5
3.8
3.0

9
7
14
1
3

84.5
43.8
125.5
1.3
8.8

N onm anufacturing..........................................
Mining, crude petroleum and natural gas production
Construction ................................................................
Transportation, except railroads and trucking . . . .
Railroads .....................................................................
Trucking ........................................................................

973
14
468
67
26
17

4,975.7
198.3
1,457.4
288.7
412.4
442.2

473
11
245
37

2,355.3
34.9
884.5
150.9
-

2

3.6

1,469.8
162.0
435.7
65.5
287.1
-

110

-

313
2
166
15
22
-

12

743.7
106.6
7.8
422.6

106
1
23
14
4
3

516.2
1.3
79.0
67.4
125.3
16.0

Communications .........................................................
Utilities, gas and e le c tric .............................................
Wholesale trade .........................................................
Retail trade, except restaurants ..............................
R estaurants...................................................................

45
75
16
130
20

744.9
234.7
50.6
634.3
65.5

29
38
9
59
9

699.0
113.8
15.0
269.9
37.6

8
28
4
25
5

23.5
83.9
6.1
178.3
11.4

8
7
1
20
3

24.0
18.5
25.0
82.4
6.3

1
10
2
26
4

2.6
46.0
4.5
103.7
13.2

Finance, insurance, and real e s ta te .........................
Services, except hotels and health s e rv ic e s ..........
H o te ls .............................................................................
Health services ...........................................................

18
40
17
20

93.3
133.7
114.0
105.8

6
14
5
9

40.5
52.3
29.1
24.3

8
12
9
9

27.0
32.9
77.4
79.0

3
1
2

22.4
1.3
26.7
-

_

_

13
2
3

47.2
5.8
4.1

-

-

50
3
-

-

Oct. 1 and Dec. 31, 1982; 68 agreements, covering 463,000 workers, which expired prior to
Oct. 1 but new agreements were not reached by Oct. 1; 58 agreements covering 178,000
workers which expired prior to Oct. 1, but for which necessary information had not been fully
gathered; and 12 agreements covering 40,000 workers that have no fixed expiration or reopen­
ing date.
N o t e : Only bargaining units in the private nonagricultural economy affecting 1,000 workers
or more are considered in this table. Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not
equal totals.

11ncludes 8 agreements, covering 17,000 workers, which will expire in 1986 or later. To­
tals are less than the sum of the parts because 34 contracts have both reopenings and expi­
rations.
2 Includes 5 contracts covering 9,®00 workers in manufacturing and 25 contracts covering
72.000 in nonmanufacturing which have wage reopenings in 1983.
3 Includes 5 contracts covering 18,000 workers in manufacturing and 8 contracts covering
49.000 in nonmanufacturing which have wage reopenings in 1984.
4 Includes 79 agreements, covering 274,000 workers, which were due to expire between

Steel

and-benefit concessions was reached in November but it
was subsequently rejected by local union leaders.
Conditions set forth by the Experimental Negotiation
Agreement ( e n a ) introduced in 1973 no longer apply.
The ENA provided that in exchange for a no-strike
pledge at the national level, workers would receive an­
nual increases equal to 3 percent of wages which could
be applied to wages or benefits, COLA, and a $150 bo­
nus. Although past contracts expired in August, the
ENA imposed an April deadline for decisions on nation­
al economic issues after which any unresolved questions
would go to an arbitration panel. The April 14, 1980
agreement postponed decisions on the ENA , which was
subsequently dropped.
Domestic steel production was generally profitable

High unemployment, declining capacity utilization,
and closing facilities have pressured both labor and
management to trim labor costs before the 3-year steel
agreements expire on August 1, 1983. The Steel Indus­
try Coordinating Committee, representing eight major
steel companies, and the Basic Steel Industry Confer­
ence of the United Steelworkers of America (composed
of all local union presidents) were unsuccessful in their
attempts to reach an early agreement when they met in
July 1982. However, private talks between Lloyd
McBride, president of the Steelworkers, and J. Bruce
Johnston, chief negotiator for the industry, were opened
in October to explore the possibility of reviving early
negotiations. A tentative agreement calling for wage


-

2

of the August 1, 1982 wage increase, and deferring re­
maining scheduled cost-of-living adjustments ( c o l a )
for 18 months. In addition, the Steelworkers reportedly
proposed a plan where c o l a payments would only be
paid when the industry’s capacity utilization rate was
above a certain level. If that level was never attained,
COLA would not be paid until the last quarter of the
3-year contract.
The companies rejected the offer, which the union es­
timated would have saved the industry $2 billion over a
3-year period, and proposed a 3-year contract projected
to save $6 billion. The company proposal reportedly in­
cluded elimination of the August 1, 1982 scheduled
wage increase; no additional specified wage increases; no
COLA the first year and a maximum COLA of 50 cents
for each of the second 2 years; and elimination of the
extended vacation plan. The plan also called for a
50-cent-an-hour increase in contributions to the
Supplemental Unemployment Benefits ( s u b ) fund to fi­
nance guaranteed weekly benefits of $100 to $220 for 1
year for laid-off employees with 5 but less than 20 years
of service. (Employees with 20 years or more of service
already had such a guarantee.) Establishment of stock
ownership and individual retirement accounts was also
proposed. On July 30, 400 local union presidents who
comprise the Basic Steel Industry Conference rejected
the industry’s proposals. Negotiations were then termi­
nated.
The Steelworkers’ biennial convention in September
1982 passed a resolution authorizing the union to bal­
ance wage goals with the need to preserve jobs in a
“distressed bargaining situation.”6
While top industry and union leaders held informal
bargaining sessions, negotiators agreed to place the
9-cent-an-hour c o l a increase due November 1 in an es­
crow account and defer payment for 1 month. The 9cent increase was paid retroactively to November 1 be­
cause a new agreement was not reached by December 1.
In mid-November, a tentative 45-month agreement
calling for wage-and-benefit concessions was reached by
negotiators but was rejected by local union leaders. Un­
der the agreement, 75 cents an hour would have been
taken out of the wages of steelworkers still on the job
to replenish the Supplemental Unemployment Benefit
fund. In addition, the agreement called for a cut of
$1.50 an hour in wages effective December 1, and the
deferment of COLA until August 1983. The $1.50 cut
will have been restored in 50-cent steps on August 1 of
1983, 1984, and 1985. It is not expected that further ne­
gotiations will be held until May 1983.

until early 1982, but the current recession, coupled with
an excess of worldwide steelmaking capacity, has result­
ed in a severe contraction of the industry.1The contrac­
tion has taken a toll on employees. An estimated
130,000 workers were on layoff in October 1982 and
over the past 10 years, the number of production work­
ers has dropped about 40 percent.
During 1982, there was a rash of plant shutdowns as
well as sharp curtailments in production at remaining
facilities.2 The capacity utilization rate has fallen dra­
matically from 78.3 percent in 1981 to 49.6 percent for
the first 10 months of 1982,3 the lowest since 1938,
when it averaged 39.6 percent for the year.
The demand for domestic steel has been affected by
declining automobile sales, the manufacture of smaller
cars, and increased imports of steel-mill products. Im­
ports accounted for about 22.4 percent of the industry’s
steel supply in October 1982, compared with 19.1 per­
cent in 1981 and 16.3 percent in 1980. In January 1982,
domestic steel producers filed charges with the Interna­
tional Trade Commission ( it c ) against several countries.
The companies claimed that the countries, including six
from the European Economic Community ( e e c ), were
subsidizing steel products being exported to the United
States, thus competing unfairly. The Trade Commission,
on October 15, agreed with the companies, making way
for President Reagan to impose duties on the goods in
question. However, on October 21, agreement was reach­
ed between the United States and the six EEC countries
limiting their exports to the United States. Action
against other countries is in process or contemplated.
Outmoded mills accounted for some of the industry’s
problems. Some firms invested large sums of money to
modernize their mills in order to make them more prof­
itable and to conform with environmental standards. In
early 1982, $6.5 billion worth of modernization pro­
grams were underway in the steel industry, but many
companies began deferring these programs when the de­
mand for steel fell dramatically in the first quarter of
1982.4
Some steel companies have been diversifying by in­
vesting in other industries. One widely publicized move
was U.S. Steel Corp.’s purchase of the Marathon Oil
Co. in early 1982. The deal may improve the company’s
financial position but, according to Steelworkers’ Presi­
dent McBride, the acquisition created a credibility gap
between the company and its employees.5 These efforts
at diversification have hindered attempts at negotiating
wage concessions because union members questioned
whether savings in labor costs would be invested in the
steel industry or would be spent elsewhere.
Faced with a distressed economic picture, industry
and union negotiators came to the bargaining table in
1982 in an effort to limit labor costs. During the July
talks, the Steelworkers’ offer was reported to include a
3-year freeze on scheduled wage increases, elimination



Aluminum
Contracts between major aluminum producers and
the United Steelworkers of America and the Aluminum,
Brick and Glass Workers International Union are
scheduled to expire on May 31, 1983. As in steel, the
3

economic decline in the aluminum industry has pres­
sured parties to reach an early settlement incorporating
cost-cutting measures.
The three largest companies in the industry— Alumi­
num Co. of America, the Reynolds Metals Co., and the
Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corp.— negotiate
jointly with the Steelworkers. Contracts negotiated by
the three companies historically have become the pat­
tern for contracts for smaller companies in the alumi­
num industry. Aluminum settlements in 1977 and 1980
generally followed the pattern of the basic steel agree­
ments reached earlier in those years. This could occur
again in 1983 if steel negotiations result in an early set­
tlement.
The 3-year contract negotiated in May 1980 provided
for a 25-cent-an-hour wage increase on June 2, 1980, 20
cents on June 1, 1981, and 15 cents on June 7, 1982; in­
crement increases between labor grades and pay adjust­
ments for some employees of each company to attain
uniformity within their company; a revised COLA formu­
la, providing adjustments of 1 cent for each 0.3-point
change in the CPI during the first 2 years of the con­
tract, and 1 cent for each 0.26-point change in the last
year; and improved paid personal leave, insurance, sup­
plemental unemployment benefits, and pensions.
Responding to falling demand and prices, the indus­
try has closed some of its unprofitable and marginal
operations, particularily gas-powered plants hit hard by
rising energy costs.7Even with the reduced operating fa­
cilities, production was only at about 63 percent of ca­
pacity in August 1982,8 12 percentage points below the
rate at the depths of the 1975 recession.
With demand for aluminum products off, shipments
down, and several plants closing, industry employment
has also dropped. About 103,000 workers were em­
ployed in the aluminum industry in September 1982, with
30 to 40 percent of the industry’s work force on layoff.
In August 1982, the aluminum industry requested
that the Steelworkers open their contracts for negotia­
tion of reduced labor costs. After preliminary discus­
sions, the talks ended in early September without
agreement, apparently because of the Aluminum Work­
ers’ rejection of a similar request by the industry for
early negotiation of their contracts. A concessionary
agreement by the Steelworkers would have destroyed
the compensation parity that exists between the two
unions in the industry. Both the Steelworkers and the
industry reportedly indicated that they would continue
to hold informal discussions.

en 6 months to submit its plan of divestiture and, if
approved, another 12 months to implement it. The
months ahead will be a period of uncertainty for many,
particularly for AT&T employees.
A proposed resolution of the 8-year antitrust battle
between the Justice Department and AT&T was agreed
to on January 8, 1982. Federal Judge Harold H.
Greene, however, refused to accept the proposal unless
several major changes were made. The final agreement,
including changes proposed by Judge Greene, included:
a requirement that AT&T spin off its 22 wholly owned
local telephone companies as independent enterprises; a
ban on the manufacture of telephone equipment by lo­
cal companies, but permission to sell such equipment;
permission for the local companies to publish the lucra­
tive “Yellow Pages”; restrictions on AT&T’s entry into
electronic publishing (transmitting information over
wires to computer video screens) for 7 years; and per­
mission for AT&T to enter the data-processing and com­
puter business for the first time in 25 years. This
pending restructuring of the industry will probably re­
sult in attention to job security provisions, training pro­
grams, and unemployment benefits during the upcoming
negotiations.
Collective bargaining agreements covering about
750.000 workers in the industry are scheduled to expire
in 1983, nearly all on August 6. Most of the covered
workers are employed by AT&T in one of its operating
companies, the Long Lines Department, the Western
Electric Co. (the manufacturing arm of the Bell Sys­
tem), or Bell Laboratories. The Communications Work­
ers of America ( c w a ) represents about 85 percent of all
workers in the industry, and the International Brother­
hood of Electrical Workers (iBEW) and the Telecommu­
nications International Union (t i u ), a federation of
independent unions, represent the rest.
In recent years, negotiations have been held between
AT&T and each of the three unions separately, but on a
national level. Usually, agreement has been reached first
with CWA and that settlement has set the pattern for the
industry. Outside the Bell System, agreements terminat­
ing in 1983 include a contract between General Tele­
phone Co. of California and the c w a , which covers
20.000 workers and expires in March.
The 3-year contract negotiated in 1980 provided a
range of wage increases averaging 9.24 percent on Au­
gust 9, 1980, 2.67 percent in August 1981, and 2.68
percent in August 1982. In addition, telephone opera­
tors received a two-stage “upgrading” increase. A re­
vised cost-of-living clause would be calculated at the
rate of 55 cents a week plus 0.65 percent of each indi­
vidual’s weekly rate for each 1-percent rise in the BLSCPI for urban wage earners and clerical workers. The
previous rate had been 50 cents plus 0.6 percent. A
number of other contract items were changed, including
pension provisions; health, dental, life insurance, and vi­

Telephone industry
It is uncertain how the August 24, 1982 consent
agreement— between the Justice Department and the
American Telephone and Telegraph Co. ( a t &t ) — on
the split-up of the Bell System will affect pending nego­
tiations in the communications industry. AT&T was giv­



4

for workers to move from job to job or career to career,
and portability of pensions and savings-plan benefits.

sion care benefits; and job security provisions.
Faced with the Bell system breakup, the c w a created
a “Committee on the Future” to study the possible ef­
fects of the divestiture and to provide some long-range
planning for its membership. The 12-member commit­
tee’s interim report to the CWA’s annual convention in
July 1982 stressed the need to recognize that rapid de­
velopments in technology will continue to affect and
change specific jobs as they are now known, and that
retraining for its members should be CWA’s highest pri­
ority. Emphasis should be placed on employment secu­
rity items, according to the report, such as permission
Table 3.

Construction
About 900,000 workers in the construction industry
are covered by major collective bargaining agreements
that will expire or are subject to reopening in 1983, the
largest number since this series began in 1967. As usual,
activity is concentrated from spring to mid-summer.
Approximately 250 major agreements are up for renego­
tiation or reopening; more than 200, covering 800,000

Workers scheduled to receive deferred w age adjustments in 1983, by major industry group and size of increase

[Workers in thousands]
Manufacturing

Average hourly
adjustment

All private
nonagricultural
industries

Total'

727

2,953

1,083

14
22
26
34
46

46
65
74
342
319

26
50
43
204
144

Number of
contracts

T o ta l...................................

Nonmanufacturing

Selected industries
Food and
kindred
products

Apparel and
other
finished
products

141

282

Paper and
allied
products

35

Selected industries
Metal­
working

Total2
Construction

Transportation,
communications
and gas and
electric utilities

Wholesale
and
retail trade

Services

463

1,870

540

529

378

196

26
9
41
157
56

20
15
31
138
175

1
1
2
1

15
4
—
94
165

—
—
28
36
7

3
8
1
6
-

Cents per hour Increase
Under 15 cents
15 and under 20
20 and under 25
25 and under 30
30 and under 35
35
40
45
50
60

and
and
and
and
and

under
under
under
under
under

40
45
50
60
70

...............
............
............
............
............

-

-

25
1
9
5

............
............
............
............
............

52
31
29
70
61

305
112
74
190
244

225
39
34
41
57

—

6
1

70 and under 80 ............
80 and under 90 ............
90 and under 100 ..........
100 and under 110 . . . .
110 and under 120 . . . .

59
43
50
24
21

172
213
117
219
75

120 and o v e r ....................
Mean a d ju stm en t............
With cost-of-living
clauses ....................
Without cost-of-living
clauses ....................
Median adjustment . . . .

144

385
76.1

—

—
—
37
70

—
—
2
-

.

_

—

6
5

162
12
—
—
-

8
—
4
5

52
13
23
23
31

80
73
40
149
187

7
3
8
36
17

34
3
3
35
27

36
17
20
49
65

1
40
8
5
76

48
83
58
12
15

10
62
—
1
8

— '
—
3
—
-

6
4
7
—
-

13
7
4
1
6

124
130
59
207
60

36
29
26
36
37

20
14
28
10
3

18
77
3
—
19

29
5
1
1
1

3
44.8

64.4

—
36.6

382
94.2

299
131.0

70
91.6

3
57.6

10
78.6

-

—

—

33.4

66.9

41.2

38.6

62.3

32.6

—

33.8

45.3

90.4

39.9

46.4

69.8

102.9
56.1

61.6
35.0

67,4
85.0

53.8
35.0

66.9
69.3

48.5
29.2

111.7
70.3

132.3
125.0

186.9
33.1

60.3
56.2

79.2
64.1

—

Percent increase3
Under 2 percent ................
2 and under 3 ....................
3 and under 4 ....................
4 and under 5 ....................
5 and under 6 ....................

42
70
63
32
70

119
453
329
242
217

85
81
260
196
127

25
5
10
6
2

—
—
179
76

—
—
7
—
4

57
56
240
8
23

34
371
69
46
90

4
20
17
29
41

18
284
11
6
10

10
64
29
10
29

2
—
8
2
4

6 and under 7 ....................
7 and under 8 ....................
8 and under 9 ....................
9 and under 10 ..................
10 and under 11 ................

103
114
94
51
30

260
495
418
153
114

108
81
63
21
55

11
4
23
2
51

17
3
7
—
—

4
14
5
1
—

41
13
8
10
2

152
415
355
132
58

61
53
94
67
39

22
81
47
25
12

37
154
18
7
7

31
99
28
15
-

11 and under 12 ................
12 and over .........................
Mean adjustment................
With cost-of-living
clauses......................
Without cost-of-living
clauses......................
Median adjustment.............

27
31

68
86
6.1

1
5
5.0

1
—
6.9

—

-

—

—
5.0

—
6.4

5
3.8

67
81
6.8

54
61
8.5

2
11
5.0

6
7
6.1

5
1
7.5

4.4

4.4

7.0

4.9

—

3.4

4.2

4.6

3.5

4.9

8.1

7.5
6.4

6.4
4.6

6.8
8.7

8,0
4.7

6.4
7.0

5.3
3.0

7.7
7.5

8.6
8.6

7.7
2.7

6.4
7.0

7.5
7.5

1 Includes workers in the following industry groups for which separate data are not shown: Textiles
(8.000); lumber (6,000); furniture (11,000); printing (33,000); chemicals (13,000); petroleum refining
(32.000); leather (25,000); stone, clay and concrete (18,000); instruments (13,000); and miscellaneous
manufacturing (6,000).
2 Includes 162,000 workers in the mining industry for which separate data are not shown, because
earnings data are confidential, and 66,000 workers in the finance, insurance, and real estate industries.




3 Percent of straight-time average hourly earnings.
N o te : Workers are distributed according to the average adjustment for all workers in each
bargaining unit considered. Deferred wage increases include guaranteed minimum adjustments under
cost-of-living clauses. Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. Dashes indi­
cate there are no workers having wage increases that fall within that stated range.

workers, in March through June. Much of the activity
will be concentrated on the west coast where one-fifth
of the contracts for at least 340,000 workers will be
renegotiated.
Construction agreements with the same expiration
dates are common at the city level and to a lesser extent
at the State and regional level. The first contract to be
negotiated in the given area often becomes the standard
after which others are patterned.
The unusually large number of workers whose con­
tracts are up for bargaining in 1983 results from the
high incidence of short-term agreements negotiated in
1982. Over one-fourth of the 153 agreements negotiated
in the first 9 months of 1982 will expire in 1983; only
one of the 165 contracts negotiated in 1981 expired in
1982. Construction contracts negotiated in the first 9
months of 1982 had an average duration of 22.4
months, compared with 27.6 months for all of 1981.
A slack demand for new construction projects, high
unemployment, and continued incursion of nonunion
employers into commercial, industrial, and heavy con­
struction prompted building-trades unions to trim their
demands for economic improvements in 1982. Many
contracts called for little or no change in pay. Con­
struction settlements for the first 9 months of 1982 pro­
vided wage changes averaging 7.0 percent in the first
contract year and 6.9 percent over the life of the con­
tract. These averages compare with 11.3 and 10.0 per­
cent, respectively, when the same parties bargained
previously. Average wage adjustments negotiated in
construction in 1981 were 13.5 and 11.3 percent, respec­
tively.
During 1982, negotiators hesitated to commit them­
selves to long-term contracts because of the recession.
Layoffs are common in the construction industry be­
cause of its seasonal nature, but the unemployment rate
was 21.9 percent in November 1982, compared with
17.8 percent in November 1981. Unless some degree of
recovery occurs in the economy in the next few months,
1983 negotiations most likely will place less emphasis
on monetary provisions and more on job security and
benefits for laid-off or unemployed workers than when
these contracts were last renegotiated.

pire on October 1, allowing ample time for settlement
of local issues. During the bargaining sessions, which
began in February, the parties reviewed the legal status
of the Rules on Containers—a key contract item—
which had been in litigation before the National Labor
Relations Board ( n l r b ) and the Federal courts for
nearly 7 years.”New technology led to the development
of these rules which attempted to lessen the adverse ef­
fects of modernization—loss of jobs, sharply reduced
earnings, and reduced work opportunities. These provi­
sions had been designed to prevent the loss of contain­
er-handling work from the docks to inland warehouses
and gave ILA members the right to pack and unpack all
containers, with certain exceptions, going to and com­
ing from points within 50 miles of a port. However, a
1975 NLRB ruling found that the container work rules
violated the National Labor Relations Act by expand­
ing the role of longshore workers and declared that the
rules were illegal. This decision was disputed in the
courts. Resolving a conflict among circuit courts, in late
May 1980, the Supreme Court sent the container rules
issue back to the NLRB to define longshore “traditional
work.” The Supreme Court ruled that the NLRB had in­
correctly examined the nature of the work involved.
The 1980 master pact, reached after the Supreme
Court ruling, provided that the union or management
could cancel the agreement on 60 days’ notice, if any
portion of the rules dealing with containerization was
struck down by State, Federal or other law, or by deci­
sion of any court or administrative agency. The agree­
ment provided for a Guaranteed Annual Income plan
for workers displaced as a result of the use of container­
ization.
In October 1982, ILA President Thomas Gleason told
a shippers conference in Boston that the union’s goal in
contract negotiations in 1983 will be to reach agreement
with management 6 months before the present contract
expires on September 30 and to avoid a strike.9 To
achieve this, the ILA has targeted talks to begin in Feb­
ruary 1983. Although the NLRB has not yet issued a fi­
nal definition of traditional longshore work, it is not
expected that the containerization question will be an
issue this year.

Lomgsiorimg

Aerospace

The International Longshoremen’s Association ( i l a )
will represent about 116,000 dockworkers in bargaining
with associations of employers on the eastern and gulf
coasts on agreements scheduled to expire at the end of
September. A master agreement will be negotiated first,
to be followed by local agreements later in the year.
Many terms, covering such issues as vacations and holi­
days, are negotiated separately at each port.
The June 1980 master agreement was reached about 4
months before the local contracts were scheduled to ex­

More than 100,000 aerospace workers are covered by
collective bargaining agreements scheduled to expire in
the fall. The two major unions involved in these negoti­
ations are the International Association of Machinists
and Aerospace Workers ( i a m ) and the United Automo­
bile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of
America ( u a w ). The major aerospace companies are the
Bendix Corp., the Boeing Co., Lockheed Aircraft Corp.,
McDonnell Douglas Corp., and United Technologies
Corp.




6

The relationship between the IAM and UAW has
ranged from intense jurisdictional rivalry during the pe­
riod of rapid growth of union membership in the late
1930’s to joint labor bargaining conferences held inter­
mittently since 1959. Recently, the two unions have
worked closely to develop common objectives and strat­
egies. Negotiations are usually on a company-by-company basis, with the earliest settlements setting the
basic framework for subsequent negotiations in the in­
dustry. However, the terms of individual contracts, as
well as expiration dates, may vary.
The aerospace industry is characterized by large fluc­
tuations in employment. Hiring booms in response to
large government and commercial airline contracts have
been followed by massive layoffs when contracts faded.
The largest companies, which build complex military
aircraft, missiles, and space vehicles and large commer­
cial airplanes, rely heavily on contracts with relatively
few customers — the United States, foreign governments,
and commercial airlines.
Currently, the aerospace industry is economically
sound because large orders for military aircraft have
made up for the decline in orders from other purchas­
ers, such as airlines, in both domestic and export mar­
kets.1 Aerospace exports in 1982, dropped for the first
0
time since 1977.
In the last round of bargaining, Boeing Co. and the
IAM were the first to reach an agreement, on October 4,
1980, for 50,000 employees in Seattle, Wash., Wichita,
Kan., Portland, Oreg., and other locations. The 3-year
contract provided an immediate 7-percent wage increase
and 3-percent increases in October 1981 and 1982 as
well as improvements in pension benefits for both pres­
ent and future employees. Shortly afterward, other ac­
cords were reached patterned after the Boeing
settlement: the Machinists with Lockheed Corp. for
30,000 workers and with McDonnell Douglas Corp. for

Table 4.
month

7,000 workers, and UAW, in a coordinated effort, with
McDonnell Douglas for 15,000 workers.

Wage changes of expiring contracts
Contracts expiring in 1983 will yield average wage
changes over their life of at least 8.6 percent. Reflecting
the recent moderation in the rate of inflation, it appears
that contracts without COLA clauses will provide higher
total wage changes than those with such clauses for the
first time in the 9 years for which such data are avail­
able. The following tabulation relates to contracts expir­
ing in 1983. It shows the average annual percent wage
adjustment specified in the contracts, up to their expira­
tion and the sum of those specified adjustments
plus COLA increases, where provided, through the third
quarter of 1982:
Specified

Total ......................
Ja n u a ry ................................
F e b ru a ry .............................
M a rc h ..................................
April .....................................
May .....................................
J u n e .....................................
J u ly ........................................
August ................................
September ........................
O cto b e r................................
N o ve m b e r...........................
D e ce m b e r...........................

Airlines, petroleum refineries
Metal containers
Coal mining
Construction, food stores
Men's and boys' coats and suits, construction
Coal mining, electrical equipment,
construction, apparel
Railroads, construction, food stores
Food stores
Coal mining
Construction
Construction, food stores
Coal mining

1983 scheduled wage changes
Only one-third of the workers (3.0 million) covered
by major collective bargaining agreements are scheduled
to receive deferred wage increases in 1983. (See tables 3
and 4.) This is the smallest number and proportion of
workers for any year since the series began in 1967.
About 4.3 million workers received “deferred” increases
in 1982 and 6.1 million in 1981. The small proportion
of workers with 1983 deferred increases stems from the
more than 1 million workers, primarily in the automo­
bile, trucking, farm implement, and rubber industries,
who are in the second year of multiyear agreements
reached in 1982 that did not provide for any specified
wage increases during the contract term; these workers
may, however, receive increases under COLA clauses.
Deferred wage increases will average 6.1 percent in
1983, compared with 6.3 percent a year earlier. In­
creases deferred from 1981 settlements will average 6.7
percent, compared with 5.8 percent for those deferred
from 1982, reflecting moderation in wage increases ne­
gotiated the latter year.
Contracts with COLA generally provide for deferred
wage increases that are smaller than those without, be­
cause they are negotiated with the anticipation that

Workers
covered
1 2,953
292
144
284
303
361
747
784
112
245
154
123
293

1This total is smaller than the sum of individual items because 520,000 workers will re­
ceive more than one increase. It is based on data available as of Oct. 1,1982, and thus may
understate the number of workers receiving deferred increases for the entire year.




8.6
8.1
9.6

Many of the contracts provide for COLA reviews after
the third quarter of 1982 but before their 1983 expira­
tion. Therefore, it is possible that by the time they ex­
pire, contracts with COLA may yield higher total wage
adjustments than those without. However, given the
current trend in the Consumer Price Index, it is unlikely
that any additional COLA yield will be sufficient to
change the relationship shown above.

[Workers in thousands]
Principal industries

6.9
5.0
9.6

Contracts expiring in 1983 . . . .
With c o l a .........................
Without c o l a ....................

Deferred w age increases scheduled in 1983, by

Effective month

Total specified
plus COLA

7

some amount of COLA wage increases will be generated.
About one-third of the workers scheduled to receive
deferred increases in 1983 have COLA coverage. These
deferred wage increases will average 4.2 percent, com­
pared with 7.2 percent for those without COLA clauses.
Variations among industries in the average amount of
deferred increases often reflect variations in the propor­
tion of workers covered by COLA clauses. For example,
in the metalworking industry, where COLA is prevalent
(88 percent of the workers are covered), 1983 deferred
increases will average only 3.8 percent, but in the con­
struction industry, where COLA clauses affect only 12
percent of the workers, deferred increases will average
8.5 percent.1 (See tables 3 and 5.)
1

Table 5.

Cost-off=Hvimg adjustments
COLA clauses are designed to help workers recover
purchasing power lost through price increases. They
provide for adjustments in wages based on measures of
price changes, in most cases the Consumer Price Index
for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers ( c p i - w ).
At the end of 1982, 4.9 million (58 percent) of the 8.5
million workers under major agreements had COLA pro­
tection. Sixty percent of the workers covered by COLA
clauses will have at least one review in 1983. (See tables
5 and 6.) The amount of protection varies, depending
on the formula used in adjustment calculations, the tim­
ing of reviews, and whether or not maximum amounts

Prevalence of cost-of-living adjustment clau ses in major collective bargaining agreem ents, October 1982

[Workers in thousands]
All contracts

2-digit standard
industry
classification
(SIC)

Contracts with COLA clauses

Percent of
workers covered by
COLA clauses

Industry

Workers
covered

Number of
contracts

Workers
covered

Number of
contracts

10
11
12
15
16

T o ta l..........................................................................
Metal mining ........................................................................
Anthracite mining ................................................................
Bituminous coal and lignite mining ..................................
Building construction general contractors ......................
Construction other than building construction ...............

8,484
36
2
160
612
435

1,772
12
1
1
162
116

4,928
34
2
—
42
105

687
10
1
—
8
16

58.1
93.2
100.0
.0
6.8
24.2

17
20
21
22
23

Construction-special trade contractors ...........................
Food and kindred products ...............................................
Tobacco m anufactures ....................................................
Textile mill products ...........................................................
Apparel and other finished p ro d u c ts ................................

410
252
22
45
351

190
87
7
16
47

31
127
20
8
266

17
33
6
3
21

7.5
50.4
90.2
18.1
75.8

24
25
26
27
28

Lumber and wood products, except furniture.................
Furniture and fixtures .........................................................
Paper and allied products .................................................
Printing, publishing and allied industries ........................
Chemicals and allied p ro d u c ts ..........................................

60
20
86
54
68

14
13
53
27
34

1
8
8
33
21

1
6
1
15
10

2.2
40.8
9.3
62.2
31.5

29
30
31
32
33

Petroleum refining and related industries ......................
Rubber and miscellaneous plastics products ...............
Leather and leather p ro d u cts............................................
Stone, clay, glass, and concrete pro d u cts......................
Primary metals industries .................................................

34
66
38
85
437

18
14
13
35
97

59
—
70
421

—
11
—
26
88

.0
90.5
.0
81.6
96.4

34
35
36
37
38

Fabricated metal p ro d u cts.................................................
Machinery, except e'ectrical ............................................
Electrical machinery, equipment, and supplies...............
Transportation equipment .................................................
Instruments and related p ro d u c ts .....................................

94
238
373
1,130
28

52
78
77
94
13

72
203
341
984
8

38
66
60
73
4

76.7
85.6
91.4
87.2
29.4

39
40
41
42
44

Miscellaneous manufacturing industries ........................
Railroad transportation ......................................................
Local and urban tr a n s it......................................................
Motor freight tra n sp orta tio n ...............................................
Water tran sp orta tio n ...........................................................

19
412
17
442
89

10
26
3
17
19

4
412
15
442
34

3
26
1
17
7

22.5
100.0
85.8
100.0
38.5

45
48
49
50
51

Transportation by a i r ...........................................................
Com m unications...................................................................
Electric, gas, and sanitary services ................................
Wholesale trade — durables ............................................
Wholesale trade — n ondurables.......................................

182
759
235
10
39

45
46
75
5
10

72
696
44
3
31

14
29
13
1
4

39.6
91.7
18.7
25.5
78.6

53
54
55
56
58

Retail trade — general m e rcha n d ise ................................
Food s to r e s ..........................................................................
Automotive dealers and service s ta tio n s ........................
Apparel and accessory s to r e s ..........................................
Eating and drinking p la c e s .................................................

78
517
11
10
66

18
95
8
4
20

25
197
1
—

4
33
1
—

32.3
38.1
11.5
.0
.0

59
60-65
70-89

Miscellaneous retail stores ...............................................
Finance, insurance, and real estate ................................
Services ...............................................................................

16
93
353

5
18
77

15
46
25

4
6
10

93.5
49.6
7.1

N o t e : Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals, and percentages
may not reflect shown ratios.




—

Dashes indicate absence of cost of living coverage,

Table 6.

Timing and frequency off 1983 cost-off-living review s1

[Workers in thousands]

—
First quarter

Contracts by expiration and frequency
of cost-of-living review

Number of
contracts

Workers
covered

328
260
43
25
—

Second quarter

Third quarter

Fourth quarter

Full year2

Number of
contracts

Workers
covered

Number of
contracts

Workers
covered

Number of
contracts

W orkers
covered

Number of
contracts

2,065
1,621
340
104
—

258
218
19
21
—

2,088
1,485
156
448
—

186
138
34
14
—

1,522
1,085
323
113
—

119
99
14
6
—

1,070
898
143
28
—

422
268
62
66
26

2,899
1,651
496
693
59

192
172
11
9
—

844
754
21
68
—

133
127
5
1
—

630
616
12
1
—

49
45
3
1
—

205
197
7
2
—

6
5
—
1
—

10
8
—
—

209
172
16
12
9

891
754
33
72
31

136
88
32
16

1,221
867
319
36

125
91
14
20

1,459
869
143
447

137
93
31
13
—

1,317
888
316
112
—

113
94
14
5

1,060
890
143
27
—

213
96
46
54
17

2,008
897
463
621
28

Workers
covered

All contracts
Total ..............................................................
Quarterly ...................................................................
S em iannual................................................................
Annual ........................................................................
Other3 ........................................................................
Contracts expiring in 1983
Total ..............................................................
Quarterly ...................................................................
S em iannual.................................................................
Annual ........................................................................
Other3 ........................................................................

2

Contracts expiring in later years
Total ..............................................................
Quarterly ...................................................................
S em iannual................................................................
Annual ........................................................................
Other3 ........................................................................

—

—

—

_

11ncludes only those reviews through the termination of the present agreement; does not assume the continuation of existing reviews after the contract expiration dates.
2 Contracts that have at least one review in the year.

3 Includes monthly, combinations of annual and quarterly combinations of annual and
semi-annual, and reviews dependent on the levels of the Consumer Price Index.

per hour for each 0.3-point increase in the CPI. COLA
adjustments for more than 1.8 million workers, includ­
ing those in the steel, railroad, trucking, and aerospace
industries, use this formula. The automobile and rubber
industries agreements provide for adjustments of 1 cent
for each 0.26-point movement in the c p i ; workers in
the electrical equipment industry receive adjustments of
1 cent for each 0.2-percent change, but beginning in June
1983, will receive 1 cent for each 0.175-percent change
in the CPI; and workers in telephone communications
receive COLA adjustments at the rate of 55 cents a week
plus 0.65 percent of the individual’s weekly rate for
each 1-percent increase in the CPI.
Cost-of-living reviews are made at intervals specified
in the COLA clause. Annual reviews are the most com­
mon, affecting 2.1 million workers, including those in
telephone communications, trucking, and apparel agree­
ments; quarterly reviews cover 1.9 million, including
workers in the automobile, steel, and aerospace indus­
tries; semiannual reviews affect 825,000 workers, most
notably in railroads and electrical products.
Four million of the 4.9 million workers with COLA
provisions are covered by contracts that tie possible ad­
justments to movements in a BLS Consumer Price Index
for “all cities.” Another 270,000 workers are under con­
tracts that use an index for an individual city and con­
tracts for 660,000 in the automobile industry relate ad­
justments to a combination of the U.S. and Canadian
indexes because contracts cover workers in both
countries.

(“caps”) are specified. During the first 9 months of
1982, c o l a ’s yielded wage increases that were about
three-fourths of the rise in the Consumer Price Index.
COLA coverage peaked in 1977 when 61.2 percent (6.0
million) of the workers under major collective
bargaining agreements had COLA clauses in their con­
tracts. The proportion covered has remained relatively
stable, although the number has declined steadily since
1977, dropping to 4.9 million in the fourth quarter of
1982, largely the fesult of declining employment in in­
dustries where COLA clauses are common. The following
shows the percent of workers under major contracts
with COLA clauses on January 1, 1971-83:1
2
N u m ber o f
workers under

Y ea r

m a jo r a g re e m e n ts

W orkers with

COLA coverage
N um ber
P erce n t

1 9 7 1 ...............
1972 ...............
1973 ...............
1974 ...............
1975 ...............
1976 ...............

10.8
10.6
10.4
10.2
10.3
10.1

3.0
4.3
4.1
4 .0
5.3
6 .0

27.8
4 0 .6
3 9 .4
39.2
51.5
59.4

1977 ...............
1978 ...............
1979 ...............
1980 ...............
1 9 8 1 ...............
1982 ...............
1983 ...............

9.8
9.6
9.5
9.3
9.1
9 .0
8.5

6 .0
5.8
5.6
5.4
5.3
5.1
4 .9

6 1 .2
6 0 .4
58.9
58.1
58.2
56.7
57.6

The most prevalent COLA adjustment formula in
current agreements provides a wage increase of 1 cent




~

9

Table 7.

Expiration and w age adjustment provisions of selected collective bargaining agreem ents

[Contracts are listed in order of Standard Industrial Classification code]
1972
SIC
Code

Industry and em ployer1

Employment
at time of
settlement

Contract term3

4,400
6,500
5,000

Unjon2

Sept. 1,1982 to Aug. 31,1985
Sept. 1,1982 to Aug. 31,1985
Sept. 27, 1981 to Sept. 30, 1984

Provisions for 1983
automatic cost-ofliving review4

Provisions for 1983
deferred wage
increases5

Manufacturing
20

Food and kindred products:
Armour and Co.6
George A. Hormel and Co.6
Kellogg Co.
Nabisco, Inc.
Sugar Cos. Negotiating Committee (Hawaii)6
Swift and Co.6
Wilson Foods Corp.

21

22

23

24

26

Tobacco m anufactures
Phillip Morris, U.S.A. (Richmond, Va.)

Textile mill products:
Dan River, Inc. (Danville, Va.)
Fieldcrest Mills, Inc. (Virginia and North
Carolina)
Apparel and other finished products:
Greater Blouse, Skirt and Undergarment
Association, Inc.
New York Coat and Suit Association
Lumber and wood products, except furniture:
Western States Wood Products
Employers Association (Boise-Cascade
Corp., Champion International Co., Crown
Zellerbach C orp, Georgia-Pacific C orp,
International Paper C o , ITT-Rayonier Inc,
Louisiana-Pacific C orp, Publishers Paper
C o , Simpson Timber C o , and
Weyerhauser Co.)

Food and Commercial Workers
Food and Commercial Workers
Grain Millers
Bakery, Confectionery and Tobacco
Workers
Longshoremen and Warehousemen
(Ind.)
Food and Commercial Workers
Food and Commercial Workers

10,500

S ept.1,1981 to Aug. 31,1983

7,000

Feb. 1,1980 to Jan. 31,1983

3,000
6,500

Sept. 1,1982 to Aug. 31,1985
Sept. 1,1982 to Aug. 31,1985

Bakery, Confectionery and Tobacco
Workers

9,650

Feb. 1,1980 to Jan. 31,1983

United Textile Workers
Clothing and Textile Workers

7,000
6,500

December
December
March, thereafter
quarterly

June 22,1980 to June 21,1983
Mar. 1,1981 to Feb. 29,1984

Ladies' Garment Workers

23,000
20,000

June 1,1982 to May 31,1985

Woodworkers; Lumber Production
and Industrial Workers (Ind.)

37,000

Feb. 1: 43 cents

June 1,1982 to May 31,1985

Ladies' Garment Workers

December
December

June 1,1980 to May 31,1983

June 1: 35 cents
January and March

June 1: 70 cents

Paper and allied products:
International Paper C o , Southern Kraft
Division

Paperworkers and Electrical
Workers (IBEW)

8,000

June 1,1979 to May 31,1983

Rubber and miscellaneous plastics products:
B.F. Goodrich Co.

Rubber Workers

7,200

Apr. 21,1982 to Apr. 20,1985

Rubber Workers

8,750

Apr. 21,1982 to Apr. 20,1985

Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.

Rubber Workers

16,000

Apr. 21,1982 to Apr. 20,1985

Uniroyal, Inc.

30

Rubber Workers

4,100

Apr. 21,1982 to Apr. 20,1985

7,150
12,400

Apr. 1,1980 to Mar. 31,1983
Apr. 1,1980 to Mar. 31,1983

215,200

Aug. 1,1980 to Aug. 1, 1983

February and May

Firestone Tire and Rubber Co.

32

33

Stone, clay and glass products:
Brockway Glass C o , Inc.
Owens-Illinois, Inc.
Primary metal industries:6
8 major basic steel companies:
Allegheny Ludlum Steel Corp.; Armco Inc.;
Bethlehem Steel Corp.; Inland Steel Co.;
Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp.; National
Steel Corp.; Republic Steel Corp.; United
States Steel Corp.;
Aluminum Co. of America
Armco Steel Corp. (Middletown, Ohio)
Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corp.
Kaiser Steel C orp, Steel Manufacturing
Division (Fontana, Calif.)
National Steel C orp, Weirton Steel Division
(Ohio and West Virginia)
Reynolds Metals Co.
United States Steel C orp, salaried
employees

34

June 1 :3 5 cents

Fabricated metal products:
American Can Co.6
Continental Group, Inc. Co.

Glass Bottle Blowers
Glass Bottle Blowers

Steelworkers

Aluminum Workers
Steelworkers
Armco Employees Independent
Federation (Ind.)
Steelworkers
Steelworkers

9,150
10,000
6,000

June 1,1980 to May 31,1983
June 1,1980 to May 31,1983
Aug. 1,1980 to July 31,1983

March
March
February and May

11,000
5,550

June 1,1980 to May 31,1983
Aug. 1,1980 to July 31,1983

March
February and May

Independent Steelworkers Union (Ind.)

10,000

Aug. 1,1980 to Aug. 1,1983

February and May

Steelworkers
Steelworkers

8,100
5,200

June 2,1980 to May 31,1983
Aug. 1,1980 to Aug. 1,1983

March
February and May

Steelworkers

6,250

Feb. 16, 1981 to Feb. 19, 1984

Steelworkers

12,000

Feb. 16,1981 to Feb. 19,1984

February, thereafter
quarterly
February, thereafter
quarterly

See footnotes at end of table.




January, thereafter
quarterly
January, thereafter
quarterly
January, thereafter
quarterly
January, thereafter
quarterly

10

Feb. 15:15 cents
Feb. 15:15-27 cents

Table 7.

Continued — Expiration and w age adjustment provisions of selected collective bargaining agreem ents

[Contracts are listed in order of Standard Industrial Classification code]
1972
SIC
Code
35

Industry and employer1

Machinery, except electrical:
Briggs and Stratton Corp. (Milwaukee, Wis.)
Cummins Engine Co., Inc. (Columbus, Ind.)
Timken Co. (Columbus and Wooster, Ohio)

36

371

Employment
at time of
settlement

Union2

Allied Industrial Workers
Diesel Workers Union (Ind.)

7,900
6,700

Aug. 1,1980 to July 31,1983
May 4, 1981 to Apr. 29,1984

Steelworkers

7,800

July 20,1980 to Aug. 29,1983

13,000
60,000
9,000
5,200

June 28, 1982 to June 27,1985
June 28,1982 to June 27,1985
Sept. 16,1981 to Aug. 31,1983
Oct. 1, 1980 to Feb. 28, 1983

Provisions for 1983
automatic cost-ofliving review4

Communications Workers

22,650

Aug. 10, 1980 to Aug. 6,1983

Transportation equipment-motor vehicle and
motor vehicle equipment:
American Motors Corp. (Wisconsin)

Auto Workers

12,000

March 1,1982 to Sept. 16, 1985 September, thereafter
quarterly
Mar. 1,1982 to Jan. 31,1985
September, thereafter
quarterly
Mar. 1,1982 to Sept. 14,1984
September and
December
Apr. 12, 1982 to Sept. 14,1984 December

Electrical
Electrical
Electrical
Electrical

Workers
Workers
Workers
Workers

(UE, Ind.)
(IUE)
(IBEW)
(IBEW)

Auto Workers

5,000

Ford Motor Co.

Auto Workers

110,000

General Motors Corp.

Auto Workers

320,000

Transportation equipment-aircraft:
Beech Aircraft Corp.

June and December
June and December

Cessna Aircraft Co. (Kansas)

Machinists

8,000

Lockheed Aircraft Corp., Lockheed-California
Division
McDonnell Douglas Corp. (California and
Oklahoma)
McDonnell-Douglas Corp. (St. Louis, Mo.)

Machinists

14,000

September, thereafter
quarterly
January
January, April and
July
Sept. 28, 1981 to Sept. 30, 1984 January, thereafter
quarterly
Oct. 20,1980 to Oct. 1,1983
January, April, July

Auto Workers

10,000

Oct. 17, 1980 to Oct. 9, 1983

11,000

May 11,1981 to May 13,1984

February, thereafter
quarterly

5,000

374

38

June 27: 3 percent
June 27: 3 percent

January, April, July

Machinists

Aug. 14,1981 to Aug. 19,1984

Bendix Corp.
Boeing Co.

373

Provisions for 1983
deferred wage
increases5

February and Novem­ May 5: 52-64 cents
ber
March and June

Electrical machinery, equipment and supplies:
General Electric Co.
General Electric Co.
Raytheon'Co. (Massachusetts)
Rockwell International Corp.
(Cedar Rapids, Iowa)6
Western Electric Co. Inc.

American Motors Corp., Jeep Corp. (Ohio)

372

Contract term3

6,750

Machinists

6,100
39,900

Auto Workers
Machinists

Transportation equipment-shipbuilding:
Bethlehem Steel Corp., Shipbuilding
Department
Litton Systems, Inc., Ingalls Shipbuilding
Division (Pascagoula, Miss.)
Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Co.
(Virginia)
Pacific Coast Shipbuilding and Ship Repair
Firms

Pacific Coast Metal Trades Dept, and
Teamsters (Ind.)

Transportation equipment-railway cars:
Pullman, Inc., Pullman Standard Division

Steelworkers

Teamsters (Ind.)

Professional, scientific and controlling
instruments; photographic and optical
goods; watches and clocks:
Honeywell, Inc. (Minneapolis and St. Paul,
Minn.)

Marine and Shipbuilding Workers
Pascagoula Metal Trades Council and
Teamsters (Ind.)
Steelworkers

Aug. 3,1981 to Aug. 5,1984

Aug. 1: 341
/2-59 '/2
cents

Apr. 30,1980 to Apr. 29,1983
Oct. 4, 1980 to Oct. 3, 1983

Sept. 26: 90 cents
to $1.35

May 11:3 percent

January

6,400

Feb. 1,1981 to Jan. 29,1984

17,000

Mar. 31,1980 to Oct. 31,1983

35,000

July 1,1980 to June 29,1983

February and May

4,800

Apr. 4, 1981 to May 4,1984

January, thereafter
quarterly

7,000

Feb. 1,1981 to Jan. 31,1984

June 7,1981 to Sept. 30, 1984

Apr. 11:10 cents

Apr. 4: 20-38 cents,
Oct. 4 :1 5 -3 3 cents

Feb. 1: 8 percent

Nonmanufacturing

15

16

17

Bituminous coal and lignite mining:
Association of Bituminous Contractors, Inc.

Mine Workers (Ind.)

12,000

Bituminous Coal Operators Association

12

Mine Workers (Ind.)

160,000

July 1, 1981 to Oct. 1,1984

Construction:
Mid-America Regional Bargaining Association
(Illinois)

Carpenters

25,000

June 1, 1981 to May 31, 1983

Construction:
Associated General Contractors (Northern
California)

Operating Engineers

12,000

June 16,1980 to June 15,1983

Construction:
New York Electrical Contractors Association,
Inc.

Electrical Workers (IBEW)

8,000

June 12,1980 to June 9,1983

See footnotes at end of table.




11

March, thereafter
quarterly; 15 cents
guaranteed
adjustments
March, thereafter
quarterly; 15 cents
guaranteed
adjustments

June 25: 40 cents

June 25: 40 cents

Table 7.

Continued — Expiration and wage adjustment provisions of selected collective bargaining agreem ents

[Contracts are listed in order of Standard Industrial Classification code]
1972
SIC
Code
40

Industry and employer1

Railroads:6
Class I railroads:
Operating unions
Nonoperating unions:
Shop craft

Nonshop craft
Conrail and Amtrak, Maintenance and
Equipment employees
Conrail, Clerks
Conrail, Operating employees
42

44

Trucking and warehousing:
Local Cartage, for Hire, and Private Carriers
agreement (Chicago, III.)
National Master Freight agreements and
supplements6
Local Cartage
Over-the-road
United Parcel Service
Water transportation:6
Dry Cargo Cos., Atlantic and Gulf coasts
Dry Cargo Cos., Tankers, Atlantic and Gulf
coasts
New York Shipping Association, Port of
New York
Pacific Maritime Association

Employment
at time of
settlement

Union2

Contract term3

Locomative Engineers (Ind.)
United Transportation Union

26,000
85,000

Apr. 1,1981 to June 30,1984
Apr. 1, 1981 to June 30,1984

Electrical Workers (IBEW)
Firemen and Oilers
Machinists
Railway Carmen
Maintenance of Way Employees
Railway Clerks
Transport Workers and Railway
Carmen
Railway Clerks
United Transportion Union

9,000
8,400
15,000
32,000
61,000
70,000
7,800

Apr.
Apr.
Apr.
Apr.
Apr.
Apr.
Apr.

January
January
January
January
January
January
January

12,450
16,100

1,1981
1,1981
1,1981
1, 1981
1,1981
1,1981
1,1981

to
to
to
to
to
to
to

June
June
June
June
June
June
June

30,1984
30,1984
30,1984
30, 1984
30,1984
30,1984
30,1984

Apr. 1,1981 to June 30,1984
Apr. 1,1981 to June 30,1984

48

Airlines:6
United Airlines, Inc., flight attendants
Communications:
American Telephone and Telegraph Co.,
Long lines dept.
Bell Telephone Co. of Pennsylvania
General Telephone Co. of California
Illinois Bell Telephone Co., (Illinois and
Indiana)
Illinois Bell Telephone Co., (Illinois and
Indiana)
Michigan Bell Telephone Co.
Mountain State Telephone and Telegraph Co.
New England Telephone and Telegraph Co.
New England Telephone Co.
New Jersey Bell Telephone Co.
Southwestern Bell Telephone Co.
Western Electric Co., Inc. (Service Div.)
Western Electric Co., Inc. (Installation)
Wisconsin Telephone Co.

49

53

Electric, gas and sanitary services:
Consolidated Edison Company of New York,
Inc.
Retail trade-general merchandise:
Bloomingdale Bros. (New York)

54

Retail trade— food stores:
Cleveland Food Industries Committee (Ohio)




January and July
January and July

200,000
100,000
85,000

Teamsters (Ind.)
Teamsters (Ind.)
Teamsters (Ind.)

Masters, Mates and Pilots
Maritime Union

Mar. 1,1982 to Mar. 31,1985
Mar. 1,1982 to Mar. 31,1985
May 1,1982 to Apr. 30,1985

July
July
July
July
July
July
July

1:
1:
1:
1:
1:
1:
1:

3
3
3
3
3
3
3

percent
percent
percent
percent
percent
percent
percent

July 1: 3 percent
July 1: 3 percent

April

April
April
May and November

5,000
15,000

June 16,1981 to June 15,1984
June 16, 1981 to June 15,1984

10,200

Oct. 1,1980 to Sept. 30,1983

11,000

July 1,1981 to July 1,1984

10,750

June 16,1981 to June 15,1984

10,750

June 16,1981 to June 15,1984

5,000

Oct. 1,1980 to Sept. 30,1983
Oct. 1,1980 to Sept. 30,1983

Apr. 1,1982 to Mar. 31,1983

23,300

June and December
June and December

Aug. 10,1980 to Aug. 6,1983

June 16: 7 ‘/2 percent
June 16: l lk percent

Longshoremen (ILA)
Longshoremen and Warehousemen
(Ind.)
Seafarers

July 2: $1.25
June and December

Seafarers

June 16:

l lk

percent

June and December
June 16: 7M> percent

Longshoremen (ILA)
Longshoremen (ILA)

Air Line Pilots

Communications Workers
Federation of Telephone Workers of
Pennsylvania (Ind.)
Communications Workers

11,950

Aug. 10,1980 to Aug. 6,1983

20,500
5,500

Mar. 5, 1980 to Mar. 4, 1983
Aug. 10, 1980 to Aug. 6, 1983

13,800

Aug. 10,1980 to Aug. 6,1983

20,000
29,200
16,000
6,300
11,450
88,000
14,750
14,000
6,250

Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.

16,750

June 18,1980 to June 17,1983

Electrical Workers (IBEW)
Communications Workers
Communications Workers
Electrical Workers (IBEW)
Electrical Workers (IBEW)
Electrical Workers (IBEW)
Communications Workers
Communications Workers
Communications Workers
Communications Workers

10, 1980
10,1980
10, 1980
10,1980
10,1980
10, 1980
10, 1980
10,1980
10,1980

to
to
to
to
to
to
to
to
to

Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.

6,1983
6,1983
6, 1983
6, 1983
6,1983
6, 1983
6, 1983
6,1983
6 1983

Utility Workers

5,600

Mar. 1,1980 to Feb. 28,1983

5,000

Nov. 18, 1979 to Feb. 1, 1983

Food and Commercial Workers
Food and Commercial Workers

8,400
17,000

Sept. 1,1980 to Sept. 3,1983
Mar. 5, 1980 to Mar. 5,1983

7,200

Mar. 3, 1980 to Feb. 25,1983

Food and Commercial Workers

5,000

Mar. 9, 1980 to Mar. 5, 1983

Retail, Wholesale and Department
Store
Food and Commercial Workers

of Northern California6
(Minnesota)
Philadelphia Food Stores (Pennsylvania,
New Jersey and Delaware)
See footnotes at end of table.

July
July
July
July
July
July
July

Apr. 1,1982 to Mar. 31,1985

Food and Commercial Workers

Woodward and Lothrop, Inc. (Maryland,
District of Columbia, and Virginia)

and
and
and
and
and
and
and

8,700

Chicago Truck Drivers (Ind.)

9,300

45

Provisions for 1983
deferred wage
increases5

January and July
January and July

7,500

Standard Freightship Agreement, Unlicensed
personnel
Standard Tanker Agreement, Unlicensed
personnel
Steamship Trade Association of Baltimore,
Inc., Port of Baltimore
West Gulf Maritime Association, Inc.

Provisions for 1983
automatic cost-ofliving review4

12

March

Table 7 . Continued— Expiration and wag® adjustment provisions of selected collective bargaining agreements
[Contracts are listed in order of Standard Industrial Classification code]
1972
SIC
Code

Ind u stry and e m plo ye r1

Retail Food Store Agreement (San Jose,
Calif.)
58

70

Retail trade-eating and drinking places:
Restaurant-Hotel Employers Council of
Southern California
Hotels, rooming houses, camps, and other
lodging places:
Hotel Employers Association of
San Francisco (California)
Nevada Resort Association, Resort Hotels
(Las Vegas, Nev.)

Em ploym ent
at tim e o f
settlem ent

Union2

Food and Commercial Workers

6,800

Hotel and Restaurant Employees

10,000

Hotel and Restaurant Employees

6,000

Hotel and Restaurant Employees

15,000

Motion pictures:
Screen Actors Guild, Commercials Contract

80

Medical and other health services:
Kaiser Foundation Hospitals and Health Plan Service Employees
and Permanente Medical Group (California)
Federal Government:
U.S. Postal Service Agreements

P rovisions fo r 1983
autom atic co si-o fliving review 4

P ro visio n s fo r 1983
d efe rre d wage
increases5

Jan. 1, 1980 to Feb. 28, 1983

Mar. 16, 1979 to Mar. 15, 1983

July 1,1980 to Aug. 14,1983
Apr. 2,1980 to Apr. 1,1984
Apr. 2: 30-55
cents

78

91

C o ntract te rm 3

Actors

52,700

7,850

' Geographical coverage of contracts is interstate unless specified.
2 Unions are affiliated with AFL-CIO, except where noted as independent find.).
3 Contract term refers to the date contract is to go into effect, not the date of signing. Where a
contract has been amended or modified and the original termination date extended, the effective
date of the change becomes the new effective date of the agreement. For purposes of this list­
ing, the expiration is the formal termination date established by the agreement. In general, it is
the earliest date on which termination of the contract could be effective, except for special provi­
sions for termination as in the case of disagreement arising out of wage reopening. Many agree­

Nov. 1, 1981 to Oct. 29, 1983

568,000

Postal Workers;
Letter Carriers;
Rural Letter Carriers;
Mail Handlers

Feb. 7,1982 to Feb. 6,1985

July 21, 1981 to July 20, 1984

May and November

July: $300 or $375 per
year
July 21: $300 or $350
(bonus)

ments provide for automatic renewal at the expiration date unless notice of termination is given.
4 Dates shown indicate the month in which adjustment is to be made, not the month of the
Consumer Price Index on which adjustment is based.
5 Hourly rate increase unless otherwise specified.
6 Contract is not on file with the Bureau of Labor Statistics; information is based on newspa­
per accounts.
S o u r c e : Contracts on file with the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Oct. 1,1982. Where no con­
tracts are on file, table entries are based on newspaper accounts.

Some contracts specify that upon reaching a certain
level in COLA payments, no further adjustments will be
made. Maximums, or “caps,” sometimes are set for
each of the reviews during the contract term, or for the
total accumulated amount over the term, or some com­
bination of the two. COLA clauses covering 1.1 million
workers, most notably in the railroad industry, contain
provisions for some limitation on the size of adjust­
ments.
More than 350,000 workers are covered by provisions
for minimum or “guaranteed COLA” payments. These

amounts were determined at the time the contracts were
negotiated and are not dependent upon the movement
in the CPI. Therefore, these amounts are treated as spec­
ified increases rather than COLA adjustments.
Given the current economic climate, it is possible
that some of the deferred increases and COLA reviews
discussed above will not be implemented as scheduled.
In 1982, a number of contracts negotiated earlier than
scheduled provided for suspension or delays in
previously negotiated increases and/or COLA adjust­
ments.

1“Steel Bargains for its Future,” Business Week, July 12, 1982,
p. 20.
2“U.S. Steelmakers Slim Down for Survival,” Business Week, May
31, 1982, p. 88.
' “Steel Production Continued Downward in October,” Steel Pro­
duction News, American Iron and Steel Institute, Nov. 24, 1982.
4George J. McManus, “Steel’s Nightmare-Imports and Layoffs Up,
Markets and Spending Plans on the Scrap Heap,” Iron Age, May 21,
1982, p. 39.
5“Steel Bargains for its Future.”

8 “Aluminum Companies Ask Union to Open Pact,” The New York
Times, Aug. 23, 1982, p. A-12.
’ “ILA Targets Early Pacts Next Year,” Journal o f Commerce, Oct.
8, 1982, pp. 1, 3b.
1 “Industry Resilient Despite Setbacks,” Financial Times (London)
0
Aug. 23, 1982 and “Switch in Time-Simmonds Precision’s Stress on
Defense Products Pays Off,” Barrons, Apr. 5, 1982.
" About 190,000 construction workers will receive deferred in­
creases under settlements in which the parties agreed to a total wage
and benefit package, with the allocation between wages and benefits
to be determined later by the union. Because the final allocation was
not known at the time this article was prepared, the entire package
has been treated as a wage increase which thus may be overstated.
1 The data for 1983 are based on information available as of Oct. 1,
2
1982.

6“The Pressure for New Steel Talks,” Business Week, Oct. 4, 1982,
p. 90.
7“Recession Spurs Drop in Demand,” The New York Times, Jan.
26, 1982, p. D-14.




13

Tabl© S. C©8l®etw© bargainSmig agreements enpiriing m 1983 covering 1,000 workers or more, by month
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

M onth and agreem ent id e n tifica tion 1

G rand Total: 609 a g re e m e n ts ............................................................................................

E m ployer
unit

Industry

State

Union

50
36
20
35
36
37
22
39
59
20
25
37
25
37
53
34
32
24
17
21
21
20
29
28
37

93
33
31
33
00
32
56
31
91
95
93
34
00
74
22
62
22
64
23
54
61
95
74
55
59

531
127
155
218
553
107
305
107
184
480
119
553
205
100
364
161
231
343
127
108
108
480
357
218
218

2
1
1
1
4
1
1
4
2
3
2
4
4
1
1
1
4

16
35
36
35
54
35
42
37
36
23
35
54
54
54
73
54
54
54
21
36
36
75
49
17
17
54
28
36

22
43
32
34
32
16
00
00
00
74
33
93
93
93
93
93
88
93
56
43
35
21
21
00
94
23
22
42

143
335
127
553
364
553
531
553
553
305
553
184
184
184
118
184
184
364
108
500
335
531
127
112
127
531
553
127

2
1
1
4
2
1
2
4
4
4
1
3
3
3
1
3
3
3
1
4
4
2
4
3
2
2
4

2,573,000

January
Total:

0063040
0036660
0003320
0 0 32330
0 0 37010
0 0 40140
000 61 1 0
004 62 2 0
0 0 73020
0 0 02620
0 0 11180
0 0 40240
0 0 11020
0 0 41760
0065070
0 0 29900
0 0 23350
0 0 10260
0 0 87260
0 0 05080
0 0 05070
0 0 03000
00 1 81 8 0
00 1 67 3 0
00 4 09 4 0

26 a g re e m e n ts ..............................................................................................

A sso c P roduce D ealers & Brokers of LA Inc C a lif ..................................................
B unker R am o C orp Illin o is ..................................................................................................
C am pbell S oup Co N apoleon O h io ................................................................................
C aterpillar T ra ctor Co Jo lie t I I I ..........................................................................................
C ham pion S park Plug Co I n t e r .........................................................................................
D ana C orp S picer A xle Div Ft W ayne Ind ...................................................................
Erwin M ills Erwin N C ............................................................................................................
G enl M illfun G rp Inc K enner Prods Div Cinn O hio ..................................................
G rea te r S eattle R etail Drug Assn Inc W a s h ...............................................................
l-A P ineapple C om panies Factory & P lantations H a w a ii........................................
Indus R eis C ouncil O f Furn M frs Ind So C a lif ............................................................
K elsey-H ayes Co D etroit & R om ulus M ich .................................................................
K roehler M fg Co I n t e r ..........................................................................................................
Levingston Shipbuilding Co O range T e x ......................................................................
M acy R H & Co Inc B am berger Div NJ .......................................................................
M agic C hef Inc Tennessee ...............................................................................................
M anville C orp M anville & Finderne N J ..........................................................................
M asonite C orp H ardboard Div Laurel M is s .................................................................
NEC A Inc W estern Penn C h p tr .......................................................................................
Philip M orris USA R ichm ond V a ......................................................................................
Phillip M orris USA Louisville K y ........................................................................................
S ugar C os N egotiating C om m H a w a ii............................................................................
Texaco Inc Pit & Term l P ort A rthur T e x .......................................................................
Union C arbide C orp A gricul Prods Co Institute W V a ............................................
U nited A ircra ft C orp P ratt & W hitney A ircra ft D Florida .........................................

65,650

2,200
1,250
1,850
5,700
4,300
2,300
1,700
2,200
2,500
6,000
1,200
1,500
1,100
1,700
1,800
1,250
1,550
1,000
1,250
7,200
2,450
7,000
4,000
1,100
1,550

1
2
4
1
2
4
1
1

February
34 agreem ents .................................................................................................

95,600

A G C of N ew Jersey .............................................................................................................
A llis-C halm ers C orp Independence M o ........................................................................
Arvin Industries Inc C olum bus Ind .................................................................................
B urroughs C orp M ic h ig a n ...................................................................................................
C alum et S uperm arket Forum Inc In d ia n a .....................................................................
C olt Industries C handler Evans Inc W H artford C o n n ............................................
Eastern Labor A dviso ry A ssn-C em ent Div In te r ........................................................
E aton C orporation M ich W is O hio & K y .......................................................................
Eltra C orp Inter .......................................................................................................................
Farah M fg C o Inc El Paso T e x ........................................................................................
Fiat-A llis C onst M ach Inc Springfield II I ........................................................................
l-A Food S tore C o n tra ct A lam eda C ounty C a lifo rn ia ..............................................
l-A G rocery & D elicatessen San Francisco C a lif .....................................................
l-A Indep G rocers A gm t S acram ento C nty C alif & 7 O t h s ...................................
l-A M aintenance C o n tra cto rs A greem ent C a lifo rn ia ................................................
l-A M aster Food & Liquor Agm t 6 C ntys C a lif...........................................................
l-A M aster Food & Liquor A gm t 8 C nties N e v ..........................................................
l-A R etail F ood S tore A gm t San Jo se C a lif................................................................
Loew s C orp Lorillard Div G reensboro N C ...................................................................
M cG raw -E dison C o Bussm an Div S t Louis M o .........................................................
M cG raw -E dison Co Speed Queen Div R ipon W i s ...................................................
M etro G arage O w ners A ssn Inc N ew Y ork N Y .........................................................
N ational Fuel G as W estern N ew Y ork .........................................................................
N ational T ransient D ivision In te r......................................................................................
N EC A A la ska C hpt O utside & Inside A g m ts ...............................................................
Phila Food S tore E m plrs Labor C ncl P e n n s y lv a n ia .................................................
R evlon Inc E dison NJ ..........................................................................................................
R ockw ell Inti C orp C ollins Radio Grp C Rpds I o w a ................................................

8,000
1,800
1,000
1,800
1,900
1,000
1,000
1,500
2,000
4,000
1,500
4,000
3,000
1,900
4,000
1,200
1,250
6,800
2,200
1,950
1,000
3,000
1,550
8,000
4,000
1,750
3,000
3,250

T otal:

0 0 86590
00 3 32 8 0
5 9 07650
0 0 33240
0 0 68380
0 0 32460
005 20 6 0
004 01 7 0
003 70 3 0
0 0 08910
0 0 32160
0 0 67290
006 75 6 0
0 0 68630
0 0 79450
0 0 67440
0 0 68590
0 0 67550
00 0 50 6 0
00 3 73 1 0
59 1 10 7 0
0 0 79440
00 6 04 6 0
0 0 86610
0 0 89300
0 0 67860
0 0 16520
0 0 36510

S ee footnotes at end of table.




14

1

Talbl© 8. Continued-Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1983 covering 1,000 worfsers ©r more, bv month
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

M onth and agreem ent id e n tifica tion 1

Industry

State

Union

Em ployer
unit

59
89
16
36
53

33
62
22
32
50

531
100
143
347
364

4
1
2
1
4

15
17
15
32
15
15
37
32
21
21
34
49
16
16
16
20
48
32
32
20
54
54
54
34
42
54
32
32
15
48
32
17
17
28
32
32
20
27
58
35
28
54
32
35
34
38

16
16
74
00
40
40
32
00
50
61
93
31
16
16
14
91
93
00
93
23
41
93
41
93
21
20
00
00
34
00
00
00
84
62
00
00
23
20
93
33
91
41
00
92
14
21

119
119
119
135
143
531
553
135
108
108
218
500
119
129
129
531
346
135
135
364
155
184
155
218
531
155
135
135
143
352
135
127
127
202
135
135
108
244
145
218
101
184
135
600
335
305

2
2
2
4
2
2
4
4
4
1
2
1
2
2
2
2
4
4
4
1
3
3
3
3
3
3
4 x
4
2
4
4
2
2
4
1
4
1
2
2
1
1
2
4
2
4
4

F e b r u a r y — C o n tin u e d

0065250
0079370
0088590
0037780
0065170

Spiegel Inc C hicago & O akbrook I I I ...............................................................................
S ve rd ru p /A ro Inc T e n n e s s e e ............................................................................................
U tility C ontrs Assn O f NJ ...................................................................................................
W hirlpool C orporation In d ia n a ...........................................................................................
W oodw ard & Lothrop M etrop DC A r e a ........................................................................

1,800
1,350
8,000
4,500
2,600

M a rc h

47 a g re e m e n ts ...................................................................................................

149,900

AG C Conn Labor R elations Div Central C onn ..........................................................
AGC C onnecticut Inc ...........................................................................................................
AGC of Am San A ntonio C hpt T e x a s ............................................................................
A nchor H ocking C orp P&M 7 I n t e r ................................................................................
Bldrs Assn o f M is s o u ri........................................................................................................
Bldrs A ssn of M issouri M o & K a n s ................................................................................
Borg-W arner C orp W arner G ear Div M uncie Ind ......................................................
B rockw ay G lass Co Inc P&M D ept I n t e r ......................................................................
B rown & W illiam son T o b a cco Corp I n t e r .....................................................................
B rown & W illiam son T o b a cco Corp Louisville K y ....................................................
C alif M etal Trades Assn C a lif ...........................................................................................
Cinn Gas & Elec Co & Subs O hio .................................................................................
Conn C onst Indus Assn Inc C o n n ...................................................................................
Conn C onst Industries Assn Inc 5 Divs C o n n ...........................................................
C onst Industries A ssoc O f W strn M ass I n c ................................................................
Dairy Em plrs Labor C ouncil M aster A g m t ....................................................................
Genl Tele Co O f C alif ..........................................................................................................
G lass C ontainers C orp In te r..............................................................................................
G lass C ontainers C orp W estern C a lifo rn ia ................................................................
Heinz H J Co Heinz USA Div P ittsburgh P a ...............................................................
l-A Food M arket A gm t o f M npls Minn ...........................................................................
l-A M aster Food & Liquor A gm t S acram ento C a lif ..................................................
l-A M eat M arket A gm t O f M npls M in n ...........................................................................
l-A M etal Trades Indep Cos C a lif....................................................................................
l-A M oving and Storage Ind of N Y .................................................................................
l-A Phila Food S tores P e n n s ylv a n ia ...............................................................................
Indian Head Inc P&M N ew O rleans L a ........................................................................
M etropak C ontainers C orp I n t e r ......................................................................................
M ich D istribution C ontrs A s s n ...........................................................................................
Natl B roadcasting Co Inc M aster In te r .........................................................................
Natl Can C orp Foster Forbes Glass Co P&M I n t e r .................................................
NECA N orthw est Line C onstr C hpt W ash & O r e g ...................................................
NECA R ocky M t C hpt D enver Inside W iring C o lo ra d o ...........................................
N orth A m erican R ayon C orp V iscose Plant T e n n e s s e e ........................................
O w ens-Illinois Inc Form ing D ept Inter ..........................................................................
O w ens-Illinois Inc P&M D ept G lass C ontainers I n t e r .............................................
Pet Inc W hitm an C h o colates Div IC Indus Co Phila P a .........................................
Printing Indus O f M etro NY Inc NJ & NY ...................................................................
R estaurant-H otel Em plrs C ouncil Of So C a lif............................................................
R ockw ell Inti Corp Adm iral C orp A ppliance D Illin o is .............................................
R ockw ell Inti Corp H anford O pers R ichland W a s h ..................................................
St Paul Food R etailers Assn M innesota ......................................................................
T h a tch e r G lass Mfg Co Form ing-P&M D ept In te r ....................................................
U nited M etal Trades Assn S hop W ork A gm t O regon ............................................
W ym an-G ordon Co Inc W o rce ste r & G rafton M a s s ................................................
X erox Corp R ochester NJ ..................................................................................................

1,300
1,000
1,000
4,200
1,350
2,000
2,000
7,150
2,150
2,400
2,000
1,200
6,500
2,800
1,500
1,000
20,500
4,000
1,000
1,800
7,000
4,600
1,000
2,450
2,200
5,000
2,050
1,700
2,000
1,600
2,000
1,500
2,000
1,450
1,950
12,400
1,000
2,000
10,000
2,350
1,400
3,100
4,100
1,800
1,400
5,000

Total:

5517840
0084510
0086160
0023580
0086240
0084350
0040050
0023640
0005120
0005030
0029260
0060560
0084810
0085930
0089060
0003490
0057210
0023550
0023590
0002590
0067350
0067360
5915570
0029310
0052170
0067710
0023570
0023560
0087420
0057820
0023680
0089410
0088060
0016260
0023610
0023630
5913230
0014220
0071170
0032910
0016080
0067590
0023600
0033790
0026540
0044270

A p ril

Total:

86 a g re e m e n ts ...................................................................................................

See footnotes at end of table.




15

232,800

Tab le 8. C o n tinued— C ollective bargaining a g reem en ts expiring in 1983 c overing 1,000 w o rk e rs or m ore, by m onth
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

M onth and agreem ent id e n tifica tion 1

Industry

State

Union

E m ployer
unit

35
80
15
15
16
15
15
54
54
37
54
17
80
17
15
37
15
15
35
27
35
37
49
15
16
16
15
16
37
30
28
29
38
16
17
49
36
36
15
63
16
16
15
36
54
54
27
54
78
22
34
54
32
36
27
17
17
70
55
17
17
70
15
15
59
16

74
93
33
64
14
10
72
91
91
14
00
22
93
00
43
00
22
33
93
33
34
34
31
50
50
14
50
23
30
56
54
74
23
10
23
23
23
00
33
33
40
40
43
31
84
35
41
34
00
56
33
34
93
15
31
23
23
41
41
21
50
88
74
74
20
00

218
118
119
100
129
143
143
155
184
347
364
119
118
170
143
553
119
119
143
243
107
107
342
143
143
129
129
600
553
333
500
500
500
129
119
127
553
127
143
531
129
143
119
127
155
155
243
155
162
305
553
184
135
127
243
170
170
145
531
127
127
163
143
119
332
129

1
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
2
4
2
2
2
2
2
4
2
2
1
2
1
1
4
2
2
2
2
2
4
1
1
1
4
2
2
4
4
4
2
1
2
2
2
4
3
3
3
3
3
1
1
4
4
4
1
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

A pril— Continued

0033880
0079310
5609470
0087490
0084920
0084040
0087870
0067160
0067150
5913510
0 0 67830
0085600
0 0 79270
5707260
0084150
0040510
0084560
0086300
5916170
0014110
0032350
0040130
0060070
0084370
0089350
0084840
0084380
0088110
0041840
0019180
0016340
0018080
0044260
0088440
0085690
0060200
0036020
0037130
5910660
0074240
0084960
0084950
0088150
0037860
0 0 67950
0067660
0014350
0 0 67870
0079190
0 0 06450
0029070
0068210
5908100
0 0 37220
0 0 14090
0087380
0 0 87390
0 0 75140
0 0 69170
0085340
0085290
0071500
0 0 86350
0086180
0 0 73010
0086050

ACF Industries Inc W -K-M V alve Div M issouri City T e x .........................................
A ffiliated H ospitals O f San Francisco C alifornia .......................................................
AGC o f Am C entral III Bldrs C h p tr .................................................................................
AGC of M iss M aster A gm t C entral Miss ......................................................................
AGC of M ass and 1 oth .....................................................................................................
A G C of M ass Inc & 1 oth M ass & NH .........................................................................
AGG Lake C harles C hptr L o u is ia n a ...............................................................................
A llied Em ployers Inc W a s h in g to n ...................................................................................
A llied Em ployers Inc K ing-S nohom ish C ntys W ashington ....................................
A m bac Indus Inc Am Bosch Div M assachusetts ......................................................
A rea G rocers Assn M innesota and W is c o n s in ..........................................................
A sso c C ontrs Assn of NJ & 1 o t h ..................................................................................
A sso c Hosp of East Bay Inc San Francisco C alif ...................................................
A ssoc M ech C ontrs O f C hatt Inc Tenn Ga N C .........................................................
A ssociated G eneral C ontractors o f St Louis m is s o u ri............................................
Bendix C orp M aster 10 Divs In te r ..................................................................................
B ergen-P assaic Bldg C ontrs Assn & 1 oth N ew J e r s e y ........................................
Bldrs Assn of Tazew ell C nty & 6 O ths Illin o is ...........................................................
C arrier C orp BDP C om pany La Puente O per Div C a lifo rn ia .................................
C hicago Lithographers A ssn Illin o is ...............................................................................
C lark Equip Co Indus Truck D Battle C reek M ich ...................................................
C lark E quipm ent Co Transm ission Div M ichigan ......................................................
C leveland Elec Ilium Co 3 Divs O h io .............................................................................
C onst C ontrs C ncl Inc DC Md & V a ..............................................................................
C onst C ontrs C ncl Inc Hvy DC Md V a .........................................................................
C onst Industries o f M a s s ....................................................................................................
C onstruction C ontr C ouncil DC Md V a .........................................................................
C ontrs Assn O f Eastern Penn Hvy Hwy & RR 29 C nty P a ..................................
Dana Corp W eatherhead Div NC In te r .........................................................................
Dayco C orp Southern Div W a y n e s v ille .........................................................................
D upont E I DE N em ours Co W aynesboro V a ............................................................
Exxon Corp Exxon Co USA Baytown Tex ..................................................................
Fischer & P orter Co Pennsylvania .................................................................................
Foundation-M arine C ontrs Assn New Eng M ass NH M aine ...............................
General Building C ontractors A ssociation Inc P e n n s y lv a n ia ...............................
Genl Public Util C orp M etro Edison Co P e n n s y lv a n ia ............................................
G ould Inc P e n n s y lv a n ia ......................................................................................................
G ould Inc I n t e r ........................................................................................................................
G reater Peoria C o ntractors & S uppliers Assn Inc Illin o is .....................................
H ealth Care S ervice C orp ..................................................................................................
Heavy C onstructors Assn O f G r Kans I n t e r ..............................................................
H eavy C onstructors Assn O f G reater Kans In te r.....................................................
H om e Bldrs Assn O f G reater St Louis M issouri .......................................................
H oover Co No C anton & C anton O h io .........................................................................
I-A D enver R etail G rocers C o lo ra d o ..............................................................................
l-A M ilw aukee A rea Retail M eat Industry W is c o n s in ...............................................
l-A Printing Industry O f Tw in C ities M in n e s o ta ..........................................................
l-A R etail M eat M arkets M ic h ig a n ..................................................................................
l-A TV & R adio C om m ercial A nnouncem ents I n t e r .................................................
J P S tevens & C om pany Inc N orth C a ro lin a ..............................................................
K eystone C onsol Indus N atl Lock Div Illin o is ............................................................
Kroger Co D etroit Branch M ic h ig a n ...............................................................................
Latchford G lass Co I n t e r ....................................................................................................
Leviton Mfg Co Inc R hode Island ..................................................................................
Me Call C orp Me Call Printing Co O h io ........................................................................
M ech C ontrs A ssn of Eastern Pa Inc 10 e n tie s ........................................................
M echanical C ontractors Assn of P e n n s y lv a n ia .........................................................
M inneapolis A rea H otels & M otels M innesota ..........................................................
M inneapolis A utom obile D ealers Assn M in n e s o ta ...................................................
NECA Inc Nassau & S uffolk C hpt N ew Y ork ............................................................
NECA W ashington DC C h a p te r.......................................................................................
N evada R esort Assn Los Vegas N e v ...........................................................................
No Texas C ontrs A s s n ........................................................................................................
No Texas C ontrs A ssn 20 enties ...................................................................................
NY R etail D ruggists Assn NJ & N Y ...............................................................................
O hio C ontractors A ssociation ...........................................................................................

See footnotes at end of table.




16

1,050
3,050
3,350
1,000
4,300
10,000
2,000
1,700
5,000
1,200
1,500
2,000
1,100
1,300
2,600
6,100
1,000
3,500
1,000
4,200
1,550
1,000
2,700
3,300
1,500
4,300
1,000
4,500
1,700
1,500
1,450
1,500
1,500
4,300
6,000
1,550
2,800
2,000
1,450
1,850
1,750
1,500
3,000
3,400
2,000
2,200
1,700
3,000
5,000
2,600
1,100
3,650
1,100
1,600
1,200
1,000
3,800
1,700
1,200
2,200
2,200
2,500
4,000
3,000
3,500
11,000

Tab!© 8. Continu©d~-Co!I©ctiv© bargaining agreem ents expiring in 1983 covering 1,000 workers or more, by month
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

M onth and agreem ent id e n tifica tion 1

Industry

State

Union

E m ployer
unit

16
16
16
30
54
16
17
17
17
20
17
25
37
16
79
34
35
49
15
15

00
00
00
00
91
00
23
20
20
82
43
93
16
54
59
91
91
23
62
30

143
115
531
135
184
170
170
187
187
531
187
119
218
143
600
112
218
342
119
143

2
2
2
4
3
2
2
2
2
1
2
2
1
2
1
2
2
4
2
2

16
15
16
16
16
15
16
17
15
15
16
16
17
33
33
28
17
49
20
26
35
33
22
54
35
37
26
33
54
17
17
17
16
15
22
17
17
17
26
50

00
00
00
00
00
73
91
43
73
73
90
91
35
00
00
56
33
14
35
74
62
31
56
88
33
63
00
93
61
33
91
43
34
30
00
93
91
00
35
33

143
129
119
129
143
119
119
119
143
119
600
531
116
220
335
202
116
342
101
231
553
335
202
184
218
553
100
335
364
531
170
170
129
119
305
127
127
127
100
531

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
4
4
1
1
1
2
1
1
1
4
1
1
1
4
4
1
2
2
2
2
2
4
2
2
2
4
2

A pril— Continued

0086040
0087880
0084620
0019270
0068090
0089170
0089010
0089440
0085720
0004050
0085140
0011110
0040950
0089470
0079750
0029660
0033050
0060390
0086250
0089430

O hio C ontrs Assn & AG C of Am O hio & K y ...............................................................
O hio C ontrs Assn & AG C of Am O hio & K y ...............................................................
O hio C ontrs A ssn-A G C of Am Inc O hio & W Va .......................................................
O w ens-Illinois Inc P lastic Prod Div In te r.......................................................................
Pierce C ounty G rocery W a s h in g to n ...............................................................................
Pipe Line C ontrs Assn N ational A gm t In te r ................................................................
Plum bing H eating & A ir C onditioning C ontrs P e n n s y lv a n ia ..................................
Roofing & S heet M etal Contrs Assn o f Philadelphia P a .......................................
R oofing & S heet M etal C ontrs Assn Inter ..................................................................
S im plot J R Co Food Processing Plant C aldw ell Id ................................................
S M A C N A S t Louis M is s o u ri...............................................................................................
S tore Fixture & A rchitectural W dw ork Inst C a lifo rn ia .............................................
U nited A ircraft Corp H am ilton Standard Div C o n n e c tic u t.....................................
Virginia A ssociation of C ontrs I n c ...................................................................................
W alt D isney P roductions W alt Disney W orld Co F lo rid a ........................................
W ash M etal Trades Inc ......................................................................................................
W ash M etal Trades Inc ......................................................................................................
W est Penn Pow er C o ...........................................................................................................
W est Tenn Barg G roup Inc T e n n ....................................................................................
W estern Illinois C o n tra cto rs Assn ...................................................................................

12,500
1,100
1,400
1,300
1,450
10,000
1,500
1,500
2,000
1,100
1,200
1,300
3,000
3,000
5,600
2,500
3,000
1,100
1,500
1,450

May

64 a g re e m e n ts ...................................................................................................

258,800

AGC of Am & 2 C hptrs S eattle & Ta co m a C hptr W a s h ........................................
AGC of Am A sso c C ontrs Of O hio Inc O hio & K y ..................................................
AGC o f Am Inland Em pire Chap Hw y-H vy I n t e r ......................................................
AGC of Am Inland Em pire C hptr I n t e r ........................................................................
AGC o f Am Inland Em pire C hptr In te r ...........................................................................
AGC o f Am O kla C hpt Bldrs D iv .....................................................................................
AGC o f Am W estern C entral Area W a s h in g to n ........................................................
AGC of St Louis & 1 O ther Dist C ncl M issouri .........................................................
AGC O klahom a C hpt-B ldrs Div O k la .............................................................................
AGO O klahom a C hpt-Bldrs Div O k la ................................................................. \ ..........
AGC O regon-C olum bia C hapt In te r................................................................................
AGC S eattle & Tacom a C hpts Bldg Hvy & Hwy W a s h in g to n .............................
A llied C onstr E m plrs Assn Inc W is c o n s o n ..................................................................
Alum Co O f Am O hio Pa Iowa III Ind N Y .....................................................................
A lum inum Co O f A m erica In te r ........................................................................................
Am Enka Co N orth C a ro lin ia .............................................................................................
A sso c S teel E rectors C hicago I II.....................................................................................
B oston Edison Co M assachusetts .................................................................................
Brew ery Prop O f M ilw Miller, P abst & S chlitz W is c o n s in ......................................
C ham pion Inti C orp C ham pion P apers Div T e x a s ....................................................
C olt Industries H olley C arburetor Div Paris Tenn ....................................................
C onsolidated A lum inum O h io ............................................................................................
Erwin M ills D urham N C .......................................................................................................
Food E m ployers C ouncil Inc Las Vegas N e v ............................................................
G ardner-D enver Co Illin o is ................................................................................................
H ayes International C orp A labam a ................................................................................
Inti P aper Co S outhern K raft Div Inter .........................................................................
K aiser A lum inum & C hem C orp In te r.............................................................................
K roger Co Louisville K y ......................................................................................................
M AR B A & E xcavators Inc III .............................................................................................
M ech C ontr A ssns of W ashington .................................................................................
M ech C ontrs Assn o f St Louis M is s o u ri.......................................................................
M ichigan Road B ldrs Assn H vy-Hwy C o n s tr...............................................................
M id-Am R egional Barg Assn Illin o is ...............................................................................
M unsingw ear Inc M ich M inn & W is ................................................................................
NECA Los A ngeles C nty C hpt Inside W irem en C a lifo rn ia ....................................
NEC A Puget Sound C hpt 3 C nties W a s h in g to n ........................................................
NECA W e stchester-F airfield C hpt NY & C o n n ..........................................................
N ekoosa E dw ards P aper Co Inc W is c o n s in ...............................................................
No III R eady Mix & M aterials Assn ................................................................................

10,000
4,000
5,500
4,000
5,000
3,000
9,000
4,200
2,000
2,200
23,700
1,500
1,200
1,950
10,000
1,300
2,500
1,700
2,700
1,200
1,200
1,000
1,200
2,300
1,000
1,800
8,000
11,000
4,800
1,500
2,000
1,800
2,250
25,000
1,150
5,500
2,700
1,300
1,300
1,800

Total:

0086490
0088300
0084070
0084690
0084650
0086290
0084060
0085650
0085880
0085890
0084080
0084280
0086580
0025910
0025920
0016230
0085800
0060050
0003080
0012050
0033680
5514370
0006040
0068640
0033660
0040770
0012150
0026040
0068190
0085810
0085090
0088540
0087770
0084340
0006200
0085320
0085360
0087760
0012220
0063250

See footnotes at end of table.




17

T able 8. C ontinued— C ollective bargaining a g re e m e n ts expiring in 1983 covering 1,000 w o rk e rs or m ore, by m onth
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

M onth and a greem ent ide n tifica tion 1

Industry

State

Union

E m ployer
unit

15
15
33
35
32
17
24
33
33
33
33
38
70
26
24
37
35
26
24
24
24
32
36
20

31
46
31
33
57
33
82
63
00
63
00
93
93
11
91
33
31
58
92
91
92
22
00
93

119
143
335
500
531
170
343
220
220
600
335
553
145
100
343
553
553
231
343
343
343
135
100
108

2
2
1
1
1
2
4
1
4
4
4
1
2
1
4
1
1
1
2
1
1
1
4
2

54
80
15
15
15
16
16
17
16
17
16
17
15
17
17
35
33
37
33
15
16
17
16
37
37
26
35
28
28
49
37
49
26
17
20
22

23
93
93
58
58
91
93
93
93
93
93
93
93
93
15
23
31
35
22
93
93
93
93
62
23
11
23
54
57
21
34
21
00
93
00
54

364
903
129
119
143
116
129
170
531
168
143
143
600
170
119
218
553
107
335
143
129
119
119
218
553
231
335
305
305
127
553
342
100
168
357
202

1
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
4
1
1
2
2
2
2
1
4
1
4
1
1
4
1
1
4
2
4
4

M ay— C ontinued

0087650
0084190
0025850
0033060
5914600
0085120
0010040
0026110
0026120
0026450
0026100
0044100
0075230
0013030
0 0 10050
0 0 32550
0033540
0012400
0010290
0010060
0010270
0023190
0038020
0002900

O hio C ontrs Assn Labor Rel Div & AGO 11 C n ty s ..................................................
O m aha Bldg C ontrs Em plrs Assn N e b ra s k a ...............................................................
O rm et C orp Hannibal O h io ................................................................................................
O utboard M arine C orp G ale Prods a 1 O ther Div Illin o is .....................................
O w ens-C orning Fiberglas C orp Aiken S C ...................................................................
Plum bing a Htg C ontrs A ssn of Lake M cH enry a oth Illin o is .............................
P otlatch Corp M aster A gm t Id a h o ..................................................................................
R eynolds M etals Co A lloys Plant A la b a m a .................................................................
R eynolds M etals Co Ky M o a V a ..................................................................................
R eynolds M etals Co Listerhill A la ..................................................................................
R eynolds M etals Co T orrance Extrusion Pit In te r ....................................................
R obertshaw C ontrols Co G rayson C ontrols C a lifo rn ia ...........................................
S acram ento C alif H otel R est & Tavern A s s n .............................................................
S co tt Paper Co SD W arren Co Div W estbrook M a in e ...........................................
Sim pson Tim ber Co S helton W a s h ................................................................................
S undstrand C orp R ockford II I ............................................................................................
Tecum seh Products Co Factory Agm t O h io ...............................................................
Union C am p C orp Savannah G a .....................................................................................
W estern S tates W ood Prods E m plr Assn O re g o n ...................................................
W eyerhaeuser Co W d Prd G rp M ill O pr Longview W a s h .....................................
W eyerhaeuser Co O re g o n ..................................................................................................
W heaton Industries New J e rs e y ......................................................................................
W hite C onsolidated Industries Inc W estinghouse C orp I n t e r ..............................
W holesale B akers G roup M ach Shop C a lifo rn ia .......................................................

1,150
4,000
2,000
1,000
1,550
5,900
2,000
1,150
1,500
1,200
8,000
1,200
1,700
1,950
1,450
1,200
1,700
1,600
37,000
1,150
1,200
1,950
1,000
1,000

June

77 a g re e m e n ts ...................................................................................................

326,400

A cm e M arkets Inc W ilkes-B arre P a ...............................................................................
A ffiliated H osps O f San Fran Reg N urses C alifornia ..............................................
AGC C ontrs O f Am San D iego C nty C hptr C alif & 2 O th rs ..................................
AGC G eorgia Branch & 2 oth s G reater A tlanta Ga ................................................
A G C G eorgia B ranch A tla n ta G a ....................................................................................
AGC of Am S eattle & T acom a C haps W a s h ..............................................................
AGC o f C alif & W estern S teel C o u n c il.........................................................................
AGC o f C alif Inc Indus & Gent Pipefitting ...................................................................
A G C of C alif-N orthern A rea ..............................................................................................
AG C of C alif-N orthern A rea ..............................................................................................
AG C of C alif-N orthern Tunnel A g m t ..............................................................................
AGC of C alif-N orthern 46 C o u n tie s ................................................................................
A G C of So C alif & 3 O t h s ..................................................................................................
A G C of C alifornia, I n c ..........................................................................................................
A G C R hode Island C h p t .....................................................................................................
A llis C halm ers C orp Y ork P e n n s y lv a n ia .......................................................................
Alum inum Co O f Am C leveland Ohio ............................................................................
A M F H arley-D avidson M otor Co Inc M ilwalkee, W is e ............................................
A m ax Inc US M etals R efining Co C arteret NJ ..........................................................
A ssociated G eneral C o ntractors o f C alif I n c ..............................................................
A ssociated G eneral C o ntractors o f C alifornia In c ....................................................
A ssociated G eneral C ontrs o f C alifornia Inc ..............................................................
A ssociated G enl C o ntractors o f C alifornia I n c ..........................................................
A vco C orp A erostru ctu re s Div N ashville T e n n ..........................................................
A vco Corp A vco Lycom ing Div W illiam sport P a ........................................................
Boise C ascade C orp R um ford M ill M a in e ...................................................................
Carrier C orp E lliott Co Div Shop A gm t P e n n s y lv a n ia .............................................
C elanese C orp C elco Plant N arrow s V a ......................................................................
C elanese C orp C elriver Plant R ock Hill S C ................................................................
C entral H udson Gas & E lec C orp New Y o r k ..............................................................
C lark Equip Co Buchanan M ic h .......................................................................................
C onsolidated Edison Co of NY I n c ................................................................................
C ontainer C orp of Am In te r ...............................................................................................
C ontracting Plasterers A ssn O f So Calif I n c ...............................................................
CPC International Inc Corn Div II Mo & T x .................................................................
Dan R iver Inc D anville V a ..................................................................................................

1,650
1,750
3,500
2,500
1,600
5,000
12,000
2,500
7,000
4,000
1,800
15,000
4,000
2,500
1,500
1,000
1,300
1,000
1,400
25,000
20,000
1,800
25,000
2,100
1,150
1,200
1,100
2,000
1,650
1,000
1,000
16,700
2,500
2,000
1,800
7,000

Total:

0067000
0079260
5909220
0086120
0086140
0089240
0084680
0085040
0084670
0 0 85430
0084890
0 0 85420
0084110
5519710
0 0 85630
0 0 33870
0025900
0041480
0025760
0 0 84030
0084130
0085610
0084010
0041350
0040470
0012250
0 0 32040
0 0 16270
0 0 16280
0060890
0 0 40120
0060580
0012450
0088550
0002650
0006020

See footnotes at end of table.




18

TabS e 8 . C o n tin u e d —-C o iie c tiv e b a r g a in in g a g r e e m e n t s e x p ir in g in 1983 covering 1,000 w o rk e rs o r m ore, by m onth
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

M onth and agreem ent id e n tifica tion 1

Industry

S tate

Union

Em ployer
unit

34
37
49
26
80
37
37
15
16
17
35
33
33
79
36
34
36
17
36
37
15
17
49
26
17
17
17
33
17
36
80
80
17
35
35
16
49
49
49
33
34

21
16
58
71
91
90
90
93
70
00
00
87
87
00
62
35
42
93
20
34
93
21
21
72
93
90
93
86
93
31
33
91
93
35
34
00
00
00
00
33
93

218
500
127
231
100
119
600
168
112
116
553
335
335
102
347
553
553
170
127
107
119
127
127
231
164
164
164
335
170
347
600
903
187
218
553
143
127
127
129
107
116

1
1
1
1
2
3
2
2
3
2
4
4
1
2
1
1
1
2
2
1
2
2
4
1
2
2
2
4
2
4
1
2
2
1
4
2
4
4
4
1
2

17
15
10
37
33
17
26
20
35
49
17
32
33
32
37
17
37
59
32

14
10
84
35
31
43
62
33
35
21
93
21
20
00
34
93
41
92
00

115
119
357
101
500
116
100
531
107
341
112
357
335
335
553
164
553
184
335

2
2
1
1
4
2
1
1
1
1
2
4
4
1
1
2
1
3
4

J u n e — C o n tin u e d
0029780
0041040
0060150
0012660
5608160
0041120
0041110
0084020
0084990
0085820
0033190
0025820
0025830
0079240
0036580
0029800
0036370
0089370
0036450
0040350
0089200
0085370
0060700
5515210
0085160
0089400
0087060
0025860
0085130
0036200
0079590
0079490
0085030
0033140
0032060
0085010
0060340
0060350
0060360
0026590
0029520

Foster W heeler Energy C orp New Y o r k .......................................................................
G enl D ynam ics C orp Elec Boat Div C o n n e c tic u t.....................................................
G eorgia Pow er C o ................................................................................................................
G eorgia-P acific Corp C rossett Ark .................................................................................
G roup H ealth C oop O f Puget Sound S eattle W ash ...............................................
l-A P acific C oast S hipbuilding & R epair I n t e r ............................................................
l-A P acific C oast Shipbuilding & R epair Firm s I n t e r ................................................
l-A So C alif Genl C o n tr s .....................................................................................................
l-A So C ent E m pls Field C onst La Tex O kla & A r k .................................................
Iron W orker Em ployers O f C al-N ev ...............................................................................
J I Case Co III Ind Iowa & W is e ......................................................................................
K ennecott C opper C orp Utah C opper Div ..................................................................
K ennecott C opper C orp Utah C opper Div Utah S m e lte r......................................
League O f NY Theatres I n c ..............................................................................................
M agnavox Co O f Tenn .......................................................................................................
M aster Lock Co M ilw aukee W is ......................................................................................
M aytag C om pany N ew ton & H am pton Io w a ...............................................................
Mech C ontrs Assn of No C alif I n c .................................................................................
M frs O f Illum ination Products Inc NY & NJ ................................................................
M otor W heel C orp M otor W heel Branch Lansing M ich .........................................
No Calif Hom e B ldgs C onf 2 A ssns & In d ..................................................................
NY E lectrical C ontrs Assn Inc & 2 o t h s .......................................................................
NY State Elec & Gas Corp 13 D is ts ..............................................................................
Olin Corp O linkraft Inc W est M onroe La ...................................................................
PDCA O f Central C oast C ntys Inc & 1 O ther C a lifo rn ia ........................................
PDCA O reg C ncl & 2 A ssns O regon & W ashington ...............................................
PDCA San Francisco Inc C a lifo rn ia ...............................................................................
Phelps D odge C orp M orenci A r iz ....................................................................................
Plum bing-H eating & Piping Emplys C ouncil C alifornia ...........................................
R eliance Electric Co Ohio .................................................................................................
R ush-P resbyterian-St Lukes M edical C enter Illinois ................................................
Seattle A rea Hosp C ncl Seattle W ash .........................................................................
S heet M etal H eating & Air Cond C ontrs C a lifo rn ia ..................................................
Tecum seh Products Co Lauson Engine Div W isconsin .........................................
Teledyne C ont M otors Genl & Indus Prods Divs M ichigan ..................................
U nderground C ontractors A ssn of N orthern C a lif....................................................
Union Electric Co In te r........................................................................................................
Union Electric Co In te r........................................................................................................
Union Electric Co In te r........................................................................................................
W agner C astings Co D ecatur III ......................................................................................
W estern Steel C ouncil C a lifo rn ia .....................................................................................

1,050
2,150
5,450
1,350
1,200
1,700
35,000
5,000
2,900
5,500
7,600
1,400
1,000
1,500
2,600
1,250
1,950
1,450
1,150
2,500
12,000
9,600
2,900
1,000
2,000
1,200
1,700
1,000
9,000
1,200
1,000
3,000
1,100
2,000
1,100
1,200
1,550
1,100
1,650
1,200
2,200

J u ly
Total:

0086780
0084100
0083110
0040400
0025040
0085790
0012570
0003850
0032030
0060430
5907520
0023320
0025170
5712480
0041850
0085900
0000250
0073060
5911930

36 a g re e m e n ts ..................................................................................................

89,100

AGC of M ass Inc & 7 O t h s ...............................................................................................
A G C of M ass Inc & 3 o t h s ................................................................................................
Am M etal C lim ax Inc C lim ax M olybdenum Co Div C olorado ..............................
AO Sm ith Corp W is c o n s in .................................................................................................
A rm co S teel C orp O hio ......................................................................................................
A ssociated G eneral C ontrs o f St Louis M issouri .....................................................
B ow aters S outhern P aper Corp C alhoun T e n n .........................................................
B rach E J & Sons Inc Illin o is ...........................................................................................
B riggs & S tratton Corp M ilwaukee W is ........................................................................
B rooklyn U nion Gas Co N ew Y o r k .................................................................................
C alifornia M etal Trades A ssociation ..............................................................................
C arborundum Co Niagara Falls N Y ................................................................................
C rucible Inc W krs NY & P a ...............................................................................................
D resser Industries Inc H arbison-W alker R efrac I n t e r .............................................
Firestone Tire & R ubber Co S teel Prods Co Div M ichigan ..................................
Floor C overing Assn O f So Calif & 4 O t h s .................................................................
FMC C oporation N orthern O rdnance Div M in n e s o ta ..............................................
Fred M eyer Inc O regon ......................................................................................................
G enl R efractories Co Pa Md Ga & O h io .....................................................................

3,500
7,000
2,300
3,000
6,000
1,700
1,100
3,200
7,900
2,350
1,200
1,950
4,900
1,400
1,050
1,850
2,300
1,800
1,100

See footnotes at end of table.




19

T able 8. C ontinued— C ollective bargaining a g reem en ts expiring in 1983 covering 1,000 w o rk e rs o r m ore, by m onth
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

M onth and a greem ent ide n tifica tion 1

Industry

State

Union

E m ployer
unit

54
14
33
34
26
54
33
36
33
54
17
58
25
37
26
10
20

86
72
93
23
62
32
90
23
35
30
93
91
93
93
56
34
93

184
531
335
553
231
184
335
335
335
184
170
145
119
320
100
335
126

3
3
1
1
1
3
4
1
4
4
2
2
2
1
1
1
2

17
33
33
33
48
33
73
17
28
33
48
48
48
36
33
35
33
48
48
10
34
35
48
33
34
48
32
37
35
70
48
48
48
48
48
48
33
33
35
33
33
32

93
00
93
30
00
00
33
34
00
23
23
23
23
00
00
74
00
50
00
00
62
23
51
31
42
23
00
31
35
93
30
33
33
30
30
32
32
00
23
23
23
31

170
335
553
335
346
335
118
129
305
335
516
516
127
346
335
218
335
346
346
335
112
335
516
357
553
127
137
335
335
100
500
500
127
346
127
346
335
335
218
335
335
135

2
4
1
4
4
4
2
2
4
1
4
4
4
4
4
1
4
4
4
4
1
1
4
1
1
4
2
4
1
2
1
1
4
4
4
4
4
4
1
1
1
1

July— Continued

0068400
0083380
0025280
5915670
0012180
0068680
5913400
0036040
0029420
0068010
5522370
0 0 71230
0011040
0041140
0012750
0083080
0003230

I-A Industry Food A greem ent A riz o n a ..........................................................................
l-A Sand and G ravel Producers L o u is ia n a ..................................................................
K aiser S teel C orp S teel M anuf Div C a lifo rn ia ............................................................
Kelsey-H ayes Co H eintz Div P e n n s y lv a n ia .................................................................
K im berly-C lark C orp M em phis Tenn ..............................................................................
Kroger Co Indiana ................................................................................................................
M artin M arietta Alum inum Inc W ash & O r e g ..............................................................
M cG raw -Edison Co Pow er System s Div Pennsylvania ..........................................
M irro A lum inum Co M anitow oc & Two R ivers W is ..................................................
Natl Tea Co S tandard G rocery Div III & I n d ...............................................................
Pipeline C ontrs Assn o f C alif & AGC o f C a lifo rn ia ..................................................
R estaurant Assn State O f W ash Inc & In d e p s ..........................................................
So C alif Assn O f C abinet M frs ........................................................................................
T odd S hipyards C orp Los A ngeles Div C a lifo rn ia ....................................................
W eyerhaeuser Co Plym outh N C ......................................................................................
W hite Pine C opper Co M ichigan .....................................................................................
W inery Em ployers Assn C alifornia .................................................................................

4,400
1,000
5,550
1,000
1,100
2,000
1,100
1,450
1,750
1,100
1,500
1,550
1,350
4,000
1,600
1,050
2,000

August

Total: 110 a g re e m e n ts .................................................................................................

0086100
0025020
5915650
0025550
0057000
0025060
0079530
0087150
0016240
0025080
0057020
0057030
0057050
0037870
0025100
0032310
0025120
0057070
0057120
0083000
0029270
0032070
0057830
0025470
0029620
0057150
0023130
0041870
0032360
0075110
0057240
0057250
0 0 57260
0057220
0057270
0057280
0 0 25240
0 0 25260
0033720
0026220
0025320
5616270

941,150

A irconditioning & R efrig C ontrs Assn O f So C a l.......................................................
A llegheny Ludlum Ind Inc S teel Div Pa NY C o n n ....................................................
A lum inum C om pany o f A m erica Vernon C a lif ...........................................................
Am Steel Foundries Inter ...................................................................................................
Am Telephone & Telegraph Long Lines D ept In te r.................................................
A rm co S teel C orp In te r .......................................................................................................
A ssociated Guard and Patrol A gencies Inc Illin o is ..................................................
A ssociated U nderground C ontractors Inc M ichigan ................................................
A vtex Fibers Inc In te r...........................................................................................................
B abcock & W ilcox Co Tubular Prods Div B eaver Fils P a .....................................
Bell Tele Co o f P a ................................................................................................................
Bell Tele Co o f P a ................................................................................................................
Bell Telephone Co of P a ....................................................................................................
Bell T e lephone Laboratories Inc I n t e r ..........................................................................
Bethlehem S teel C orp M aster A gm t In te r ...................................................................
C am eron Iron W orks Inc H arris C nty T e x a s ...............................................................
CF&I S teel Corp Pueblo C o lo ..........................................................................................
C hesapeake & Potom ac Tele Co All D epts I n t e r ....................................................
C incinnati Bell Inc O hio ......................................................................................................
C leveland C liffs Iron Co M ich & Minn ..........................................................................
C om bustion Eng Inc C h a ttanooga T e n n ......................................................................
C ooper-B essem er Co G rove City P a ............................................................................
D iam ond S tate Tele Co D e la w a re ..................................................................................
Elkem M etals Co. M arietta O hio ....................................................................................
Fisher C ontrols Co Io w a .....................................................................................................
G eneral T e lephone C om pany of P e n n s y lv a n n ia ......................................................
G lass Packaging Institute In te r ........................................................................................
G rum m an Flxible Co Loudonville & M illersburg O h io .............................................
H arnischfeger Corp W isconsin ........................................................................................
H otel E m ployers A ssn O f San Fran C a lif....................................................................
III Bell Tele Co C om m & M ktng Depts Illinois and In d ia n a ..................................
III Bell Tele Co C om m O perations & O th s ..................................................................
III Bell Tele Co C om ptrollers D ept & 3 O th D e p ts ...................................................
Illinois Bell T e lephone C o ..................................................................................................
Illinois Bell T e lephone Co M ilitary A g re e m e n t...........................................................
Indiana Bell Tel Co I n c .......................................................................................................
Inland Steel Co Indiana H arbor I n d ...............................................................................
Jo n e s & Laughlin S teel C orp I n te r .................................................................................
Joy M fg Co Franklin P a ......................................................................................................
Latrobe S teel Co Latrobe P a ...........................................................................................
Lukens S teel C om pany P e n n s ylv a n ia ...........................................................................
M anville C orp D efiance O h io ...........................................................................................

1,400
5,000
1,000
4,000
6,100
13,200
6,000
1,650
3,200
4,100
3,350
11,950
4,050
1,700
45,000
4,000
4,000
33,050
3,850
3,400
2,300
1,300
1,200
1,000
1,700
2,100
4,000
1,800
2,300
6,000
2,500
2,200
1,200
5,500
13,800
6,900
18,000
17,000
1,600
1,000
2,150
1,050

See footnotes at end of table.




20

TabS® 8. Continued--CoSleetswe bargaining agreements expiring in 1@ 3 covering 1,000 workers or more, by month
S
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

M onth and agreem ent iden tifica tion '

Industry

State

Union

48
33
10
48
48
48
20
34
33
33
33
33
17
17
48
17
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
39
33
10
17
48
48
48
48
33
36
36
35
10
33
33
36
36
36
36
36
36
48
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
48
36
49
48
33

34
30
41
00
22
22
00
23
33
34
32
00
14
74
10
14
10
10
22
00
00
21
22
40
00
31
00
00
14
00
41
93
50
00
16
00
92
33
71
31
41
00
00
31
23
23
84
33
32
00
22
33
33
46
72
73
52
00
14
35
35
30

346
335
335
346
127
346
108
500
335
335
335
500
127
127
127
170
127
127
127
346
516
516
346
346
516
346
127
346
112
335
335
185
346
346
516
346
335
500
127
335
335
335
335
127
127
127
127
127
127
346
127
127
127
127
127
127
500
346
346
127
346
335

E m ployer
unit

A u g u s t— C o n tin u e d
0057320
0025750
0083210
0057340
0057400
0057380
0002820
5915040
0025220
0025230
0026550
0025340
0087810
0085310
0057840
0087070
0057370
0057360
0057390
0057490
0057460
0057440
0057410
0057420
0057450
0057500
0057510
0057520
0046080
0025390
0083240
0085730
0057630
0057920
0057640
0057650
0026660
0036770
0037600
0032780
0083010
0025440
0025450
0036890
0036880
0036860
0037730
0036870
0036800
0057720
0036780
0036810
0037970
0036820
0037360
0036830
0026130
0057710
0036840
0060400
0057730
0025540

M ich Bell Tele p h o n e C o .....................................................................................................
M icrodot Inc Valley M ould Div In te r...............................................................................
M oore M ccorm ack P ickands M ather & Co & 2 Divs M in n e s o ta ........................
M ountain S tates Tele & Tele Co In te r..........................................................................
N J Bell T ele Co Pit & Eng Depts .................................................................................
N J Bell Tele Co T ra ffic D e p t ..........................................................................................
N abisco Foods Co N abisco Brands Inc In te r ............................................................
N ational Forge Co P & M Irvine P a ...............................................................................
N ational S teel Corp G ranite City S teel Co Illin o is ....................................................
N ational S teel C orporation G reat Lakes S teel Div M ic h ig a n ...............................
Natl S teel C orp M idw est S teel Div In d ia n a .................................................................
Natl S teel C orp W eirton S teel Div O hio & W Va .......................................................
NECA B oston C hptr Elec C ontr A ssn M a s s a c h u s e tts ...........................................
NECA S outheast Tex H ouston ........................................................................................
New Eng Tele & T ele Co P la n t.......................................................................................
New E ngland M echanical C ontrs A ssn Inc R hode Island ....................................
New E ngland Tele Co A c c t ...............................................................................................
N ew E ngland Tele Co T ra ffic ............................................... ' ..........................................
New Jersey Bell T e lephone C o .......................................................................................
New Y ork Telephone C o ....................................................................................................
New Y ork T e lephone Co D ow nstate .............................................................................
New York T e lephone Co U pstate ...................................................................................
NJ Bell T elephone Co Comm & M arketing D e p ts ...................................................
N orthw estern Bell Telephone Co In te r .......................................................... -.............
NY Telephone Co A ccounting .........................................................................................
Ohio Bell Tele C o ..................................................................................................................
Pacific Tele & Tele Co & Bell O f N ev C alif N e v ......................................................
Pacific Tele & Tele Co & Bell O f N ev Calif Nev ....................................................
Q uestor C orp S palding Div M assachusetts ................................................................
R epublic S teel C orp I n t e r ......................................................................... .........................
Reserve Mining Co S ilver Bay & B abbitt M in n ..........................................................
R oofing C ontrs Assn O f So Calif & 1 O th e r...............................................................
So Bell Tele & Tele Co Fla G a NC & S C ...................................................................
S outh Central Bell T ele Co I n te r .....................................................................................
Southern N ew E ngland Telephone Co C o n n e c tic u t................................................
S outhw estern Bell Tele Co All Depts ...........................................................................
Teledyne W ah C hang A lbany Oreg ...............................................................................
Teletype Corp C ook C nty Illin o is .....................................................................................
Teletype Corp A rk a n s a s .....................................................................................................
Tim ken Co O h io .....................................................................................................................
United S tates S teel C orp Minn Ore O p e ra tio n s ........................................................
US Steel C orp East S outh C ent & W est Divs In te r .................................................
US S teel C orp S alaried Inter ...........................................................................................
W estern Elec Co Inc C olum bus W orks O h io ..............................................................
W estern E lectric Co Inc Reading P a ...........................................................................
W estern E lectric Co Inc A llentow n P a ..........................................................................
W estern E lectric Co Inc D enver C o lo ...........................................................................
W estern E lectric Co Inc H aw thorne W ks III................................................................
W estern E lectric Co Inc Indpls Ind ................................................................................
W estern E lectric Co Inc Installation D ept I n t e r .........................................................
W estern E lectric Co Inc Kearny NJ ...............................................................................
W estern E lectric Co Inc M ontgom ery Plant III...........................................................
W estern E lectric Co Inc No III W ks ...............................................................................
W estern E lectric Co Inc O m aha N e b r ..........................................................................
W estern E lectric Co Inc S hreveport L a ........................................................................
W estern E lectric Co Inc O k la h o m a ................................................................................
W estern E lectric Co Inc M a ry la n d ..................................................................................
W estern Electric C om pany Inc Service Div I n t e r .....................................................
W estern Electric C om pany Inc M a s s a c h u s e tts .........................................................
W isconsin Electric Pow er C o ...........................................................................................
W isconsin T e lephone C o ....................................................................................................
Y oungstow n S heet & T ube Co Ohio & I n d .................................................................

See fo o tno te s at end o f table.




21

20,000
1,000
2,900
29,200
11,450
4,600
10,300
1,250
2,600
6,000
1,200
10,000
2,300
3,300
16,000
1,000
1,400
6,300
1,250
42,400
8,000
2,400
3,700
21,700
3,000
18,000
2,350
46,500
1,000
27,000
2,900
1,500
50,000
21,550
10,000
64,500
1,050
1,850
1,800
7,800
3,000
70,000
5,200
3,900
2,150
3,250
2,300
4,600
5,750
14,000
4,900
2,050
1,500
3,300
5,700
3,950
4,650
14,750
22,650
1,050
6,250
11,400

4
4
4
4
4
4
1
1
4
1
1
4
2
2
4
2
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4

4
1

4
4
2

4
4
4
4
1
1
1

4
1

4
4
1
4
1
1
1
1
4
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
4
1
1
4
4

Tab le 8. C ontinued— C o llective bargaining a g reem en ts expiring in 1983 covering 1,000 w o rk e rs or more, by month
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

M onth and agreem ent ide n tifica tion 1

Industry

State

Union

Em ployer
unit

20
32
70
33
37
24
26
54
54
49
48
33
33
54
37
35
10
26
54
37
54
54
58
44
28
20
20
16
16
33
33
34
78
44
44
33
54
32
33
44
36
35
35
37
44
25
33
49
58
20
44
54
44
36
36

33
31
22
58
35
82
31
31
31
34
93
31
23
21
23
21
86
56
50
00
00
52
41
54
54
93
00
00
00
91
33
35
21
72
00
00
31
31
32
20
42
74
71
00
58
00
00
57
41
93
52
21
70
71
43

107
137
145
335
112
535
231
364
184
342
127
335
335
332
320
335
600
231
184
335
184
184
145
239
357
531
600
112
112
600
335
553
192
239
239
553
155
137
335
239
218
335
335
335
239
205
335
127
145
107
239
332
239
107
127

1
1
2
4
1
1
1
2
2
4
1
1
4
4
1
1
1
1
4
4
4
4
2
2
1
3
3
3
3
1
1
1
3
2
2
4
3
1
1
2
1
1
1
4
2
4
4
4
2
3
2
4
2
1
1

Septem ber

58 a g re e m e n ts ..................................................................................................

139,250

A E S taley M anufacturing Illin o is ....................................................................................
A nchor H ocking Corp O h io ...............................................................................................
A ssoc H otels A tla n tic City N J ..........................................................................................
A tlantic S teel Co G e o rg ia ..................................................................................................
Bay S hipbuilding C orp S turgeon Bay W is e .................................................................
Boise C ascade C orporation Idaho .................................................................................
C ham pion Inti Corp C ham pion Papers Div H am ilton O h io ...................................
C leveland Food Industry C om m ittee O h io ..................................................................
C leveland Food Industry C om m ittee O h io ..................................................................
C onsum ers Pow er Co M ichigan ......................................................................................
C ontinental Tele Co of C alif B akersfield C a lif...........................................................
C opperw eld S pecialty S teel Co W arren O h io ............................................................
C yclops Corp U niversal-C yclops S pec S teel P e n n s y lv a n ia ..................................
D aitch Crystal D airies Inc New Y o r k ..............................................................................
D ravo C orp Eng W ks Div P ennsylvania .......................................................................
D resser Industries Inc P e n n s y lv a n ia ..............................................................................
Duval Corp Duval S ierrita Corp Sub Pima Cnty A riz o n a ........................................
Federal Paper Board Co Inc R iegelw ood N C ............................................................
Food Fair S tores Inc Md Del Va & W V a ...................................................................
Genl Am T ransportation C orp In te r................................................................................
G iant Food Inc Md Del Va & W V a ...............................................................................
G reat A&P Tea Co Md Del & Va ...................................................................................
G reater M etro A rea H ospitality Assn Inc M inpls M in n ...........................................
H am pton R oads Shipping Assn V irg in ia .......................................................................
H ercules Inc R adford A rm y Am m unition Pit R adford V a ......................................
I-A Fluid M ilk-Ice C ream A greem ent C a lifo rn ia .........................................................
l-A M ilk D ealers Phila & V ic P en n s ylv a n ia ..................................................................
l-A N ortheastern S tates B oilerm aker Em ployers In te r ..........................................
l-A O hio V alley Field A gm t Ky O hio W V a ...................................................................
Intalco A lum inum Corp W a s h in g to n ...............................................................................
Interlake Inc R iverdale Plant Illin o is ...............................................................................
K ohler Co W is c o n s in ............................................................................................................
M otion P icture Laboratory T echnicians N ew Y o r k ...................................................
New O rleans Steam ship A ssociation L o u is ia n a ........................................................
N ew Y ork S hipping Assn Inc Port O f New Y ork In te r............................................
NL Industries Inc D oehler-Jarvis Div I n t e r .................................................................
N ortheastern O hio Food Industry Em ployers ............................................................
O w ens-Illinois Inc O hio .......................................................................................................
Penn-Dixie Indus Inc Penn-Dixie Steel C orp In d ia n a ..............................................
Phila M arine Trade Assn Port O f Phila & V ic P e n n s ylv a n ia .................................
R aytheon Co R efrigeration Div A m ana Io w a ..............................................................
Reed R ock Bit Co & Reed Tubular Prods Co H ouston Tex ...............................
R heem M anufacturing C om pany A rk a n s a s .................................................................
R ockw ell Inti C orp A uto O prs I n t e r ................................................................................
S avannah M aritim e Assn G e o rg ia ..................................................................................
S chnadig C orp Ind PAGA & Co I n t e r ...........................................................................
S haron S teel C orp P-M S teel B rainard-D earborn Div I n t e r ..................................
So C arolina E lectric & Gas C o ........................................................................................
St Paul O n-S ale Liquor D ealer Assn M in n e s o ta ......................................................
S tar-Kist Foods Inc Los A ngeles C a lif..........................................................................
Steam ship Trade Assn of B altim ore Inc M aryland ..................................................
W aldbaum Inc New Y o r k ....................................................................................................
W est G ulf M aritim e Assn Inc I n te r .................................................................................
W hirlpool C orp Ft Sm ith A r k .............................................................................................
Zenith R adio C orp S pringfield M o ..................................................................................

1,500
3,000
5,000
1,300
1,050
1,000
1,400
4,000
8,400
5,000
1,300
2,150
1,600
1,000
1,300
1,300
1,850
1,200
1,700
3,500
2,500
1,750
2,500
3,200
3,000
1,350
1,700
1,050
2,650
1,250
1,600
3,500
1,000
3,500
10,200
2,000
4,800
1,000
1,200
3,500
1,900
1,200
1,200
1,050
1,600
1,000
3,100
1,000
1,350
3,500
5,000
4,000
7,500
2,550
1,500

Total:

0002720
0023030
0075260
0025070
5801320
5617100
0013000
0067030
0067040
0060590
0058020
0025160
0025500
5910210
0041020
0032680
0083310
0012930
0067740
0041190
0068050
0067260
0071140
0054170
0016570
0002330
0002370
0085920
5910680
0026490
0025000
0029570
0079230
0054210
0054230
0026140
0068130
0023430
0025140
0054250
0037720
0033600
0 0 33950
0040380
0 0 54310
0 0 11240
0 0 25400
5601780
5910710
0002490
0054260
0 0 68360
0054160
0 0 37390
0 0 37490

O ctob er

Total:

37 a g re e m e n ts ..................................................................................................

See footnotes at end of table.




22

141,300

Table 8. C ontinued— C ollective bargaining a g reem en ts expiring in 1983 covering 1,000 w o rk e rs o r m ore, by m onth
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

M onth and agreem ent id e n tifica tion 1

Industry

S tate

Union

Em ployer
unit

34
26
48
36
37
34
33
37
37
20
41
20
35
22
35
49
80
35
54
48
34
37
37
37
37
17
33
37
33
26
35
32
37
33
36

00
63
23
21
23
00
31
23
14
34
00
23
74
00
22
22
93
52
00
46
00
93
58
00
93
72
00
54
74
56
33
22
33
88
41

335
231
516
218
553
335
335
335
320
332
197
108
335
305
335
127
118
218
155
346
218
218
218
218
553
170
335
335
335
231
500
137
553
335
218

4
1
4
1
4
4
1
1
4
1
4
1
1
3
1
4
4
1
4
4
4
4
1
4
4
2
4
1
1
1
4
1
4
1
1

37
72
36
35
54
49
36
76
48
72
35
35
26

91
33
34
21
74
61
00
00
00
33
62
00
50

500
533
553
335
364
127
347
127
531
533
218
335
231

1
2
4
1
3
1
4
4
4
2
1
4
4

O c to b e r— C o n tin u e d

0029450
0012680
0057010
0037840
0040570
0029410
0025200
0040160
0041440
0002670
0050330
0003030
0032370
0006220
0033150
0060640
0079290
0033020
0067470
0057300
0000090
0040800
0040810
0040650
0040660
0088870
0026600
0041080
0025310
0012970
0032120
0023150
0041670
5900720
0037790

ACC O Industies Inc In te r ....................................................................................................
Am Can Co N aheola A la ....................................................................................................
Bell Tele Co of P a .................................................................................................................
Bendix C orp E lectrical C om ponents Div New Y o r k .................................................
Boeing Co Boeing V ertol Co Div P e n n s ylv a n ia .........................................................
C om m ercial Shearing Inc I n t e r ........................................................................................
C yclops C orp E m pire-D etroit Steel Div M ansifeld O h io .........................................
Dana Corp Parish Fram e Div Reading Pa ..................................................................
Genl D ynam ics C orp Elec Boat Div Q uincy M a s s ...................................................
G enl Foods C orp Post-C arton & C ontainer M ichigan ............................................
G reyhound Lines Inc In te r ..................................................................................................
H ershey Foods Corp H ershey Pa ...................................................................................
Hughes Tool Co H ouston T e x .........................................................................................
l-A Dye & M achine Print Cos In te r.................................................................................
Ingersoll-R and Co New J e rs e y ........................................................................................
Jersey Central Pow er & Light Co New J e r s e y ..........................................................
K aiser Foundation H osps & 2 O ths SF C a lif..............................................................
Koppers Co Inc M etal Prods Div M a ry la n d .................................................................
Kroger Co Pitts Region S tores I n t e r ..............................................................................
Lincoln T e lephone & Telegraph C om pany N e b ra s k a .............................................
Lockheed A ircraft C orp M issiles and Space Inter ...................................................
Lockheed A ircraft C orp Lockheed C alif Co Div ........................................................
Lockheed A ircraft C orp Lockheed G eorgia Co Div .................................................
M cD onnell D ouglas Corp Inter ........................................................................................
M cD onnell D ouglas Corp D ouglas A ircraft Co C a lifo rn ia ......................................
M ech C ontrs Assn of N ew O rleans Louisiana ..........................................................
N ational-S tandard In te r .......................................................................................................
N ew port News S hipbldg & Dry D ock Co V irg in ia ......................................................
N orthw est Industries Inc Lone Star S teel Co Texas ...............................................
Olin Corp 2 Pits Pisgah Forest N C ................................................................................
O utboard M arine Corp Johnson O utboards Div Illin o is ..........................................
O w ens-Illinois Inc N ew J e rs e y .........................................................................................
Schw inn B icycle Co C hicago I I I .......................................................................................
Titanium M etals Corp of A m erica N e v a d a ..................................................................
W hite C onsol Indus Inc Franklin Mfg Co St Cloud M inn ......................................

1,000
1,250
1,300
2,350
3,000
1,200
1,200
1,800
2,500
1,400
17,000
2,300
3,250
4,000
1,800
2,150
7,850
1,500
3,550
1,600
6,300
14,000
8,500
5,700
9,900
3,000
1,200
17,000
4,300
1,850
2,500
1,300
1,500
1,050
1,200

N ovem ber

Total:

0041770
0077030
0036350
5901170
0067730
0060670
0036590
0079360
0057760
0077040
0033890
5908700
0012330

13 a g re e m e n ts ...................................................................................................

33,700

Boeing Co & Boeing C om puter Services Inc W a s h in g to n ....................................
C hicago Dry C leaners Assn Illin o is ................................................................................
G ibson Products C orp M ic h ig a n ......................................................................................
G oulds Pum ps Inc New Y o r k ............................................................................................
l-A Chain & Indep G rocery Stores Texas ...................................................................
Louisville Gas & Electric Co Louisville K y ...................................................................
RCA Corp M aster NJ Pa Calif ......................................................................................
RCA Corp RCA S ervice Co Div In te r.............................................................................
RCA G lobal C om m unications Inc C om m Trade Div In te r .....................................
Textile M aintenance Institute O f C hicagoland Illin o is .............................................
Trane Co C larksville T e n n .................................................................................................
U nited S tates S teel C orp O ilw ell Div I n t e r ..................................................................
W e stva co C orp Va & M d ....................................................................................................

10,500
1,000
3,000
1,100
1,900
2,800
4,600
2,500
1,000
1,000
1,700
1,400
1,200

D ecem ber

Total:

21 a g re e m e n ts ..................................................................................................

See footnotes at end of table.




23

99,350

Tab!© 8. C o n tinued— C o llective bargaining a g reem en ts expiring in 1983 covering 1,000 w o rk e rs or m ore, by month
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

M onth and agreem ent identification1

Industry

State

Union

E m ployer
unit

63
73
63
37
16
16
33
16
80
37
20
58
37
76
28
33
23
65
70
20
37

00
21
93
00
00
23
55
23
33
93
59
93
00
20
33
31
21
21
93
33
33

238
118
163
500
129
531
335
143
118
500
332
500
500
239
121
161
134
118
145
108
484

4
2
1
4
2
2
1
3
2
4
1
4
4
2
1
1
2
2
2
1
4

D e c em b er— C ontinued

0074000
0 0 79020
0074220
0 0 40550
0088400
5909740
0026030
0088880
0079410
0040820
0003880
0071260
0040670
0079860
0016110
5915470
0008570
0074100
0075240
0003600
0041860

Am N atl Insurance Co I n t e r ..............................................................................................
Bldg Service League C om m ercial Jobs New Y o r k ..................................................
Blue C ross o f N orthern C a lifo rn ia ..................................................................................
Boeing Co In te r......................................................................................................................
C onstructors Assn O f W estern P e n n ............................................................................
C onstructors Assn O f W estern P e n n .............................................................................
H untington A lloys Inc W est V irg in ia ...............................................................................
l-A H eavy Eng RR C ontrg & H wy C onst A gm t Pa ..................................................
Illinois Assn O f H ealth Care Facilities ..........................................................................
Lockheed A ircraft Corp Lockheed Calif Co Div ........................................................
Lykes P asco Packing Co D ade City F la .......................................................................
M arriott Corp Bobs Big Boy R estaurants G lendale C a lif......................................
M cD onnell D ouglas C orp Prof Engineering I n t e r ......................................................
M etropolitan M arine C ontractors Assn In c ..................................................................
M onsanto Co Krum m rich Plant lllio n is ..........................................................................
N eenah Foundry Co W is c o n s in .......................................................................................
P lastic S oft M aterials M frs Assn Inc N Y ......................................................................
R ealty A dvisory Bd On Lab R eis Inc Comm Bldg New Y o r k ..............................
San M ateo C ounty R est H otel O w ners Assn C a lifo rn ia .........................................
S tandard Brands Inc C urtiss D Frankln Prk Pit Illin o is ...........................................
S tew art-W arner Corp C hicago I I I .....................................................................................

1 S ee appendix A fo r explanation of abbreviations.




3,000
10,000
1,300
12,000
8,000
6,000
1,300
5,000
3,200
2,750
1,000
5,700
2,500
2,000
1,000
1,100
5,000
20,000
5,200
1,000
2,300

2 S ee appendix B fo r explanation of codes.

24

Tab le 9. C o llective bargaining a g re e m e n ts expiring in 1983 c overing 1,000 w o rk e rs o r m ore, by industry
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

Industry and agreem ent id e n tifica tio n 1

G rand Total: 609 a g re e m e n ts ...........................................................................................

Expiration
m onth

S tate

Union

E m ployer
unit

7
8
9
8
8
8
7

84
00
86
41
41
41
34

357
335
600
335
335
335
335

1
4
1
4
4
1
1

7

72

531

3

3
6
6
6
5
4
5
3
4
6
5
5
4
7
4
6
4
4
3
3
4
4
4
4
4
6
3
5
6
4
4
5
5
4
4

16
93
58
58
00
33
73
74
64
93
73
73
10
10
72
93
43
22
40
40
33
50
50
33
43
93
34
30
93
74
74
31
46
62
30

119
129
119
143
129
119
119
119
100
600
143
119
143
119
143
143
143
119
143
531
119
143
129
143
119
168
143
119
119
143
119
119
143
119
143

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

5
5
5
5

00
00
00
00

143
119
129
143

2
2
2
2

2,573,000

Metal mining

7 a g re e m e n ts ..................................................................................................

17,400

Am M etal C lim ax Inc C lim ax M olybdenum Co Div C olorado ..............................
C leveland C liffs Iron Co M ich & M inn ...........................................................................
Duval C orp Duval S ierrita C orp Sub Pima C nty A riz o n a ........................................
M oore M cco rm a ck Pickands M ather & Co & 2 Divs M in n e s o ta ........................
R eserve M ining Co S ilver Bay & B abbitt M in n ..........................................................
U nited S tates Steel C orp M inn O re O p e ra tio n s ........................................................
W hite Pine C opper Co M ichigan .....................................................................................

2,300
3,400
1,850
2,900
2,900
3,000
1,050

Total:
0 0 83110
0 0 83000
0 0 83310
0 0 83210
0083240
0 0 83010
0083080

N onm etallic m inerals, ex cep t fuels

1 a g re e m e n t....................................................................................................

1,000

0083380 I-A Sand and G ravel Producers L o u is ia n a ...................................................................

1,000

Total:

G eneral building co ntrac tors

35 agre e m e n ts .................................................................................................

151,750

AGC C onn Labor R elations Div C entral Conn ...........................................................
AGC C ontrs O f Am San D iego C nty C hptr C alif & 2 O th rs ..................................
AGC G eorgia B ranch & 2 o th s G reater A tla n ta G a ................................................
AG C G eorgia B ranch A tla n ta G a ....................................................................................
AG C o f Am A sso c C ontrs O f O hio Inc O hio & Ky ..................................................
AG C o f Am C entral III Bldrs C h p tr ..................................................................................
AG C o f Am O kla C hpt B ldrs D iv .....................................................................................
AG C of Am San A nto n io C hpt T e x a s ............................................................................
AG C of M iss M aster A gm t Central M is s ......................................................................
AG C of S o C alif & 3 O t h s ..................................................................................................
AG C O kla h o m a C hpt-B ldrs Div O k la .............................................................................
AG C O klahom a C hpt-B ldrs Div O k la .............................................................................
AG C of M ass Inc & 1 oth M ass & NH .........................................................................
AG C of M ass Inc & i o t h s .................................................................................................
A G G Lake C harles C hptr L o u is ia n a ...............................................................................
A ssociated G eneral C ontractors of C alif I n c ..............................................................
A ssociated G eneral C ontractors of St Louis m is s o u ri............................................
B ergen-P assaic B ldg C ontrs Assn & 1 oth N ew J e r s e y ........................................
Bldrs Assn of M is s o u ri.........................................................................................................
Bldrs Assn of M issouri M o & K a n s ................................................................................
B ldrs Assn of T azew ell C nty & 6 O ths Illin o is ...........................................................
C onst C ontrs C ncl Inc DC Md & V a ..............................................................................
C onstruction C ontr C ouncil DC Md V a .........................................................................
G reater Peoria C o n tra cto rs & Suppliers A ssn Inc Illinois .....................................
H om e Bldrs A ssn O f G reater St Louis M issouri .......................................................
l-A So C alif G enl C o n tr s .....................................................................................................
M ich D istribution C ontrs A s s n ...........................................................................................
M id-Am R egional Barg A ssn Illin o is ...............................................................................
No C alif H om e B ldgs C onf 2 A ssns & I n d ..................................................................
No Texas C ontrs A s s n .........................................................................................................
No Texas C ontrs A ssn 20 cnties ....................................................................................
O hio C ontrs A ssn Labor Rel Div a AG C 11 C n ty s ..................................................
O m aha Bldg C ontrs Em plrs Assn N e b ra s k a ...............................................................
W est T enn Barg G roup Inc T e n n ....................................................................................
W estern Illinois C o n tra cto rs Assn ...................................................................................

1,300
3,500
2,500
1,600
4,000
3,350
3,000
1,000
1,000
4,000
2,000
2,200
10,000
7,000
2,000
25,000
2,600
1,000
1,350
2,000
3,500
3,300
1,000
1,450
3,000
5,000
2,000
25,000
12,000
4,000
3,000
1,150
4,000
1,500
1,450

Total:
5517840
5909220
0086120
0086140
0 0 88300
5 6 09470
0086290
0 0 86160
0087490
0 0 84110
0085880
0085890
0084040
0084100
0087870
0084030
0084150
0084560
0086240
0 0 84350
0086300
0084370
0084380
5910660
0088150
0084020
0 0 87420
0 0 84340
0 0 89200
0086350
0086180
0087650
0084190
0 0 86250
0089430

H eavy construction co ntrac tors

Total:
0086490
0084070
0084690
0084650

AG C
AGC
AGC
AGC

of
of
of
of

Am
Am
Am
Am

39 agre e m e n ts .................................................................................................

246,500

& 2 C hptrs S eattle & Ta co m a C hptr W a s h .......................................
Inland Em pire Chap H w y-H vy I n t e r ......................................................
Inland Em pire C hptr Inter ........................................................................
Inland Em pire C hptr In te r ..........................................................................

10,000
5,500
4,000
5,000

See footnotes at end of table.




25

Table 9. Conti[n)u©dl‘“ (Do8SecSiv© bargaining agreements expiring in 1983 severing 1,000 workers ®r more, by industry
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

Inddstry and agreem ent id e n tifica tion 1

Expiration
m onth

5,000
9,000
12,000
7,000
1,800
8,000
23,700
4,300
1,500
20,000
25,000
6,500
2,800
1,500
1,500
4,300
8,000
6,000
4,500
4,300
1,750
1,500
5,000
1,050
2,650
2,900
2,250
11,000
12,500
1,100
1,400
10,000
1,200
8,000
3,000

State

Union

E m ployer
unit

6
5
6
6
6
2
5
4
5
6
6
3
3
4
3
4
12
12
4
4
4
4
12
9
9
6
5
4
4
4
4
4
6
2
4

91
91
93
93
93
22
90
14
91
93
93
16
16
50
14
14
00
23
23
10
40
40
23
00
00
70
34
00
00
00
00
00
00
22
54

116
119
129
531
143
143
600
129
531
129
119
119
129
143
129
129
129
531
600
129
129
143
143
112
112
112
129
129
143
115
531
170
143
143
143

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
3
3
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

3
6
6
6
7
5
6
6
8
5
4
4
5
6
7
8
7
6
7
4
6
5
5
10
6
5
4

16
93
93
93
14
43
93
15
93
35
22
00
33
93
43
34
93
93
93
23
00
33
91
72
93
43
23

119
170
168
143
115
119
170
119
170
116
119
170
116
119
116
129
112
168
164
119
116
531
170
170
170
170
170

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

H e a vy c o n s tru c tio n e© r?traet© rs— C©n£inu@til
0089240
0084060
0084680
0 0 84670
0084890
0086590
0084080
0084920
0084280
0084130
0084010
0084810
0085930
0089350
0089060
0084840
0088400
5909740
0088110
0088440
0084960
0084950
0088880
0085920
5910680
0084990
0087770
0086050
0086040
0087880
0084620
0089170
0085010
0088590
0089470

A G C o f Am S eattle & T acom a Chaps W a s h ..............................................................
A G C o f Am W estern C entral A rea W ashington ........................................................
A G C of C alif & W estern S teel C o u n c il.........................................................................
A G C of C alif-N orthern A r e a ..............................................................................................
A G C of C alif-N orthern Tunnel A g m t ..............................................................................
A G C of N ew Jersey .............................................................................................................
A G C O regon-C olum bia C hapt In te r................................................................................
AGC of M ass and 1 oth .....................................................................................................
A G C Seattle & Ta co m a C hpts Bldg Hvy & Hwy W a s h in g to n .............................
A ssociated G eneral C o ntractors o f C alifornia I n c ....................................................
A ssociated G enl C o n tra cto rs of C alifornia I n c ..........................................................
Conn C onst Indus Assn Inc C o n n ..................................................................................
C onn C onst Industries A ssn Inc 5 Divs C o n n ...........................................................
C onst C ontrs C ncl Inc Hvy DC Md V a .........................................................................
C onst Industries A sso c O f W stm M ass I n c ................................................................
C onst Industries of M a s s ....................................................................................................
C onstructors A ssn O f W estern P e n n ............................................................................
C onstructors A ssn O f W estern P e n n .............................................................................
C ontrs Assn O f Eastern Penn Hvy Hwy & RR 29 C nty P a ..................................
F oundation-M arine C ontrs Assn New Eng M ass NH M aine ................................
H eavy C onstructors Assn O f G r Kans I n t e r ..............................................................
H eavy C on stru cto rs Assn O f G reater Kans In te r ......................................................
l-A H eavy Eng RR C ontrg & Hwy C onst A gm t Pa ..................................................
l-A N ortheastern S tates B oilerm aker Em ployers In te r ..........................................
l-A O hio Valley Field A gm t Ky O hio W V a ...................................................................
l-A So C ent E m pls Field C o n st La Tex O kla & A r k .................................................
M ichigan R oad Bldrs A ssn H vy-H w y C o n s tr...............................................................
O hio C o ntractors A ssociation ...........................................................................................
O hio C ontrs Assn & A G C o f Am Ohio & K y ...............................................................
O hio C ontrs Assn & A G C of Am Ohio & K y ...............................................................
O hio C ontrs A ssn-A G C o f Am Inc Ohio & W Va .......................................................
Pipe Line C ontrs Assn N ational A gm t I n te r ................................................................
U nderground C o n tra cto rs Assn o f N orthern C a lif....................................................
U tility C ontrs Assn O f NJ ...................................................................................................
Virginia A ssociation o f C ontrs I n c ...................................................................................

S p e c ia l tra d e c o n tra c to rs
54 agreem ents ................................................................................................

155,800

A G C C onnecticut Inc ...........................................................................................................
AGC o f C alif Inc Indus & G enl P ip e fittin g ....................................................................
AGC of C alif-N orthern A r e a ..............................................................................................
AGC o f C alif-N orthern 46 C o u n tie s ................................................................................
AGC o f M ass Inc & 7 O t h s ...............................................................................................
A G C of St Louis & 1 O ther D ist C ncl M issouri .........................................................
A G C of C alifornia, I n c ..........................................................................................................
A G C R hode Island C h p t.....................................................................................................
A irconditioning & R efrig C ontrs Assn O f So C a l.......................................................
A llied C o n str Em plrs A ssn Inc W is c o n s o n ..................................................................
A sso c C ontrs Assn of NJ & 1 o t h ..................................................................................
A sso c M ech C ontrs O f C hatt Inc Tenn G a N C .........................................................
A sso c S teel E rectors C hicago I I I .....................................................................................
A ssociated G eneral C ontrs of C alifornia Inc ..............................................................
A ssociated G eneral C ontrs of St Louis M issouri ......................................................
A ssociated U nderground C o n tra cto rs Inc M ichigan ................................................
C alifornia M etal Trades A ssociation ..............................................................................
C ontracting Plasterers A ssn O f So Calif In c ...............................................................
Floor C overing Assn O f S o C alif & 4 O t h s .................................................................
G eneral Building C o ntractors A ssociation Inc P e n n s y lv a n ia ...............................
Iron W orker E m ployers O f C al-N ev .............................................. ................................
M AR BA & E xcavators Inc I I I ............................................................................................
M ech C ontr A ssns of W ashington .................................................................................
M ech C ontrs A ssn o f N ew O rleans Louisiana ..........................................................
M ech C ontrs Assn of No C alif I n c .................................................................................
M ech C ontrs Assn of St Louis M is s o u ri.......................................................................
M ech C ontrs Assn of Eastern Pa Inc 10 c n tie s ........................................................

1,000
2,500
4,000
15,000
3,500
4,200
2,500
1,500
1,400
1,200
2,000
1,300
2,500
1,800
1,700
1,650
1,200
2,000
1,850
6,000
5,500
1,500
2,000
3,000
1,450
1,800
1,000

Total:
0084510
0085040
0085430
0085420
0086780
0085650
5519710
0 0 85630
0086100
0086580
0085600
5707260
0 0 85800
0 0 85610
0085790
0 0 87150
5907520
0 0 88550
0 0 85900
0 0 85690
0 0 85820
0085810
0 0 85090
0088870
0089370
0088540
0087380

See footnotes at end of table.




26

Table 9. C ontinued— C ollective bargaining a g reem en ts expiring in 1983 covering 1,000 w o rk e rs or m ore, by industry
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

Industry and agreem ent id e n tifica tion 1

Expiration
m onth

3,800
8,000
4,000
2,300
2,200
1,250
5,500
1,500
2,700
2,000
3,300
2,200
1,300
1,000
9,600
2,000
1,200
1,700
1,500
5,900
1,500
9,000
1,500
2,000
1,500
1,100
1,200

State

Union

Em ployer
unit

4
2
2
8
4
1
5
3
5
3
8
4
5
8
6
6
6
6
7
5
4
6
4
4
8
6
4

23
00
94
14
21
23
93
00
91
84
74
50
00
14
21
93
90
93
93
33
23
93
20
20
93
93
43

170
112
127
127
127
127
127
127
127
127
127
127
127
170
127
164
164
164
170
170
170
170
187
187
185
187
187

2
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

9
7
5
1
6
3
10
3
10
9
9
1
12
8
3
4
12
9
1
5
7

33
33
35
31
00
91
34
23
23
93
00
95
59
00
23
82
33
93
95
93
93

107
531
101
155
357
531
332
364
108
531
600
480
332
108
108
531
108
107
480
108
126

1
1
2
1
4
2
1
1
1
3
3
3
1
1
1
1
1
3
2
2
2

3
3
2
1
1

50
61
56
54
61

108
108
108
108
108

4
1
1
4
1

Special trade c o n tra c to rs — C ontinued
0087390
0086610
0089300
0087810
0085340
0087260
0085320
0089410
0085360
0088060
0085310
0085290
0087760
0087070
0085370
0085160
0089400
0087060
5522370
0085120
0089010
0085130
0089440
0085720
0085730
0085030
0085140

M echanical C o n tra cto rs Assn of Pennsylvania .........................................................
N ational T ransient Division In te r............................... :.....................................................
NECA A laska C hpt O utside & Inside A g m ts ...............................................................
NECA B oston C hptr Elec C ontr Assn M assachusetts ...........................................
NECA Inc Nassau & S uffolk Chpt New York ............................................................
NECA Inc W estern Penn C h p tr .......................................................................................
NECA Los A ngeles C nty C hpt Inside W irem en C a lifo rn ia ....................................
NECA N orthw est Line C onstr Chpt W ash & O r e g ...................................................
NECA Puget Sound C hpt 3 C nties W a s h in g to n ........................................................
NECA R ocky M t C hpt D enver Inside W iring C o lo ra d o ...........................................
NECA S outheast Tex H ouston ........................................................................................
NECA W ashington DC C h a p te r.......................................................................................
NECA W estchester-Fairfield Chpt NY & C o n n ..........................................................
New England M echanical C ontrs Assn Inc R hode Island ....................................
NY Electrical C ontrs Assn Inc & 2 o t h s .......................................................................
PDCA O f Central C oast Cntys Inc & 1 O ther C a lifo rn ia ........................................
PDCA Oreg Cncl & 2 A ssns Oregon & W ashington ...............................................
PDCA San Francisco Inc C alifornia ...............................................................................
Pipeline C ontrs Assn of C alif & AGC of C alifornia ..................................................
Plum bing & Htg C ontrs Assn of Lake M cH enry & oth Illin o is .............................
Plum bing Heating & Air C onditioning C ontrs P e n n s y lv a n ia ..................................
Plum bing-H eating & Piping Emplys Council C alifornia ...........................................
R oofing & S heet M etal C ontrs Assn of P hiladelphia P a .......................................
R oofing & S heet M etal C ontrs Assn Inter ..................................................................
Roofing C ontrs Assn O f So C alif & 1 O th e r...............................................................
S heet M etal Heating & A ir C ond C ontrs C a lifo rn ia ..................................................
SM AC NA St Louis M is s o u ri...............................................................................................
Food and kindred products
21 agreem ents ................................................................................................

54,500

A E S taley M anufacturing Illin o is .....................................................................................
Brach E J & Sons Inc Illin o is ............................................................................................
B rewery Prop O f Milw Miller, Pabst & Schlitz W is c o n s in ......................................
C am pbell Soup Co N apoleon O h io ................................................................................
CPC International Inc Corn Div II Mo & T x .................................................................
Dairy Em plrs Labor C ouncil M aster A g m t...................................................................
Genl Foods C orp P ost-C arton & C ontainer M ichigan ............................................
Heinz H J Co Heinz USA Div P ittsburgh P a ...............................................................
H ershey Foods Corp H ershey Pa ..................................................................................
l-A Fluid M ilk-Ice Cream A greem ent C a lifo rn ia .........................................................
I A M ilk D ealers Phila & Vic P e n n s y lv a n ia ..................................................................
l-A Pineapple C om panies Factory & P lantations H a w a ii........................................
Lykes P asco Packing Co Dade City F la .......................................................................
N abisco Foods Co N abisco Brands Inc In te r ............................................................
Pet Inc W hitm an C hocolates Div IC Indus Co Phila P a .........................................
S im plot J R Co Food Processing Plant C aldw ell Id ................................................
S tandard Brands Inc C urtiss D Frankln Prk Pit Illin o is ...........................................
S tar-Kist Foods Inc Los A ngeles C a lif..........................................................................
Sugar C os N egotiating C om m H a w a ii...........................................................................
W holesale Bakers G roup M ach Shop C a lifo rn ia ......................................................
W inery Em ployers Assn C alifornia .................................................................................

1,500
3,200
2,700
1,850
1,800
1,000
1,400
1,800
2,300
1,350
1,700
6,000
1,000
10,300
1,000
1,100
1,000
3,500
7,000
1,000
2,000

Total:
0002720
0003850
0003080
0003320
0002650
0003490
0002670
0002590
0003030
0002330
0002370
0002620
0003880
0002820
5913230
0004050
0003600
0002490
0003000
0002900
0003230

Tob a c c o m anufactures
Total:
0005120
0005030
0005060
0005080
0005070

5 a g re e m e n ts ...................................................................................................

16,400

B rown & W illiam son T obacco Corp I n t e r ....................................................................
B rown & W illiam son T obacco Corp Louisville K y ....................................................
Loews Corp Lorillard Div G reensboro N C ...................................................................
Philip M orris USA R ichm ond V a ......................................................................................
Phillip M orris USA Louisville K y .......................................................................................

2,150
2,400
2,200
7,200
2,450

See fo o tno te s at end of table.




27

Table 9. Continued—
-Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1983 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

Industry and agreem ent id e n tifica tion 1

Expiration
m onth

State

Union

E m ployer
unit

6
5
1
10
4
5

54
56
56
00
56
00

202
202
305
305
305
305

4
4
1
3
1
4

2
12

74
21

305
134

4
2

9
1
5
5
5
5
5

82
64
82
91
92
91
92

535
343
343
343
343
343
343

1
1
4
4
2
1
1

1
1
9
7
4

93
00
00
93
93

119
205
205
119
119

2
4
4
2
2

10
6
7
9
5
6
9
6
5
7
5
6
10
5
5
11
7

63
11
62
31
74
00
56
71
00
62
35
72
56
11
58
50
56

231
231
100
231
231
100
231
231
100
231
100
231
231
100
231
231
100

1
1
1
1
1

T e x tile m ill p ro d u c ts
6 a g re e m e n ts ...................................................................................................

17,650

Dan R iver Inc D anville V a .................................................................................................
Erwin M ills Durham N C .......................................................................................................
Erwin M ills Erwin N C ............................................................................................................
l-A Dye & M achine Print C os In te r.................................................................................
J P S tevens & C om pany Inc N orth C arolina .............................................................
M unsingw ear Inc M ich M inn & W is ................................................................................

7,000
1,200
1,700
4,000
2,600
1,150

Total:
0006020
0006040
0006110
0006220
0006450
0006200

A p p a re l a n d o th e r te x tile p ro d u c ts
2 a g re e m e n ts ....................................................................................................

9,000

0008910 Farah M fg Co Inc El Paso T e x ........................................................................................
0008570 P lastic S oft M aterials M frs Assn Inc N Y ......................................................................

4,000
5,000

Total:

L u m b e r a n d w o o d p ro d u c ts
8 a g re e m e n ts ....................................................................................................

44,800

B oise C ascade C orporation Idaho .................................................................................
M asonite C orp H ardboard Div Laurel M is s .................................................................
P otlatch Corp M aster A gm t Id a h o ..................................................................................
S im pson Tim ber Co S helton W a s h ................................................................................
W estern States W ood Prods Em plr Assn O re g o n ...................................................
W eyerhaeuser Co Wd Prd G rp Mill Opr Longview W a s h .....................................
W eyerhaeuser Co O re g o n ..................................................................................................

1,000
1,000
2,000
1,450
37,000
1,150
1,200

Total:
5617100
0010260
0010040
0010050
0010290
0010060
0010270

F u rn itu re a n d fix tu re s
5 a g re e m e n ts ....................................................................................................

5,950

Indus Reis Council O f Furn M frs Ind So C a lif...........................................................
K roehler Mfg Co I n t e r .........................................................................................................
Schnadig C orp Ind PAGA & Co Inter ...........................................................................
So Calif Assn Of C abinet M frs ........................................................................................
S tore Fixture & A rchitectural W dw ork Inst C a lifo rn ia .............................................

1,200
1,100
1,000
1,350
1,300

Total:
0011180
0011020
0011240
0011040
0011110

P ap e r a n d a llie d p ro d u c ts
17 a g re e m e n ts ...................................................................................................

30,800

Am Can Co N aheola A la ....................................................................................................
Boise C ascade Corp R um ford Mill M a in e ...................................................................
B ow aters Southern Paper C orp C alhoun T e n n .........................................................
C ham pion Inti C orp C ham pion Papers Div H am ilton O h io ...................................
C ham pion Inti C orp C ham pion Papers Div T e x a s ....................................................
C ontainer C orp of Am In te r ...............................................................................................
Federal Paper Board Co Inc R iegelw ood N C ............................................................
G eorgia-Pacific Corp C rossett Ark .................................................................................
Inti P aper Co Southern Kraft Div Inter .........................................................................
Kim berly-C lark C orp M em phis Tenn ..............................................................................
N ekoosa E dw ards Paper Co Inc W isconsin ...............................................................
Olin Corp O lin kra ft Inc W est M onroe La ...................................................................
Olin Corp 2 Pits Pisgah Forest N C ................................................................................
S cott Paper Co SD W arren Co Div W estbrook M a in e ...........................................
Union C am p C orp Savannah G a ....................................................................................
W estvaco C orp Va & M d ....................................................................................................
W eyerhaeuser Co Plym outh N C .....................................................................................

1,250
1,200
1,100
1,400
1,200
2,500
1,200
1,350
8,000
1,100
1,300
1,000
1,850
1,950
1,600
1,200
1,600

Total:
0012680
0012250
0012570
0013000
0012050
0012450
0012930
0012660
0012150
0012180
0012220
5515210
0012970
0013030
0012400
0012330
0012750

See fo o tno te s at end of table.




28

4
1
1

4
1

4
1
1
1
1

4
1

T able 9. C ontinued— C o llective bargaining a g reem en ts expiring in 1983 covering 1,000 w o rk e rs o r m ore, by industry
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

Industry and agreem ent id e n tifica tion '

Expiration
m onth

State

Union

Em ployer
unit

4
4
4
3

33
41
31
20

243
243
243
244

2
3
1
2

5
8
6
6
4
9
12
3
2
3
1

56
00
54
57
54
54
33
62
22
91
55

202
305
305
305
500
357
121
202
553
101
218

1
4
1
1
1
1
1
4
4
1
1

4
1

74
74

500
357

1
4

4
4

56
00

333
135

1
4

9
3
3
7
7
7
3
3
8
3
4
8
1
3
3
5
10
9
3
3
3
5

31
00
00
21
00
00
00
93
00
00
93
31
22
00
00
57
22
31
00
00
00
22

137
135
135
357
335
335
135
135
137
135
135
135
231
135
135
531
137
137
135
135
135
135

1
4
4
4
1
4
4
4
2
4
4
1
4
4
4
1
1
1
1
4
4
1

Printing and publishing
4 a g re e m e n ts ....................................................................................................

9,100

C hicago Lithographers Assn Illin o is ...............................................................................
l-A Printing Industry O f Twin Cities M innesota ........................................................
Me Call Corp Me Call Printing Co O h io ........................................................................
Printing Indus O f M etro NY Inc NJ & NY ...................................................................

4,200
1,700
1,200
2,000

Total:
0014110
0014350
0014090
0014220

C hem icals and allied products
11 a g re e m e n ts ..................................................................................................

20,550

Am Enka Co N orth C a ro lin ia .............................................................................................
A vtex Fibers Inc In te r...........................................................................................................
C elanese C orp C elco Plant N arrow s V a ......................................................................
C elanese C orp C elriver Plant R ock Hill S C ................................................................
D upont E I DE N em ours Co W aynesboro V a ............................................................
H ercules Inc R adford Arm y Am m unition Pit R adford V a ......................................
M onsanto Co Krum m rich Plant lllio n is ..........................................................................
North A m erican Rayon Corp Viscose Plant T e n n e s s e e ........................................
R evlon Inc Edison NJ ..........................................................................................................
R ockw ell Inti C orp H anford O pers R ichland W a s h ..................................................
Union C arbide Corp Agricul Prods Co Institute W V a ............................................

1,300
3,200
2,000
1,650
1,450
3,000
1,000
1,450
3,000
1,400
1,100

Total:
0016230
0016240
0016270
0016280
0016340
0016570
0016110
0016260
0016520
0016080
0016730

P etroleum and coal products
2 a g re e m e n ts ....................................................................................................

5,500

0018080 Exxon Corp Exxon Co USA Baytown Tex ..................................................................
0018180 T exaco Inc Pit & Term l Port A rthur T e x .......................................................................

1,500
4,000

Total:

R ubber and misc. plastics products
Total:

2 a g re e m e n ts ....................................................................................................

2,800

0019180 Dayco C orp S outhern Div W a y n e s v ille .........................................................................
0019270 O w ens-Illinois Inc P lastic Prod Div In te r.......................................................................

1,500
1,300

Stone, clay, and glass products
Total:
0023030
0023580
0023640
0023320
5712480
5911930
0023550
0023590
0023130
0023570
5908100
5616270
0023350
0023560
0023680
5914600
0023150
0023430
0023610
0023630
0023600
0023190

23 a g re e m e n ts ...................................................................................................

61,500

A nch o r H ocking Corp O hio ...............................................................................................
A nchor H ocking C orp P&M 7 Inter ................................................................................
B rockw ay G lass Co Inc P&M Dept In te r ......................................................................
C arborundum Co Niagara Falls N Y ................................................................................
D resser Industries Inc H arbison-W alker R efrac I n t e r .............................................
G enl R efractories Co Pa Md Ga & O h io ......................................................................
G lass C ontainers Corp In te r..............................................................................................
G lass C ontainers Corp W estern C a lifo rn ia ................................................................
Glass Packaging Institute In te r ........................................................................................
Indian Head Inc P&M New O rleans La ........................................................................
Latchford G lass Co I n t e r ....................................................................................................
M anville C orp D efiance O h io ...........................................................................................
M anville C orp M anville & Finderne N J .........................................................................
M etropak C ontainers Corp In te r ......................................................................................
Natl Can C orp Foster Forbes Glass Co P&M I n t e r .................................................
O w ens-C orning Fiberglas C orp Aiken S C ...................................................................
O w ens-Illinois Inc New J e rs e y .........................................................................................
O w ens-Illinois Inc O h io .......................................................................................................
O w ens-Illinois Inc Form ing Dept Inter ..........................................................................
O w ens-Illinois Inc P&M D ept Glass C ontainers I n t e r .............................................
T hatcher Glass M fg Co Form ing-P&M D ept In te r....................................................
W heaton Industries N ew J e rs e y ......................................................................................

3,000
4,200
7,150
1,950
1,400
1,100
4,000
1,000
4,000
2,050
1,100
1,050
1,550
1,700
2,000
1,550
1,300
1,000
1,950
12,400
4,100
1,950

See footnotes at end of table.




29

Table 9. Continued=CoiIectsv@ bargaining agreements expiring in 1983 covering 1,000 workers ©r more, by industry
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

Industry and a greem ent identification'

Expiration
m onth

State

Union

00
00
00
31
93
30
22
00
31
58
23
00
00
31
31
20
31
23
31
55
32
91
33
00
93
93
87
87
23
23
90
30
35
33
34
00
32
00
31
00
74
31
32
86
00
63
00
63
00
00
92
88
00
00
33
30

335
220
553
335
553
335
335
335
500
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
357
335
335
600
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
500
161
553
335
335
335
335
335
220
220
600
335
335
335
335
335
335
107
335

E m ployer
unit

P rim a ry m eta ! in d u s trie s
Total:
0025020
0025910
0025900
0025920
5915650
0025550
0025760
0025060
0025040
0025070
0025080
0025100
0025120
5514370
0025160
0025170
0025200
0025500
0025470
0026030
0025240
0026490
0025000
0 0 25260
0026040
0025280
0025820
0025830
0026220
0025320
5913400
0025750
0029420
0025220
0025230
0026600
0026550
0025340
5915470
0026140
0025310
0 0 25850
0025140
0025860
0025390
0026110
0026120
0026450
0026100
0 0 25400
0026660
5900720
0 0 25440
0025450
0026590
0025540

63 a g re e m e n ts ..................................................................................................

A llegheny Ludlum Ind Inc S teel Div Pa NY C o n n ....................................................
Alum Co Of Am O hio Pa Iowa III Ind N Y ....................................................................
A lum inum Co O f Am C leveland O h io ...........................................................................
A lum inum Co O f A m erica In te r ........................................................................................
A lum inum C om pany o f A m erica Vernon Calif ...........................................................
Am S teel Foundries Inter ..................................................................................................
A m ax Inc US M etals R efining Co C arteret N J ..........................................................
A rm co S teel C orp In te r .......................................................................................................
A rm co S teel Corp O hio ......................................................................................................
A tla n tic S teel Co G e o rg ia ..................................................................................................
B abcock & W ilcox Co Tubular Prods Div B eaver Fils P a .....................................
Bethlehem S teel C orp M aster A gm t In te r...................................................................
CF&I S teel Corp Pueblo C o lo ..........................................................................................
C onsolidated A lum inum O h io ...........................................................................................
C opperw eld S pecialty S teel Co W arren O h io ............................................................
C rucible Inc W krs NY & P a ...............................................................................................
C yclops C orp E m pire-D etroit S teel Div M ansifeld O h io .........................................
C yclops C orp U niversal-C yclops S pec S teel P e n n s y lv a n ia ..................................
Elkem M etals Co. M arietta O hio .....................................................................................
H untington A lloys Inc W est V irg in ia ...............................................................................
Inland S teel Co Indiana H arbor Ind ...............................................................................
Intalco A lum inum C orp W a s h in g to n ...............................................................................
Interlake Inc R iverdale Plant Illin o is ...............................................................................
Jones & Laughlin S teel C orp In te r .................................................................................
K aiser A lum inum & C hem Corp In te r.............................................................................
K aiser S teel C orp S teel M anuf Div C a lifo rn ia ............................................................
K ennecott C opper C orp Utah C opper Div ..................................................................
K ennecott C opper Corp Utah C opper Div Utah S m e lte r......................................
Latrobe S teel Co Latrobe P a ............................................................................................
Lukens S teel C om pany P e n n s y lv a n ia ...........................................................................
M artin M arietta Alum inum Inc W ash & O r e g ..............................................................
M icro do t Inc V alley M ould Div In te r ...............................................................................
M irro Alum inum Co M anitow oc & Tw o R ivers W is ..................................................
N ational S teel C orp G ranite C ity S teel Co Illin o is ....................................................
N ational S teel C orporation G reat Lakes Steel Div M ic h ig a n ...............................
N ational-S tandard In te r .......................................................................................................
N atl S teel C orp M idw est S teel Div In d ia n a .................................................................
N atl S teel Corp W eirton Steel Div Ohio & W Va .......................................................
N eenah Foundry Co W is c o n s in .......................................................................................
NL Industries Inc D oehler-Jarvis Div In te r .................................................................
N orthw est Industries Inc Lone Star S teel Co T e x a s ..............................................
O rm et Corp Hannibal O h io ................................................................................................
Penn-Dixie Indus Inc P enn-D ixie S teel Corp In d ia n a ...............................................
Phelps D odge Corp M orenci A r iz ...................................................................................
R epublic S teel Corp I n t e r ..................................................................................................
R eynolds M etals Co A lloys Plant A la b a m a .................................................................
R eynolds M etals Co Ky M o & Va ..................................................................................
R eynolds M etals Co Listerhill A la ..................................................................................
R eynolds M etals Co Torrance Extrusion Pit In te r....................................................
S haron Steel Corp P-M S teel B rainard-D earborn Div I n t e r ..................................
Teledyne W ah C hang A lbany O reg ...............................................................................
Titanium M etals C orp of A m erica N e v a d a ..................................................................
US S teel Corp East S outh C ent & W est D ivs In te r .................................................
US S teel Corp S alaried Inter ...........................................................................................
W agner C astings Co D ecatur III ......................................................................................
Y oungstow n S heet & Tube Co O hio & I n d .................................................................

See fo o tn o te s at end o f table.




30

339,650
5,000
1,950
1,300
10,000
1,000
4,000
1,400
13,200
6,000
1,300
4,100
45,000
4,000
1,000
2,150
4,900
1,200
1,600
1,000
1,300
18,000
1,250
1,600
17,000
11,000
5,550
1,400
1,000
1,000
2,150
1,100
1,000
1,750
2,600
6,000
1,200
1,200
10,000
1,100
2,000
4,300
2,000
1,200
1,000
27,000
1,150
1,500
1,200
8,000
3,100
1,050
1,050
70,000
5,200
1,200
11,400

8
5
6
5
8
8
6
8
7
9
8
8
8
5
9
7
10
9
8
12
8
9
9
8
5
7
6
6
8
8
7
8
7
8
8
10
8
8
12
9
10
5
9
6
8
5
5
5
5
9
8
10
8
8
6
8

4
4
4
4
1
4
1
4
4
4
1
4
4
1
1
4
1
4
1
1
4
1
1
4
4
1
4
1
1
1
4
4
4
4
1
4
1
4
1
4
1
1
1

4
4
1

4
4
4

4
1
1
4

4
1

4

T able 9. C o n tinued— C o llective bargaining a g re e m e n ts expiring in 1983 c overing 1,000 w o rk e rs o r m ore, by industry
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

Industry and agreem ent id e n tifica tion 1

E xpiration
m onth

State

Union

E m ployer
unit

10
3
8
10
8
6
3
7
4
9
10
1
6
8
4
6
3

00
93
62
00
42
21
93
23
33
35
00
62
35
23
91
93
14

335
218
112
335
553
218
218
553
553
553
218
161
553
500
112
116
335

4
2
1
4
1
1
3
1
1
1
4
1
1
1
2
2
4

4
6
2
7
2
8
4
6
1
4
5
2
8
9
2
5
11
8
10
10
6
8
10
5
10
9
9
3
5
6
6
8
11
3
11
4

74
23
43
35
34
74
93
23
33
34
62
16
23
21
33
33
21
35
74
22
00
23
52
33
33
74
71
33
31
35
34
31
62
92
00
91

218
218
335
107
553
218
143
335
218
107
553
553
335
335
553
218
335
335
335
335
553
218
218
500
500
335
335
218
553
218
553
335
218
600
335
218

1
1
1
1
4
1
1
4
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
4
1
1
1
4
1
1
1
1
1
4
4
1
2
4
2

2

32

127

1

Fabricated m etal products

17 a g re e m e n ts ..................................................................................................

33,450

ACCO Industies Inc In te r....................................................................................................
C alif M etal Trades Assn C a lif ..........................................................................................
C om bustion Eng Inc C hattanooga Tenn ......................................................................
C om m ercial Shearing Inc Inter ........................................................................................
Fisher C ontrols Co Io w a .....................................................................................................
Foster W heeler Energy C orp New Y o r k .......................................................................
l-A M etal Trades Indep Cos C a lif....................................................................................
K elsey-H ayes Co Fleintz Div P e n n s y lv a n ia .................................................................
K eystone C onsol Indus Natl Lock Div Illin o is ............................................................
Kohler Co W is c o n s in ............................................................................................................
Lockheed A ircraft Corp M issiles and S pace Inter ...................................................
M agic C hef Inc Tennessee ...............................................................................................
M aster Lock Co M ilw aukee W is ......................................................................................
N ational Forge Co P & M Irvine P a ...............................................................................
W ash M etal Trades Inc ......................................................................................................
W estern S teel Council C a lifo rn ia .....................................................................................
W ym an-G ordon Co Inc W orcester & G rafton M a s s ................................................

1,000
2,000
2,300
1,200
1,700
1,050
2,450
1,000
1,100
3,500
6,300
1,250
1,250
1,250
2,500
2,200
1,400

Total:
0029450
00292.60
0029270
0029410
0029620
0029780
0029310
5915670
0029070
0029570
0000090
0029900
0029800
5915040
0029660
0029520
0026540

Nonelectrical m achinery

36 a g re e m e n ts ...................................................................................................

82,100

ACF Industries Inc W -K-M Valve Div M issouri City T e x .........................................
Allis C halm ers C orp York P e n n s y lv a n ia .......................................................................
A llis-C halm ers C orp Independence M o ........................................................................
B riggs & S tratton C orp M ilwaukee W is ........................................................................
Burroughs Corp M ichigan ...................................................................................................
C am eron Iron W orks Inc Harris C nty T e x a s ...............................................................
C arrier C orp BDP C om pany La Puente O per Div C a lifo rn ia .................................
C arrier C orp E lliott Co Div Shop A gm t P e n n s y lv a n ia .............................................
C aterpillar T ra ctor Co Joliet I I I .........................................................................................
C lark Equip Co Indus Truck D B attle C reek M ich ...................................................
C olt Industries H olley C arburetor Div Paris Tenn ....................................................
C olt Industries C handler Evans Inc W H artford C o n n ............................................
C ooper-B essem er Co G rove City P a .............................................................................
D resser Industries Inc P e n n s y lv a n ia ..............................................................................
Fiat-Allis C onst M ach Inc Springfield I I I ........................................................................
G ardner-D enver Co Illin o is ................................................................................................
G oulds Pum ps Inc N ew Y o r k ............................................................................................
H arnischfeger Corp W isconsin ........................................................................................
Hughes Tool Co H ouston T e x .........................................................................................
Ingersoll-R and Co New J e rs e y ........................................................................................
J I Case Co III Ind Iowa & W ise ......................................................................................
Joy M fg Co Franklin P a ......................................................................................................
Koppers Co Inc M etal Prods Div M a ry la n d .................................................................
O utboard M arine C orp G ale Prods & 1 O ther Div Illin o is .....................................
O utboard M arine C orp Johnson O utboards Div Illin o is ..........................................
Reed R ock Bit Co & Reed Tubular Prods Co H ouston Tex ...............................
Rheem M anufacturing C om pany A rk a n s a s .................................................................
R ockw ell Inti C orp Adm iral Corp A ppliance D Illin o is .............................................
Tecum seh P roducts Co Factory A gm t O h io ...............................................................
Tecum seh Products Co Lauson Engine Div W isconsin .........................................
Teledyne C ont M otors G enl & Indus Prods Divs M ichigan ..................................
Tim ken Co O h io .....................................................................................................................
Trane Co C larksville T e n n .................................................................................................
U nited M etal Trades Assn Shop W ork A gm t O regon ............................................
U nited S tates S teel C orp Oilwell Div I n te r ..................................................................
W ash M etal Trades Inc ......................................................................................................

1,050
1,000
1,800
7,900
1,800
4,000
1,000
1,100
5,700
1,550
1,200
1,000
1,300
1,300
1,500
1,000
1,100
2,300
3,250
1,800
7,600
1,600
1,500
1,000
2,500
1,200
1,200
2,350
1,700
2,000
1,100
7,800
1,700
1,800
1,400
3,000

Total:
0033880
0033870
0033280
0032030
0033240
0032310
5916170
0032040
0032330
0032350
0033680
0032460
0032070
0032680
0032160
0033660
5901170
0032360
0032370
0033150
0033190
0033720
0033020
0033060
0032120
0033600
0033950
0032910
0033540
0033140
0032060
0032780
0033890
0033790
5908700
0033050

Electric and electronic equipm ent

42 a g re e m e n ts ..................................................................................................

131,500

5907650 Arvin Industries Inc C olum bus Ind .................................................................................

1,000

Total:

See footnotes at end of table.




31

Table 9. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1983 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

Industry and agreem ent id e ntification'

Expiration
m onth

1,700
2,350
1,250
4,300
2,000
3,000
2,800
2,000
3,400
1,600
2,600
1,950
1,950
1,450
1,000
1,150
1,900
4,600
1,200
3,250
1,850
1,800
3,900
2,150
3,250
2,300
4,600
5,750
4,900
2,050
1,500
3,300
5,700
3,950
4,650
22,650
2,550
4,500
1,200
1,000
1,500

State

Union

E m ployer
unit

8
10
1
1
2
11
4
4
4
4
6
6
2
7
2
6
9
11
6
2
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
9
2
10
5
9

00
21
33
00
00
34
23
00
31
15
62
42
43
23
35
20
42
00
31
42
33
71
31
23
23
84
33
32
22
33
33
46
72
73
52
14
71
32
41
00
43

346
218
127
553
553
553
553
127
127
127
347
553
500
335
335
127
218
347
347
127
500
127
127
127
127
127
127
127
127
127
127
127
127
127
500
346
107
347
218
100
127

4
1
1
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
1
1
4
1
4
2
1
4
4
1
1
1
1
4
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
4
1

6
4
7
6
6
9
4
12
11
10
3
6
4
10
1
4
9
2

35
14
35
62
23
35
00
00
91
23
32
34
34
23
32
30
23
00

107
347
101
218
553
112
553
500
500
553
553
553
107
335
107
553
320
553

1
4
1
1
4
1
4
4
1
4
4
1
1
1
1
4
1
4

Electric and e le ctro n ic equipm ent— C ontinued
0037870
0037840
0036660
0037010
0037030
0036350
0036020
0037130
0037880
0037220
0036580
0036370
0037310
0036040
5911070
0036450
0037720
0036590
0036200
0036510
0036770
0037600
0036890
0036880
0036860
0037730
0036870
0036800
0036780
0036810
0037970
0036820
0037360
0036830
0026130
0 0 36840
0037390
0037780
0037790
0038020
0037490

Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc I n t e r ..........................................................................
Bendix C orp Electrical C o m ponents Div N ew Y o r k .................................................
B unker R am o C orp Illin o is .................................................................................................
C ham pion S park Plug Co I n t e r ........................................................................................
Eltra Corp Inter ......................................................................................................................
G ibson P roducts C orp M ic h ig a n ......................................................................................
G ould Inc P e n n s y lv a n ia ......................................................................................................
G ould Inc I n t e r .......................................................................................................................
H oover Co No C anton & C anton O h io .........................................................................
Leviton Mfg Co Inc R hode Island ..................................................................................
M agnavox Co O f Tenn .......................................................................................................
M aytag C om pany N ew ton & H am pton Io w a ...............................................................
M cG raw -Edison Co Bussm an Div St Louis M o .........................................................
M cG raw -Edison Co Pow er System s Div Pennsylvania ..........................................
M cG raw -Edison Co Speed Q ueen Div Ripon W i s ...................................................
M frs O f Illum ination Products Inc NY S N J ................................................................
R aytheon Co R efrigeration Div Am ana Io w a ..............................................................
RCA Corp M aster NJ Pa C alif ......................................................................................
R eliance Electric Co O h io ..................................................................................................
R ockw ell Inti C orp C ollins Radio G rp C Rpds I o w a ................................................
Teletype C orp C ook C nty Illin o is .....................................................................................
Teletype Corp A rkansas .....................................................................................................
W estern Elec Co Inc C olum bus W orks O h io ..............................................................
W estern E lectric Co Inc Reading P a ............................................................................
W estern E lectric Co Inc A llentow n P a ..........................................................................
W estern E lectric Co Inc D enver C o lo ............................................................................
W estern E lectric Co Inc H aw thorne W ks II I ................................................................
W estern Electric Co Inc Indpls Ind ................................................................................
W estern Electric Co Inc K earny NJ ...............................................................................
W estern Electric C o Inc M ontgom ery Plant III...........................................................
W estern Electric Co Inc No III W ks ...............................................................................
W estern E lectric C o Inc O m aha N e b r ...........................................................................
W estern Electric Co Inc S hreveport L a ........................................................................
W estern E lectric Co Inc O k la h o m a ................................................................................
W estern Electric Co Inc M a ry la n d ..................................................................................
W estern Electric C om pany Inc M a s s a c h u s e tts .........................................................
W hirlpool C orp Ft Sm ith A r k .............................................................................................
W hirlpool C orporation In d ia n a ..........................................................................................
W hite C onsol Indus Inc Franklin Mfg Co St Cloud M inn ......................................
W hite C onsolidated Industries Inc W estinghouse C orp I n t e r ..............................
Zenith R adio C orp Springfield M o ..................................................................................

Tra n s p o rta tio n equipm ent
Total:
0041480
5913510
0040400
0041350
0040470
5801320
0040510
0040550
0041770
0 0 40570
0040050
0040120
0040130
0040160
0040140
0 0 41840
0 0 41020
0040170

48 a g re e m e n ts ...................................................................................................

186,150

A M F H arley-D avidson M otor Co Inc M ilw a u k e e , W i s e .......................................
A m bac Indus Inc Am B osch Div M assachusetts .....................................................
AO Sm ith C orp W is c o n s in .................................................................................................
A vco C orp A erostructures Div N ashville T e n n ..........................................................
A vco C orp A vco Lycom ing Div W illiam sport P a ........................................................
Bay S hipbuilding Corp Sturgeon Bay W is e .................................................................
B endix C orp M aster 10 Divs In te r ..................................................................................
Boeing Co In te r ......................................................................................................................
Boeing Co & Boeing C om puter S ervices Inc W a s h in g to n ....................................
Boeing Co Boeing V ertol Co Div P e n n s ylv a n ia .........................................................
B org-W arner Corp W arner G ear Div M uncie Ind .....................................................
C lark Equip Co B uchanan M ic h .......................................................................................
C lark Equipm ent Co Transm ission Div M ichigan .....................................................
Dana Corp Parish Fram e Div R eading Pa ..................................................................
D ana C orp Spicer A xle Div Ft W ayne Ind ..................................................................
Dana C orp W eatherhead Div NC In te r .........................................................................
Dravo C orp Eng W ks Div Pennsylvania .......................................................................
E aton C orporation M ich W is O hio & K y .......................................................................

1,000
1,200
3,000
2,100
1,150
1,050
6,100
12,000
10,500
3,000
2,000
1,000
1,000
1,800
2,300
1,700
1,300
1,500

See footnotes at end of table.




32

Tab le 9. C ontinued— C ollective bargaining a g re e m e n ts expiring in 1983 c overing 1,000 w o rk e rs or m ore, by industry
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

Industry and agreem ent id e n tifica tion '

Expiration
m onth

1,050
2,300
3,500
2,150
2,500
1,800
1,800
1,700
35,000
1,500
1,700
14,000
2,750
8,500
5,700
9,900
2,500
2,500
17,000
1,050
1,500
2,300
1,200
4,000
3,000
1,550

S tate

Union

E m ployer
unit

7
7
9
6
10
8
5
6
6
1
1
10
12
10
10
10
12
6
10
9
10
12
5
7
4
1

34
41
00
16
14
31
63
90
90
34
74
93
93
58
00
93
00
34
54
00
33
33
33
93
16
59

553
553
335
500
320
335
553
119
600
553
100
218
500
218
218
553
500
107
335
335
553
484
553
320
218
218

1
1
4
1
4
4
1
3
2
4
1
4
4
1
4
4
4
1
1
4
4
4
1
1
1
1

4
5
3

23
93
21

500
553
305

4
1
4

1
8

31
14

107
112

4
1

10

00

197

4

2
3

00
21

531
531

2
3

9
9
9

54
72
00

239
239
239

2
2
2

Transportation equipm ent— C ontinued

0041850
0000250
0041190
0041040
0041440
0041870
0040770
0041120
0041110
0040240
0041760
0040800
0040820
0040810
0040650
0040660
0040670
0040350
0041080
0040380
0041670
0041860
0032550
0041140
0040950
0040940

Firestone Tire & R ubber Co Steel Prods Co Div M ichigan ..................................
FMC C oporation N orthern O rdnance Div M in n e s o ta ..............................................
G enl Am T ransportation C orp In te r................................................................................
G enl D ynam ics C orp Elec Boat Div C o n n e c tic u t......................................................
G enl D ynam ics C orp Elec B oat Div Q uincy M a s s ...................................................
G rum m an Flxible Co Loudonville & M illersburg O h io .............................................
Hayes International C orp A la b a m a ................................................................................
l-A P acific C oast S hipbuilding & R epair I n t e r ............................................................
l-A P acific C oast Shipbuilding & R epair Firm s I n t e r ................................................
K elsey-H ayes Co D etroit & Rom ulus M ich .................................................................
Levingston S hipbuilding Co O range T e x ......................................................................
Lockheed A ircra ft C orp Lockheed C alif Co Div ........................................................
Lockheed A ircraft C orp Lockheed C alif Co D iv ........................................................
Lockheed A ircra ft C orp Lockheed G eorgia Co Div .................................................
M cD onnell D ouglas C orp Inter ........................................................................................
M cD onnell D ouglas Corp D ouglas A ircraft Co C a lifo rn ia ......................................
M cD onnell D ouglas Corp Prof E ngineering I n t e r ......................................................
M otor W heel C orp M otor W heel B ranch Lansing M ich .........................................
N ew port N ew s Shipbldg & Dry Dock Co V irg in ia ......................................................
R ockw ell Inti C orp A uto O prs In te r ................................................................................
S chw inn Bicycle Co C hicago I I I .......................................................................................
S tew art-W arner C orp C hicago I I I .....................................................................................
S undstrand C orp R ockford III............................................................................................
T odd S hipyards C orp Los A ngeles Div C a lifo rn ia ....................................................
U nited A ircraft C orp H am ilton S tandard Div C o n n e c tic u t.....................................
U nited A ircra ft C orp Pratt & W hitney A ircraft D F lo rid a .........................................

Instrum ents and related products

3 a g re e m e n ts .......................................................... ..........................................

7,700

0044260 Fischer & Porter Co P ennsylvania ..................................................................................
0044100 R obertshaw C ontrols Co G rayson C ontrols C a lifo rn ia ...........................................
0044270 Xerox C orp R och e ste r NJ ..................................................................................................

1,500
1,200
5,000

Total:

Miscellaneous m anufacturing industries

2 a g re e m e n ts ....................................................................................................

3,200

0046220 G enl M illfun Grp Inc K enner Prods Div Cinn O hio ..................................................
0046080 Q uestor Corp S palding Div M assachusetts ................................................................

2,200
1,000

Total:

Local and interurban passenger transit

Total:

1 a g re e m e n t......................................................................................................

17,000

0050330 G reyhound Lines Inc I n t e r ..................................................................................................

17,000

Trucking and w arehousing

Total:

2 a g re e m e n ts ....................................................................................................

3,200

0052060 Eastern Labor A dvisory A ssn-C em ent Div In te r ........................................................
0052170 l-A M oving and Storage Ind of N Y .................................................................................

1,000
2,200

W ater transportation

7 a g re e m e n ts ....................................................................................................

34,500

0054170 H am pton R oads S hipping A ssn V irg in ia .......................................................................
0054210 N ew O rleans Steam ship A ssociation L o u is ia n a ........................................................
0054230 N ew Y ork S hipping Assn Inc Port O f New Y ork In te r............................................

3,200
3,500
10,200

Total:

See footnotes at end of table.




33

T able 9. C ontinued— C ollective bargaining a g reem en ts expiring in 1983 covering 1,000 w o rk e rs or m ore, by industry
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

Industry and agreem ent id e n tifica tion 1

Expiration
m onth

3,500
1,600
5,000
7,500

State

Union

E m ployer
unit

9
9
9
9

20
58
52
70

239
239
239
239

2
2
2
2

8
8
8
10
8
8
8
9
8
8
3
8
8
8
8
8
8
10
8
8
8
8
3
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
11
8
8
8
8
8
8
8

00
23
23
23
23
50
00
93
51
23
93
30
33
33
30
30
32
46
34
00
22
22
00
10
10
10
22
00
00
21
22
40
00
31
00
00
00
50
00
16
00
00
00
35

346
516
516
516
127
346
346
127
516
127
346
500
500
127
346
127
346
346
346
346
127
346
352
127
127
127
127
346
516
516
346
346
516
346
127
346
531
346
346
516
346
346
346
346

4
4
4
4
4
4
4
1
4
4
4
1
1
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4

5
7
6
3
4
6
9
4

14
21
21
31
31
21
34
23

342
341
127
500
342
342
342
127

1
1
4
1
4
1
4
4

W a te r tra n s p o rta tio n — C ontinued
0054250
0054310
0054260
0054160

Phila M arine Trade A ssn Port O f Phila & Vic P e n n s y lv a n ia .................................
S avannah M aritim e Assn G e o rg ia ..................................................................................
S team ship Trade Assn of B altim ore Inc M aryland ..................................................
W est G ulf M aritim e Assn Inc I n t e r .................................................................................

C om m unication
44 a g re e m e n ts ...................................................................................................

561,550

Am Telephone & Telegraph Long Lines D ept In te r.................................................
Bell Tele Co of P a .................................................................................................................
Bell Tele Co o f P a .................................................................................................................
Bell Tele Co o f P a .................................................................................................................
Bell Telephone Co of P a ....................................................................................................
C hesapeake & Potom ac Tele Co All D epts I n t e r ....................................................
C incinnati Bell Inc O hio ......................................................................................................
C ontinental Tele Co of C alif B akersfield C a lif ...........................................................
Diam ond State Tele Co D e la w a re ...................................................................................
G eneral T e lephone C om pany of P e n n s y lv a n n ia .......................................................
G enl Tele Co O f C a lif ..........................................................................................................
III Bell Tele Co C om m & M ktng Depts Illinois and In d ia n a ..................................
III Bell Tele Co C om m O perations & O th s ..................................................................
III Bell Tele Co C om ptrollers D ept & 3 O th D e p ts ...................................................
Illinois Bell T e lephone C o ...................................................................................................
Illinois Bell T e lephone Co M ilitary A g re e m e n t...........................................................
Indiana Bell Tel Co I n c .......................................................................................................
Lincoln T e lephone & T elegraph C om pany N e b ra s k a .............................................
M ich Bell Telephone C o .....................................................................................................
M ountain S tates T ele & Tele Co In te r...........................................................................
N J Bell Tele Co Pit & Eng D epts .................................................................................
N J Bell T ele Co Traffic D e p t ...........................................................................................
Natl B roadcasting Co Inc M aster In te r .........................................................................
New Eng Tele & Tele Co P la n t.......................................................................................
New E ngland Tele Co A c c t ...............................................................................................
N ew England Tele Co T ra ffic ............................................................................................
New Jersey Bell T e lephone C o .......................................................................................
N ew Y ork T e lephone C o ....................................................................................................
N ew Y ork Tele p h o n e Co D o w n s ta te .............................................................................
N ew Y ork Telephone Co U p s ta te ...................................................................................
NJ Bell T e lephone Co C om m & M arketing D e p ts ...................................................
N orthw estern Bell Telephone Co In te r .........................................................................
NY T e lephone Co A ccounting .........................................................................................
O hio Bell T ele C o ..................................................................................................................
P acific T ele & Tele Co & Bell O f Nev C alif N e v .......................................................
P acific Tele & Tele Co & Bell O f Nev C alif Nev ....................................................
RCA G lobal C om m unications Inc Comm Trade Div I n te r .....................................
So Bell Tele & Tele Co Fla G a NC & S C ...................................................................
S outh C entral Bell Tele Co I n t e r .....................................................................................
S outhern N ew England T e lephone Co C o n n e c tic u t................................................
S outhw estern Bell Tele Co All Depts ............................................................................
W estern E lectric Co Inc Installation D ept I n t e r .........................................................
W estern E lectric C om pany Inc Service Div I n t e r ......................................................
W isconsin T e lephone C o ....................................................................................................

23,300
3,350
11,950
1,300
4,050
33,050
3,850
1,300
1,200
2,100
20,500
2,500
2,200
1,200
5,500
13,800
6,900
1,600
20,000
29,200
11,450
4,600
1,600
16,000
1,400
6,300
1,250
42,400
8,000
2,400
3,700
21,700
3,000
18,000
2,350
46,500
1,000
50,000
21,550
10,000
64,500
14,000
14,750
6,250

Total:
0057000
0057020
0057030
0057010
0057050
0057070
0057120
0058020
0057830
0057150
0057210
0057240
0057250
0057260
0057220
0057270
0057280
0057300
0057320
0057340
0057400
0057380
0057820
0057840
0057370
0057360
0057390
0057490
0057460
0057440
0057410
0057420
0057450
0057500
0057510
0057520
0057760
0057630
0057920
0057640
0057650
0057720
0057710
0057730

E lectric, gas, and sanitary services
Total:
0060050
0 0 60430
0 0 60890
0 0 60560
0060070
0 0 60580
0 0 60590
0 0 60200

19 a g re e m e n ts ...................................................................................................

54,500

Boston Edison Co M assachusetts .................................................................................
Brooklyn Union Gas Co N ew Y o r k .................................................................................
C entral Hudson G as & Elec C orp New Y o r k ..............................................................
Cinn Gas & Elec Co & Subs O h io .................................................................................
C leveland Elec Ilium Co 3 Divs O h io .............................................................................
C onsolidated Edison Co of NY I n c ................................................................................
C onsum ers Pow er Co M ichigan ......................................................................................
G enl Public Util C orp M etro Edison Co P e n n s y lv a n ia ............................................

1,700
2,350
1,000
1,200
2,700
16,700
5,000
1,550

See footnotes at end of table.




34

Table 9. Continued-Collective bargaining agreements expiring on 1933 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

Industry and agreem ent id e n tifica tion 1

Expiration
m onth

5,450
2,150
2,800
1,550
2,900
1,000
1,550
1,100
1,650
1,100
1,050

State

Union

E m ployer
unit

6
10
11
2
6
9
6
6
6
4
8

58
22
61
21
21
57
00
00
00
23
35

127
127
127
127
127
127
127
127
129
342
127

1
4
1
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
1

1
5

93
33

531
531

2
2

1
2

22
50

364
364

1
4

6
4
4
4
2
9
9
9
5
9
9
9
11
4
3
2
2
2
7
3
2
2
3
4
3
2
4
4
7
5
10
7
9
2

23
91
• 91
00
32
31
31
21
88
50
00
52
74
84
41
93
93
93
86
93
93
88
41
35
20
93
34
34
32
61
00
30
31
23
91

364
155
184
364
364
364
184
332
184
184
184
184
364
155
155
184
184
184
184
184
184
184
155
155
155
364
155
184
184
364
155
184
155
531
184

1
1
2
2
2
2
2
4
1
4
4
4
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3

E le c tric , ga s, a n d s a n ita ry s e rv ic e s — C o n tin u e d
0060150
0060640
0060670
0060460
0060700
5601780
0060340
0060350
0060360
0060390
0060400

G eorgia Pow er C o ................................................................................................................
Jersey Central Pow er & Light Co New J e rs e y ..........................................................
Louisville Gas & E lectric Co Louisville K y ......... ..........................................................
N ational Fuel G as W estern New Y ork .........................................................................
NY State Elec & Gas Corp 13 D is ts ..............................................................................
So C arolina E lectric & Gas C o ........................................................................................
Union E lectric Co In te r........................................................................................................
Union Electric Co In te r........................................................................................................
U nion Electric Co In te r........................................................................................................
W est Penn Pow er C o ...........................................................................................................
W isconsin E lectric Pow er C o ............................................................................................

W h o le s a le tra d e — d u ra b le g o o d s
2 a g re e m e n ts ....................................................................................................

4,000

0063040 A ssoc Produce Dealers & Brokers of LA Inc C a lif ..................................................
0063250 No III R eady Mix & M aterials Assn ................................................................................

2,200
1,800

Total:

G e n e ra l m e rc h a n d is e s to re s
2 a g re e m e n ts ....................................................................................................

4,400

0065070 M acy R H & Co Inc B am berger Div NJ .......................................................................
0065170 W oodw ard & Lothrop M etrop DC Area ........................................................................

1,800
2,600

Total:

F o o d s to re s
38 a g re e m e n ts ...................................................................................................

112,850

A cm e M arkets Inc W ilkes-B arre P a ...............................................................................
A llied Em ployers Inc W a s h in g to n ....................................................................................
Allied Em ployers Inc K ing-S nohom ish Cntys W a s h in g to n ....................................
Area G rocers Assn M innesota and W is c o n s in ..........................................................
C alum et S uperm arket Forum Inc In d ia n a ....................................................................
C leveland Food Industry C om m ittee O h io ..................................................................
C leveland Food Industry C om m ittee O h io ..................................................................
D aitch C rystal Dairies Inc N ew Y o r k ..............................................................................
Food Em ployers C ouncil Inc Las Vegas N e v ............................................................
Food Fair S tores Inc Md Del Va & W V a ...................................................................
G iant Food Inc Md Del Va & W V a ...............................................................................
G reat A&P Tea Co Md Del & Va ....................................................................................
I-A Chain & Indep G rocery S tores Texas ...................................................................
l-A D enver Retail G rocers C o lo ra d o ..............................................................................
l-A Food M arket A gm t of M npls Minn ..........................................................................
l-A Food S tore C on tra ct Alam eda C ounty C a lifo rn ia ..............................................
l-A G rocery & D elicatessen San Francisco C alif ........................................ ............
l-A Indep G rocers A gm t S acram ento Cnty Calif & 7 O t h s ...................................
l-A Industry Food A greem ent A rizona ..........................................................................
l-A M aster Food & Liquor A gm t S acram ento C a lif ..................................................
l-A M aster Food & Liquor A gm t 6 C ntys C a lif...........................................................
l-A M aster Food & Liquor A gm t 8 C nties N ev ..........................................................
l-A M eat M arket A gm t Of M npls M in n ..........................................................................
l-A M ilw aukee A rea Retail M eat Industry W is c o n s in ..............................................
l-A Phila Food S tores P e n n s ylv a n ia ...............................................................................
l-A Retail Food S tore A gm t San Jose C a lif................................................................
l-A Retail M eat M arkets M ic h ig a n ..................................................................................
Kroger Co D etroit Branch M ic h ig a n ...............................................................................
Kroger Co Indiana ................................................................................................................
Kroger Co Louisville Ky ......................................................................................................
Kroger Co Pitts Region S tores I n te r ..............................................................................
Natl Tea Co Standard G rocery Div III & I n d ...............................................................
N ortheastern O hio Food Industry Em ployers ............................................................
Phila Food S tore E m plrs Labor C ncl P e n n s y lv a n ia .................................................
Pierce C ounty G rocery W a s h in g to n ...............................................................................

1,650
1,700
5,000
1,500
1,900
4,000
8,400
1,000
2,300
1,700
2,500
1,750
1,900
2,000
7,000
4,000
3,000
1,900
4,400
4,600
1,200
1,250
1,000
2,200
5,000
6,800
3,000
3,650
2,000
4,800
3,550
1,100
4,800
1,750
1,450

Total:
0067000
0067160
0067150
0067830
0068380
0067030
0067040
5910210
0068640
0067740
0068050
0067260
0067730
0067950
0067350
0067290
0067560
0068630
0068400
0067360
0067440
0068590
5915570
0067660
0067710
0067550
0067870
0068210
0068680
0068190
0067470
0068010
0068130
0067860
0068090

See footnotes at end of table.




35

4

4
3
1

4
4
3
2
3

Table 9. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1983 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

Industry and agreem ent id e n tifica tion 1

Expiration
m onth

3,100
4,000

State

Union

E m ployer
unit

3
9

41
21

184
33?

2
4

4

41

531

2

9
12
7
3
9

41
93
91
93
41

145
500
145
145
145

2
4
2
2
2

7
1
4
2

92
91
20
33

184
184
332
531

3
2
2
4

12
12
4

00
93
33

238
163
531

4
1
1

12

21

118

2

9
8
4
4
5
12

22
93
41
88
93
93

145
100
145
163
145
145

2
2
2
2
2
2

11
11

33
33

533
533

2
2

F o o d s to re s — C o n tin u e d
0067590 St Paul Food R etailers Assn M innesota ......................................................................

A u to m o tiv e d e a le rs and s e rv ic e s ta tio n s
Total:

1 a g re e m e n t......................................................................................................

1,200

0069170 M inneapolis A utom obile D ealers Assn M in n e s o ta ...................................................

1,200

E a tin g a n d d rin k in g p la c e s
5 a g re e m e n ts ....................................................................................................

21,100

G reater M etro Area H ospitality Assn Inc M inpls M in n ...........................................
M arriott Corp Bobs Big Boy R estaurants G lendale C a lif......................................
R estaurant Assn State O f W ash Inc & In d e p s ..........................................................
R estaurant-H otel E m plrs C ouncil Of So C a lif............................................................
St Paul O n-Sale Liquor D ealer Assn M in n e s o ta .......................................................

2,500
5,700
1,550
10,000
1,350

Total:
0071140
0071260
0071230
0071170
5910710

M is c e lla n e o u s re ta il
4 a g re e m e n ts ....................................................................................................

9,600

Fred M eyer Inc O regon ......................................................................................................
G reater S eattle Retail Drug Assn Inc W a s h ...............................................................
NY R etail D ruggists Assn NJ & N Y ...............................................................................
Spiegel Inc C hicago & O akbrook I I I ...............................................................................

1,800
2,500
3,500
1,800

Total:
0073060
0073020
0073010
0065250

In s u ra n c e c a rrie rs
Total:

3 a g re e m e n ts ....................................................................................................

6,150

0074000 Am Natl Insurance Co I n t e r ..............................................................................................
0074220 Blue C ross of N orthern C a lifo rn ia ..................................................................................
0074240 H ealth Care S ervice Corp .................................................................................................

3,000
1,300
1,850

R eal e s ta te
Total:

1 a g re e m e n t......................................................................................................

20,000

0074100 R ealty Advisory Bd On Lab R eis Inc C om m Bldg N ew Y o r k ..............................

20,000

H o te ls a n d o th e r lo d g in g p la c e s
Total:
0075260
0075110
0075140
0071500
0075230
0075240

6 a g re e m e n ts ...................................................................................................

22,100

Assoc H otels A tlantic City N J ..........................................................................................
H otel Em ployers Assn O f San Fran C a lif....................................................................
M inneapolis Area H otels & M otels M innesota ..........................................................
N evada R esort Assn Los Vegas N e v ...........................................................................
S acram ento Calif H otel R est & Tavern A s s n ............................................................
San M ateo C ounty R est H otel O w ners Assn C a lifo rn ia .........................................

5,000
6,000
1,700
2,500
1,700
5,200

P e rs o n a l s e rv ic e s
Total:

2 a g re e m e n ts ....................................................................................................

2,000

0077030 C hicago Dry C leaners Assn Illin o is ................................................................................
0077040 Textile M aintenance Institute O f C hicagoland Illin o is .............................................

1,000
1,000

See footnotes at end of table.




36

Tabs© 9 Continued—
=
-Collective bargaining agreements ©spiring in 1983 cohering 1,000 workers or mors, by industry
C odes2
N um ber of
w orkers

Industry and agreem ent id e n tifica tion 1

Expiration
m onth

State

Union

Em ployer
unit

8
12
2

33
21
93

118
118
118

2
2
1

2

21

531

2

12
11

20
00

239
127

2
4

4
9

00
21

162
192

3
3

6
4

00
59

102
600

2
1

4
6
4
6
12
10
6
6

93
93
93
91
33
93
33
91

118
903
118
100
118
118
600
903

2
2
2
2
2
4
1
2

2

62

100

1

B u s in e s s s e rv ic e s
3 a g re e m e n ts ....................................................................................................

20,000

0079530 A ssociated G uard and Patrol A gencies Inc Illin o is ..................................................
0079020 Bldg Service League C om m ercial Jobs N ew Y o r k ..................................................
0079450 l-A M aintenance C o ntractors A greem ent C a lifo rn ia ................................................

6,000
10,000
4,000

Total:

A u to re p a ir, s e rv ic e s , a n d g a ra g e s
1 a g re e m e n t......................................................................................................

3,000

0079440 M etro G arage O w ners Assn Inc New Y ork N Y .........................................................

3,000

Total:

M is c e lla n e o u s re p a ir s e rv ic e s
2 a g re e m e n ts ....................................................................................................

4,500

0079860 M etropolitan M arine C ontractors Assn I n c ..................................................................
0079360 RCA C orp RCA S ervice Co Div In te r.............................................................................

2,000
2,500

Total:

M o tio n p ic tu re s
2 a g re e m e n ts ....................................................................................................

6,000

0079190 l-A TV & R adio C om m ercial A nnouncem ents I n t e r .................................................
0079230 M otion P icture Laboratory Technicians N ew Y o r k ...................................................

5,000
1,000

Total:

A m u s e m e n t a n d re c re a tio n s e rv ic e s
2 a g re e m e n ts ....................................................................................................

7,100

0079240 1 eague O f NY T heatres I n c ..............................................................................................
0079750 W alt D isney P roductions W alt D isney W orld Co F lo rid a ........................................

1,500
5,600

Total:

H e a lth s e rv ic e s
8 a g re e m e n ts ....................................................................................................

22,150

A ffiliated H ospitals O f San Francisco C alifornia .......................................................
A ffiliated H osps O f San Fran Reg N urses C alifornia .............................................
A sso c Hosp o f East Bay Inc San Francisco C alif ...................................................
G roup H ealth C oop O f P uget Sound S eattle W ash ................................................
Illinois Assn O f H ealth Care Facilities ..........................................................................
Kaiser Foundation H osps & 2 O ths SF C a lif..............................................................
R ush-P resbyterian-St Lukes M edical C enter Illin o is ................................................
S eattle A rea Hosp C ncl S eattle W ash .........................................................................

3,050
1,750
1,100
1,200
3,200
7,850
1,000
3,000

Total:
0079310
0079260
0079270
5608160
0079410
0079290
0079590
0079490

M is c e lla n e o u s s e rv ic e s
1 a g re e m e n t......................................................................................................

1,350

0079370 S ve rd ru p /A ro Inc T e n n e s s e e ............................................................................................

1,350

Total:

1 See appendix A for explanation o f abbreviations.




2 See appendix B fo r explanation o f codes.

37

T a b le 10. C ollective b arg ain in g s itu a tio n s 1 covering 1,000 w orkers or m ore2 w ith a g re e m e n ts expiring in 1983, by month
C odes3
Industry and situation identification

G rand total:

378 situations ...................................................................................

N um ber of
w orkers

Industry

S tate

Union

Em ployer
unit

121
108
364
204
337
108
108
127
127
104

1
4
4
9
1
1
1
1
9
4

1,117,935

J a n u a ry
18 s itu a tio n s .............................................................................................

41,220

A m erican C y a n a m id .......................................................................................................
A m erican T o b a cco C o ..................................................................................................
B am b e rg e r’s ......................................................................................................................
C hicago N ew spaper P ublishers A ssn ...................................................................
Erwin M ills Inc, Subs O f B urlington In d u s trie s ...................................................
Liggett & M yers Inc ......................................................................................................
Lorillard, Div o f Loew s Theatres, Inc .....................................................................
N orthern S tates Pow er C o ..........................................................................................
NECA, N o rth w est Line C o n tra c to rs ........................................................................
Pan A m erican W orld A irw ays (P ilo ts ).....................................................................
Pan A m erican W orld A irw ays (C lerical and Passenger Service
E m ployees) ................................................................................................................
Pan A m erican W orld Airw ays (Flight E n g in e e rs )...............................................
P roduce Trade A s s o c ia tio n ........................................................................................
S alt R iver P ow er D istrict and S alt R iver W a te r A ssn .....................................
S hoe M anufacturers in Eastern M a s s a c h u s e tts ................................................
Texas International A irlines (Clerical, O ffice, and A gent Em ployees) ......
Tim e Inc .............................................................................................................................
U tah Pow er A nd Light Co (all depts) .....................................................................

1,000
3,200
2,500
1,300
1,500
2,200
1,250
3,400
1,200
2,320

28
21
53
27
22
21
21
49
16
45

22
50
22
33
57
56
61
41
99
99

10,000
1,050
1,000
2,400
1,000
1,700
1,200
3,000

45
45
51
49
31
45
27
49

99
99
21
86
14
99
21
80

531
215
531
127
337
531
323
127

4
4
9
1
9
4
1
4

20
32
20
54
54
28
54
54
36
20
58
53
36
36
31
89

93
23
31
41
41
72
93
23
63
99
93
34
74
93
21
62

126
335
364
364
364
335
364
531
346
364
145
364
347
127
337
600

9
1
1
9
9
1
9
9
1
4
9
4
1
1
9
1

Total:

•

F e b ru a ry
16 s itu a tio n s .............................................................................................

54,850

A m erican C rystal, H olly Sugar, A m star and C onsolidated F o o d s ..............
A n c h o r H ocking Corp, S henango Div ....................................................................
C am pbell S oup C o .........................................................................................................
C hain & Independent G rocery S to r e s ....................................................................
C hain & Independent Food S to r e s .........................................................................
E thyl C orp .........................................................................................................................
Food E m ployers Labor R elations A ssn o f N orthern C a lifo rn ia ....................
Food S tore E m ployers Labor C o u n c il....................................................................
G TE A uto m a tic E lectric C o ........................................................................................
H.J. Heinz Co ..................................................................................................................
Long B each A nd O range C ounty R estaurant Assn .........................................
M on tg o m ery W ard & Co .............................................................................................
R ockw ell Inti Corp, C ollins R adio G r o u p ..............................................................
R ockw ell Inti Corp, C ollins R adio G r o u p ..............................................................
S lipp e r A nd Playw ear A ssn .......................................................................................
V erdrup T e ch n o lo g ies Corp A rnold A F B ............................................................

3,000
900
2,000
2,800
7,200
1,000
17,000
2,000
2,000
3,100
6,500
1,300
2,500
1,200
1,000
1,350

Total:

M a rch
43 s itu a tio n s .............................................................................................

142,360

A & P Tea C o ..................................................................................................................
A llied E m ployers, Inc (grocery ) ...............................................................................
A m erican A irlines (Flight A tte n d a n ts )....................................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra cto rs of Je ffe rson C ounty, Inc, and o thers ....
A sso cia te d G eneral C ontractors; and C onstruction Em ployers A s s n .......
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra cto rs and C o n ne cticut C onstruction
Industries A ssn, I n c ...............................................................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o ntractors o f Illinois; S outhern Illinois Builders
A ssn; and E gyptian C o n tra cto rs Assn ...........................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A u to m o tive Parts D istributors A s s n ........................................................................
AG C , B altim ore Building D iv is io n .............................................................................
B anquet Foods C o r p ....................................................................................................
C abot C o r p ........................................................................................................................
C ha tta n o o g a G lass M fg C o .......................................................................................

1,800
8,000
6,200
3,500
1,500
1,350

54
54
45
15
15
15

34
91
99
52
99
74

364
364
341
119
143
115

4
9
4
9
9
9

3,500
7,000
5,000

16
16
16

16
21
21

127
119
143

9
9
9

1,500
2,000
1,300
2,000
5,300
1,050
3,000

16
16
55
15
20
33
32

33
52
21
52
99
32
62

119
129
531
143
600
335
135

9
9
9
9
4
1
4

Total:




38

T ab le 10. C o n tin u e d — C o lle c tiv e b argainin g s itu a tio n s 1 covering 1,000 w orkers or m o re2 w ith a g re e m e n ts expiring in 1983, by
m onth
C odes3
Industry and situation identification

N um ber of
w orkers

Industry

State

Union

Em ployer
unit

2,000

16

16

115

9

4,000
4,000
1,700
8,000
900
2,000
2,100
1,000
900
1,000
1,600
1,200
1,600
1,000
9,500
1,800
3,000
4,000
1,300
9,300
12,500
1,660
4,000
4,600
2,500
1,200

20
28
54
70
20
54
36
17
28
34
54
16
32
26
32
32
27
54
17
45
54
45
49
37
35
70

93
34
21
33
54
34
33
52
32
14
99
46
99
43
99
90
21
99
90
99
34
99
50
23
91
93

531
335
184
145
531
364
218
170
335
600
184
143
135
127
135
135
100
155
187
104
364
104
127
553
218
118

9
1
4
9
1
4
1
9
1
4
9
9
4
1
4
4
1
9
9
4
9
4
4
1
9
1

M arch— C ontinu ed
C o n ne cticut C onstruction Industries Assn, Inc ..................................................
D airy Industry Industrial R elations A ssn (M ilk processing and
d istributing p la n ts )...................................................................................................
D ow C hem ical, M idland D iv is io n ..............................................................................
G rand U nion (G rocery D epts) ...................................................................................
G rea te r C hicago H otel and M otel A s s n ................................................................
ITT C o n tinental Baking Co, M orton Frozen Foods ..........................................
K roger C o ..........................................................................................................................
M agic C hef Inc A dm iral-M idw est M fg ...................................................................
M echanical C o n tra cto rs A ssn o f M a ry la n d ..........................................................
M iles La b orato rie s I n c ..................................................................................................
M oore Co, I n c ..................................................................................................................
N M innesota & N W isconsin Food M e rc h a n ts ...................................................
O m aha H eavy C o n tra cto rs Assn .............................................................................
O w ens Illinois, Inc (m achine o p e ra to rs )................................................................
O w e n s-Illin o is Inc Lily D iv ...........................................................................................
O w ens-Illinois, I n c ..........................................................................................................
O w ens-Illinois, I n c ..........................................................................................................
Printing Industries of M etro New Y o r k ..................................................................
R etail Jo in t C o u n c il........................................................................................................
S he e t M etal Assn, I n c ..................................................................................................
U nited A irlines (Flight A tte n d a n ts )...........................................................................
U nited S uper M arket A s s n ..........................................................................................
US A IR ................................................................................................................................
Virginia E lectric And Pow er C o .................................................................................
V olksw agen O f A m erica I n c ......................................................................................
W ashington M etal Trades Inc ...................................................................................
Y osem ite Park and Curry C o .....................................................................................

April
51 s itu a tio n s .............................................................................................

97,610

A & P ,S afew ay,M ilgram s,U nited S uper S to r e s ...................................................
A &P Tea Co, A nn Page Div ......................................................................................
Allied E m ployers I n c .....................................................................................................
A llied E m ployers,Inc .....................................................................................................
Assn M aster Painters and D ecorators of P h ila d e lp h ia ...................................
A ssociated G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A ssociated G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A ssociated G eneral C o n tra cto rs O f M is s o u ri......................................................
A ssociated G eneral C o n tra cto rs (heavy-highw ay and u tility ).......................
A ssociated G eneral C o n tra cto rs O f St L o u is ......................................................
A ssociated G eneral C o n tra cto rs O f M is s o u ri......................................................
A G C .....................................................................................................................................
AG C (C III),Allied B ldrs.W est III C trs Assn D C ...................................................
A G C of M issouri ..............................................................................................................
B uilding C o n tra cto rs of S outhern N ew J e rs e y ...................................................
Building C o n tra cto rs A s s n ...........................................................................................
Building M aterial D ealers O f G reater C lev ..........................................................
C aterpillar T ra ctor C o ...................................................................................................
C entral Illinois Builders, Div of A so cia ted G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..................
C entral Illinois Builders, Div of A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra cto rs ...............
C hain and Independent Food S to r e s .....................................................................
C hicago M eat P ackers’ W h olesalers Assn and Independent C om panies
(D riv e rs ).......................................................................................................................
C ities S ervice Corp, C opper Div ..............................................................................
C o n ne cticut C onstruction Industries Assn, Inc ..................................................
C o nstruction C o n tra cto rs C ouncil, Inc of W ashington, DC ...........................
C o n tra cto rs Assn o f Eastern P e n n s y lv a n ia .........................................................
C o n tra cto rs Assn o f Eastern P e n n s y lv a n ia .........................................................
D ayton Press I n c ............................................................................................................
E m ploying B ricklayers Assn o f D elaw are V a lle y ...............................................
G eneral B uilding C o n tra cto rs Assn, Inc.................................................................
H ighw ay C ontractors, Inc .............................................................................................
Indep e n d e n t c o n tra c to rs .............................................................................................
Luggage & Leather G oods M anufacturing Assn of NYC ..............................
M ason C o n tra cto rs A ssn o f W ashington, D .C.....................................................

1,050
1,200
1,300
1,300
850
1,500
4,000
1,000
1,200
3,800
4,000
1,800
1,800
4,000
1,350
2,200
1,000
1,400
6,000
1,000
3,000

54
20
51
54
17
15
16
16
16
16
16
15
15
16
15
17
50
35
16
16
54

40
21
91
91
23
61
33
43
33
43
43
61
33
43
22
22
31
93
33
33
34

364
531
531
155
164
143
531
129
143
129
129
119
143
143
119
100
531
218
143
129
364

9
1
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
1
9
9
9

1,200
1,100
2,100
6,000
1,500
3,000
1,200
1,100
4,000
2,450
500
1,800
935

20
10
16
15
16
16
27
17
15
16
15
31
17

33
62
16
53
23
23
31
23
23
61
62
21
53

531
121
531
119
119
143
243
115
143
119
119
141
115

9
9
9
9
9
9
1
9
9
9
9
9
9

Total:




39

T a b le 10. C o n tin u e d — C o llective b arg ain in g s itu a tio n s 1 covering 1,000 w orkers or m o re2 w ith a g re e m e n ts expiring in 1983, by
m onth
C odes3
Industry and situation id entification

N um ber of
w orkers

Industry

State

Union

E m ployer
unit

2,000
750
700
3,000
1,650
2,200
1,400
1,800
1,650
1,300
1,800
2,000
1,000

16
17
17
20
17
17
16
49
30
17
49
49
20

81
74
74
93
23
72
31
33
99
22
33
23
54

143
116
170
531
127
127
531
118
137
164
118
118
423

9
9
9
9
9
9
9
1
4
9
1
1
1

850
1,500
1,425
950

17
26
15
34

90
35
35
33

170
231
143
553

9
1
9
1

A p r il— C o n tin u e d
M ontana H eavy H ighw ay and B uilding C o n tra c to rs .........................................
N orth Texas C o n tra cto rs A s s n ..................................................................................
N orth Texas C o n tra c to rs .............................................................................................
N orthern C alif D airy Industry Labor R elations A ssn ........................................
N E C A ...................................................................................................................................
N E C A ...................................................................................................................................
O hio C o n tra cto rs A ssn; A ssociated G eneral C o n tra c to rs .............................
O hio Edison C o ...............................................................................................................
O w ens-Illinois, I n c ..........................................................................................................
P ainting and D ecorating C o n tra cto rs A ssn of Essex County, I n c ..............
P eoples G as Light A nd C oKe C o ............................................................................
P hiladelphia Gas W o r k s ...............................................................................................
P lanters Peanuts, Div O f Standard Brands, I n c .................................................
Portland A ssn of Plum bing, H eating and C ooling C ontractors, Inc.
(s te a m fitte rs )..............................................................................................................
P roctor A nd G am ble P aper Products D iv .............................................................
S ou th w e ste rn M ighigan C o n tra cto rs A s s n ...........................................................
S tanadyne, I n c .................................................................................................................
M ay
60 s itu a tio n s .............................................................................................

158,005

A llied C onstruction In d u s try .......................................................................................
A lum inum Co O f A m erica ...........................................................................................
A ssn O f Tele p h o n e A nsw ering S ervices ..............................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A G C (C alum et B ldrs) & O th e r s ................................................................................
AG C , S ea ttle and Ta co m a C h a p te rs ......................................................................
B endix Corp, Forest D iv ..............................................................................................
Building C o n tra cto rs E m ployers A s s n ....................................................................
B uilding C o n tra cto rs Assn; C onstruction League o f In d ia n a p o lis...............
C entral C alifornia “ Big T h re e ” ..................................................................................
C hicago R oofing C o n tra cto rs Assn ........................................................................
D iam ond International ..................................................................................................
E astern M oto r C ar D ealers, I n c ...............................................................................
E dw ard J. H ines Lum ber Co .....................................................................................
E lectrical C o n tra cto rs A ssn o f th e City of C h ic a g o ..........................................
E nte n m a nn ’s, Inc ...........................................................................................................
E quipm ent O w ners A s s n .............................................................................................
Fox R iver V alley C o n tra cto rs A ssn, (residential) ...............................................
Fox R iver V alle y C o n tra cto rs A s s n .........................................................................
H udson Pulp & P aper C o r p .......................................................................................
Indiana H ighw ay C onstructors, I n c .........................................................................
Industrial C o n tra cto rs and Builders A ssn of Indiana; C alum et Builders
A s s n ..............................................................................................................................
J W eingarten and K ro g e r............................................................................................
K anaw ha V alley Builders A s s n ..................................................................................
K roger C o ..........................................................................................................................
Labor R elations Div of C onstruction Industries of M assachusetts, Inc ....
M echanical C o n tra cto rs A ssn ...................................................................................
M echanical C o n tra cto r Assn .....................................................................................
M echanical C o n tra cto rs A ssn of C in c in n a ti.........................................................
M etrop o lita n D e tro it Plum bing and M echanical C ontractors A ssn, Inc
(plum bers) ..................................................................................................................
M etrop o lita n D e tro it Plum bing and M echanical C ontractors A ssn, Inc
(p ip e fitte rs ).................................................................................................................
M ichigan R oad B uilders A ssn ..................................................................................
M ichigan R oad B uilders A ssn ...................................................................................
M id-A m erica R egional Bargaining A s s n ................................................................
M id-A m erica R egional Bargaining A s s n ................................................................
M id-A m erica R egional Bargaining A s s n ................................................................
M illw rights, C onveyor and M achine E rector C o n tra c to rs ...............................
N ew C ar D ealers O f C ontra C o s ta .........................................................................
N E C A ...................................................................................................................................
N E C A ...................................................................................................................................

1,400
2,100
1,300
2,000
4,350
1,000
2,200
7,000
1,000
1,200
2,000
4,500
1,800
1,000
1,200
1,400
6,350
1,230
1,000
1,550
1,000
1,500
3,300

15
33
73
15
16
17
15
16
24
15
15
24
17
24
55
24
17
20
16
15
15
26
16

31
91
21
34
82
99
32
91
93
46
32
93
33
99
93
92
33
21
59
33
33
59
32

143
100
332
119
600
116
119
129
100
119
119
119
185
100
600
100
127
108
129
119
143
231
129

9
4
9
9
9
9
9
9
4
9
9
4
9
4
9
4
9
1
9
9
9
1
9

1,800
1,000
1,000
4,500
1,200
8,000
2,500
1,100

17
54
15
54
16
17
17
17

32
74
55
99
14
33
91
31

116
531
143
364
143
170
170
170

9
9
9
4
9
9
9
9

1,900

17

34

170

9

1,850
4,000
1,000
6,000
20,000
1,900
1,200
1,000
1,275
2,600

17
16
16
15
15
17
17
55
17
17

34
34
34
33
33
33
34
93
74
43

170
143
531
115
143
168
119
218
127
127

9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9

Total:




40

Tab le 10. C o n tin u e d — C ollec tiv e ba rg a in in g s itu a tio n s 1 covering 1,000 w orkers or m o re2 w ith agreements expiring an 1S83, by
m onth
C odes3
Industry and situation identification

N um ber of
w orkers

Industry

State

U nion

17
17
15
24
54
58
26
17
20
24
54
17
17
49
45
35
36
24

54
91
99
92
70
93
63
91
33
99
21
99
33
53
99
42
10
92

127
164
119
100
364
145
231
198
531
100
364
119
187
118
500
553
347
100

E m ployer
unit

M a y— C o n tin u e d
N EC A ...................................................................................................................................
PDC A ...................................................................................................................................
Q uad C ity Builders Assn .............................................................................................
R oseburg Lum ber C o ...................................................................................................
S afe w a y S to re s ,In c ........................................................................................................
S an ta C lara C ounty H ospitality Assn .....................................................................
S co tt P aper Co, S outhern D iv ...................................................................................
S he e t M etal and A ir C onditioning C o n tra cto rs Assn .......................................
S o ft D rink B ottling C om panies (drivers and h e lp e rs ).......................................
S t Regis P aper C o .........................................................................................................
S ta r S u p e rm a rk e ts ,In c ..................................................................................................
T ri-S tate C o n tra cto rs Assn .........................................................................................
V en tila tin g and A ir C onditioning Assn of C hicago, I n c ...................................
W a shin g ton Gas Light C o ...........................................................................................
W estern A irlin e s (C lerical and Agents) .................................................................
W hite Farm E q u ip m e n t.................................................................................................
W h ite-W estinghouse, Div o f W hite C onsolidated .............................................
W illa m e tte Industries I n c .............................................................................................

1,100
2,000
1,000
2,800
2,800
4,900
2,500
1,800
1,300
1,200
2,000
1,800
4,200
1,600
4,500
1,400
4,500
1,400

9
9
9
4
4
9
1
9
9
4
4
9
9
1
4
1

4
4

June
Total:

64 s itu a tio n s .............................................................................................

167,890

A & P, A cm e & P & C S tores ...................................................................................
A ffilia te d H ospitals o f San F ra n c is c o .....................................................................
A na co nd a C o ....................................................................................................................
A nch o ra ge R etail G rocery S to r e s ............................................................................
A sarco, I n c ........................................................................................................................
A ssociated G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A ssociated G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A ssociated G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A ssociated G eneral C ontractors: Piledriving C o ntractors Assn
(piledrivers) ................................................................................................................
A G C .....................................................................................................................................
A G C ,O th e rs .......................................................................................................................
A G C ,O th e rs .......................................................................................................................
Building T rades E m ployers A s s n ........ ....................................................................
C alifornia + Haw aiian S ugar Co .............................................................................
C alifornia C on fe ren ce O f M ason C o n tra cto rs Assns, I n c ..............................
C elanese C orp O f A m e ric a .........................................................................................
C o lo ra d o S he e t M etal and A ir C onitioning C o n tra c to rs ..................................
C ontinental Can Co, I n c ...............................................................................................
C o n tra ctin g Plasterers Assn of S outhern C alifornia, I n c ...............................
D enver M etropolitan A ssn o f Plum bing, H eating & C ooling C ontractors;
M echanical C o n tra cto rs A ssn o f C o lo ra d o ...................................................
Fluo resce n t Lighting Fixture M a n u fa c tu re rs ........................................................
F ood E m ployers A ssn, I n c ..........................................................................................
Fro n tie r A irlines (A gents & C lerical) .......................................................................
G rain M illing C om panies .............................................................................................
H am m erm ill Paper Co ..................................................................................................
H ighw ay C onstructors, I n c ..........................................................................................
H yster C o ...........................................................................................................................
Inspiration C onsolidated C opper C o .......................................................................
J.R. S im p lo t Co ...............................................................................................................
Ja m e s R iver C o ...............................................................................................................
Jo h n so n & J o h n s o n .......................................................................................................
Jo h n so n & Joh n so n and E thicon I n c .....................................................................
K e n n e co tt C o p pe r C o r p ...............................................................................................
K e n n e co tt C orp (skilled trades) ...............................................................................
M agm a C opper C o .........................................................................................................
M eat Trade Institute, Inc (including K osher M aster C o n tra ct and
Provision M frs A s s n )..............................................................................................
M echanical C o n tra cto rs Assn o f U tah (S alt Lake C ity ) ..................................
M ichigan R oad B uilders A ssn ...................................................................................
M iller & P apst B rew ing C o m p a n ie s ........................................................................
M ontana H eavy H ighw ay and B uilding C o n tra c to rs .........................................
M T L .In c ...............................................................................................................................
N orthern C alifornia D ryw all C o n tra cto rs A ssn (tapers a g re e m e n t)............

4,800
1,750
4,800
1,000
3,550
1,750
1,300
1,500

54
80
10
54
33
15
15
15

21
93
99
94
99
15
58
88

364
905
600
364
600
143
129
119

1,000
14,000
7,500
7,000
1,000
1,000
2,000
4,000
1,200
800
1,000

16
16
15
15
15
20
17
28
17
26
17

93
93
93
93
14
93
93
50
84
72
93

119
129
119
143
119
186
143
305
187
231
143

1,900
1,000
2,000
2,700
1,200
850
6,000
850
1,600
1,100
1,450
1,750
1,600
9,000
1,700
4,900

17
36
51
45
20
26
16
35
10
20
26
28
38
10
33
10

84
93
92
99
21
23
61
99
86
82
12
22
22
80
80
86

170
127
531
104
208
231
143
500
101
208
231
305
337
335
100
335

1
4
1
4
9
4
4

2,500
1,400
6,000
1,600
1,000
1,200
1,100

20
17
16
20
16
41
17

20
87
34
35
81
95
93

155
170
129
304
129
531
164

9
9'
9
9
9
i
9




9
9
9
9

4
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
1
9

4
9
1
9
9

4
9

4
9

4
9
4

4

T a b le 10. C o n tin u e d — C o lle c tiv e ba rg a in in g s itu a tio n s 1 covering 1,000 w orkers or m o re2 w ith a g re e m e n ts expiring in 1983, by
m onth
C odes3
Industry and situation identification

N um ber of
w o rke rs

Industry

S tate

Union

E m ployer
unit

1,550
850
11,000
740
5,000
1,500
900
1,500
1,600
2,000
3,900
1,100

45
20
37
26
10
33
17
17
17
17
78
17

99
82
90
31
99
99
43
93
74
93
99
43

104
364
100
231
335
600
170
170
164
164
102
187

4
1
9
1
9
4
9
9
9
9
9
9

2,700
1,000

17
35

93
43

187
107

9
1

1,400
6,500
1,200
1,000
1,000
3,000
1,900
1,200

17
59
27
27
27
26
45
33

14
93
41
33
33
90
99
21

116
364
243
243
204
175
531
127

9
4
9
9
9
9
4
9

17
54
10
17
33
17
15
55
44
54
54
26
34
10
33
33
20
32
22
45

59
86
86
86
23
58
34
93
99
50
50
99
41
99
33
86
34
99
57
99

170
364
100
116
500
170
119
218
335
364
364
231
553
335
500
600
208
114
337
341

9
9
4
9
1
9
9
9
9
9
4
4
1
9
1
4
4
4
1
4

54
17
48
26
45
32
33
31
33
48
48

21
34
23
72
99
99
99
14
32
21
21

364
143
516
231
104
137
127
356
335
516
516

4
9
1
1
4
4
4
9
1
1
1

J u n e — C o n tin u e d
N o rth w est A irlines (P ilo ts )...........................................................................................
O re-ld a F o o d s ,In c ..........................................................................................................
P acific C oast S hipbuilders A s s o c ia tio n .................................................................
Packaging C orp O f A m e ric a ......................................................................................
P helps D odge C orp .......................................................................................................
P helps D odge C orp (sm elting and refining o p e ra tio n s )..................................
P lum bing C o n tra cto rs o f M etropolitan St L o u is .................................................
Plum bing, H eat and C ooling C o n tra cto rs of th e G reater Bay A r e a ...........
PDCA ...................................................................................................................................
PDCA ...................................................................................................................................
S creen A cto rs TV & T heatrical A g m t.....................................................................
S he e t M etal and A ir C onditioning C o n tra cto rs A ssn .......................................
S he e t M etal and A ir C onditioning N ational A ssn; A ir C onditioning S heet
M etal A s s n .................................................................................................................
S perry R and Corp, V ickers Div ................................................................................
S teel E rectors A ssn O f th e Building Trades E m ployers Assn;
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra c to rs .......................................................................
T h rifty Drug A nd D iscount S to r e s ............................................................................
Tw in C ity C om m ercial P rin te rs ..................................................................................
U nion E m ployees A ssn D iv.of Printing Industry o f Illin o is .............................
U nion E m ployers A s s n .................................................................................................
W e st C o a st P aper & P aper C onverting In d u s try ...............................................
W estern A irlines (G round S ervice) .........................................................................
W ire and C able C om panies, N ew Y ork, NY a re a ..............................................

J u ly
20 s itu a tio n s .............................................................................................

42,100

A ir C onditioning, R efrigeration, H eating and Piping A ssn,Inc and
in d e p e n de n t c o m p a n ie s ........................................................................................
A lp h a Beta, AJ Bayless, Low C ost,Furr’s ,S a fe w a y ..........................................
A nam ax M ining Co, Tw in B uttes O peration ........................................................
A rizona Steel Field E rectors A s s n ...........................................................................
A rm co, I n c ..........................................................................................................................
A ssn O f M echanical C o n tra c to rs .............................................................................
'A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra cto rs (com m ercial and industrial agreem ent)
A uto m o tive R epair & M ain te na n ce I n d .................................................................
B asic S teel Industry S hip o w n e rs .............................................................................
C olonial S tores Inc N C ,S C .......................................................................................
C olonial S to res Inc ........................................................................................................
C o n tinental Can Co .......................................................................................................
FM C C orp, N orthern O rdn a n ce D iv ........................................................................
Iron ore m ining c o s ........................................................................................................
K eystone C o n solidated Industries, I n c ..................................................................
M agm a C opper Co, (sm elting and refining o p e ra tio n s )..................................
M ichigan S ugar Co ........................................................................................................
N ational R e fra cto ries A g re e m e n t.............................................................................
P acific C olum bia M ills I n c ...........................................................................................
Pan A m erican W orld A irw a ys (G round S e r v ic e )................................................

1,200
2,700
1,200
1,500
3,500
1,350
1,200
1,000
1,600
1,000
1,000
850
2,300
1,600
1,500
2,800
1,200
6,000
1,000
7,600

Total:

A ugust
28 s itu a tio n s .............................................................................................

120,500

A & P Tea Co, I n c .........................................................................................................
A sso cia te d U nderground C o n tr a c to rs ...................................................................
B ell T e le p h o n e O f P e n n s y lv a n ia ..............................................................................
C row n Z e llerbach C o r p ................................................................................................
E astern A irlines (P ilo ts )................................................................................................
G lass C o ntainer Industrial C o u n c il..........................................................................
G K Te ch n o lo g ies, I n c ...................................................................................................
M assa chu se tts L e ather M anufacturers A s s n ......................................................
N ational S teel C orp, G reat Lakes S teel D iv ........................................................
N ew Y ork Tele p h o n e C o (tra ffic )............................................................................
N ew Y ork Tele p h o n e Co (tra ffic ).............................................................................

12,000
2,000
1,300
900
4,000
3,000
1,600
1,200
1,300
3,700
10,000

Total:




42

7

Table 10. Continued— Collective bargaining situations1 covering 1,000 workers or more2 with agreements expiring in 1983, by
month
C odes3
Industry and situation identification

N um ber of
w orkers

Industry

State

Union

Em ployer
unit

850
1,200
1,300
2,800
2,000
9,000
1,500

48
17
17
17
20
36
34

21
58
43
99
99
14
21

516
127
127
127
364
127
500

1
9
9
9
4
4
1

900
3,400
1,600
800
1,600
12,000
2,500
22,650
13,800
1,600

48
33
33
35
34
54
54
36
48
35

21
99
20
16
23
50
50
99
99
20

500
335
335
553
335
184
155
246
346
335

1
4
4
4
4
9
9
4
4
4

54
54
54
54
70
36
22
54
15
49
44
78
63
17
54
44
44
45
51

43
31
50
50
22
32
10
21
95
62
63
20
99
33
84
50
59
99
21

184
364
364
364
145
553
337
364
129
127
239
192
238
164
531
239
239
104
531

9
9
9
9
4
4
9
9
9
1
9
9
4
9
9
9
9
4
9

37
54
37
32
49
54
15
26
33
80
33
33
58
58
63
33
38
45
36

43
86
99
99
23
20
95
63
99
93
23
99
41
41
99
23
16
99
22

100
364
218
174
127
364
143
231
335
118
335
335
145
145
414
335
449
218
531

1
9
4
9
1
4
9
1
4
4
1
4
9
9
4
1
1
4
4

A u g u s t— C o n tin u e d
N ew Y ork Tele p h o n e Co (accounting, executive and treasurers
d e p a rtm e n t)................................................................................................................
N E C A ...................................................................................................................................
N E C A ...................................................................................................................................
NECA, A m e rica Line Builders C h a p te r..................................................................
R ath Packing Co ............................................................................................................
R aytheon C o .....................................................................................................................
R em ington A rm s Co, I n c .............................................................................................
R och e ste r T e le p h o n e C orp (accounting, com m ercial engineering and
tra ffic d e p a rtm e n ts ).................................................................................................
S haron Steel C orp .........................................................................................................
S henango Furnace Co, S henango, Inc, subsidiary ..........................................
T o rrington C o ...................................................................................................................
U.S. S teel Corp, A m erican B ridge Div ..................................................................
W ashington,D C Food E m ployers Labor R elations A ssn ...............................
W ashington,D C Food E m ployers Labor R elations A ssn ...............................
W estern E lectric C o .......................................................................................................
W estern E lectric Co, Inc (distribution and w a re h o u s e )...................................
W orth in gto n Corp, (Subs, of M cG raw E d is o n )...................................................

S e p te m b e r
19 s itu a tio n s .............................................................................................

78,170

A & p,S afew ay, M ilgram s A nd In dependents ........................................................
A kron-C anton Food Industry C om m ittee ..............................................................
B altim ore Food Em ployers Labor R elations A s s n ............................................
B altim ore Food Em ployers Labor R elations A s s n ............................................
C asino H otels in A tla n tic C it y ....................................................................................
CTS C orp ..........................................................................................................................
Dyeing C om panies in N ew E n g la n d .......................................................................
G reater NY Food Em ployers Labor R elations Assn ........................................
H aw aii Em ployers C ouncil ..........................................................................................
M em phis Light, Gas And W ater Div (All D epts) ................................................
M obile Steam ship A s s n ...............................................................................................
M otion P icture Lab T e c h n ic ia n s ...............................................................................
P rudential Insurance Co of A m e ric a .......................................................................
PDCA ..................................................................................................................................
S afew ay S tores A nd King S oopers ........................................................................
S outh A tla n tic Em ployers N egotiating C o m m itte e ............................................
S ou th e a st Florida E m ployer’s Assn .......................................................................
U nited Airlines (Pilots) ..................................................................................................
W h olesale T o b a cco D istributors ..............................................................................

3,500
3,500
9,000
1,000
9,300
1,000
4,800
4,000
2,600
2,280
1,000
1,000
16,500
7,000
1,500
3,250
1,200
4,540
1,200

Total:

O c to b e r
19 s itu a tio n s .............................................................................................

98,750

AC F Industries, Inc A m car D iv .................................................................................
AJ Bayless, El R ancho, Food G ia n t.......................................................................
B oeing Co .........................................................................................................................
C hinaw are M an u fa ctu re rs’ G roup (6 c o m p a n ie s ).............................................
D uquesne Light C o ........................................................................................................
First N ational S to re s ,In c ..............................................................................................
H aw aii E m ployers C ouncil .........................................................................................
Jam es R iver-D ixie N orthern D iv is io n ......................................................................
Jessup S teel Co, a subsidiary of A th lo n e Industries I n c ...............................
K aiser-P erm anente M ed Care P ro g ........................................................................
M idland-R oss Corp, N ational C astings D iv ..........................................................
O hio F erro-A iloys C o r p ................................................................................................
O n-sale Liquor D ealers (M in n e a p o lis )...................................................................
O n-sale Liquor D ealers (St. P a u l)...........................................................................
P rudential Insurance C o o f A m e ric a .......................................................................
S tandard S teel Titanium M etals C o r p ...................................................................
Tim e x C orp .......................................................................................................................
U nited A irlines (G round S e rv ic e )..............................................................................
U niversal M fg C o r p ........................................................................................................

1,500
1,900
50,000
1,500
2,950
1,000
3,000
1,300
1,350
7,000
1,050
1,000
3,000
3,000
1,900
1,800
1,000
13,500
1,000

Total:




43

Table 10. Continued—
-Collective bargaining situations1 cowering 1,000 workers or more2 with agreements expiring in 1983, by
month
C odes3
Industry and situation id entification

N um ber of
w o rke rs

Industry

State

Union

Em ployer
unit

23
63
49
75
38
79
72
54
20
27

62
35
59
93
23
99
33
99
59
23

337
163
127
531
553
162
533
364
531
243

1
4
1
9
4
9
9
9
1
9

99
22
57
93
99
99
99
99
74
59
21
99
33
99
21
99
21
33
99

335
127
127
193
104
104
218
531
364
127
337
231
118
161
127
531
364
100
218
127
118

4
1
1
4

N ovem ber

10 s itu a tio n s .............................................................................................

24,300

A llied C hem ical Corp, A utom otive P roducts D iv ................................................
B lue C ross-B lue Shield O f W is c o n s in ....................................................................
Florida P ow er A nd Light Co (m anual em pls) ......................................................
G arage & Parking Lot A g m t ......................................................................................
Leeds & N orthrup, Div of G eneral S ignal C o r p .................................................
P honograph R ecord Labor A g m t .............................................................................
P rofessional Laundry A g re e m e n t.............................................................................
S ou th w e st S u p e rm a rk e ts ............................................................................................
Tro p ica n a P roducts I n c ................................................................................................
U nion E m ployers A ssn-D iv of G raphic A rts Assn of D elaw are V alley .....

1,000
1,200
4,500
1,000
1,400
6,400
1,000
4,800
1,800
1,200

Total:

D ecem ber

30 s itu a tio n s .............................................................................................

92,180

A sarco, Inc (Lead & Zinc Facilities) .......................................................................
A tla n tic C ity E lectric Co (physical e m p ls )...........................................................
A VX Corp, A VX C eram ics D iv ...................................................................................
B lue C ross O f N orthern C a lifo rn ia ...........................................................................
B raniff A irw ays (Pilots) .................................................................................................
B raniff A irw ays (Flight A tte n d a n ts) .........................................................................
B raniff A irw ays G round S e r v ic e ............... ...............................................................
B raniff A irw ays C lerical & O ffic e ..............................................................................
C am pbell Soup C o .........................................................................................................
Florida Pow er C orp (m anual e m p ls ).......................................................................
F ulton C ounty Tanners A s s n .....................................................................................
G rea t Lakes A ssn O f S te v e d o re s ............................................................................
Illinois A ssn O f H ealth Care F a c ilite s ....................................................................
M an u fa ctu re rs Industrial R elations A ssn ..............................................................
N ew Y ork Lam p and Shade A ssn M frs Assn, I n c ............................................
N o rth w est A irlines (Flight A tte n d a n ts )...................................................................
N Y -B ronx M eat & Food D ealers Inc ......................................................................
O lin C o r p ............................................................................................................................
O zark A irlines (C lerical and A g e n ts ).......................................................................
Public S eryice Co O f C olorado ................................................................................
R ealty A dvisory B oard on Labor R elations (com m ercial a g m t)...................
R epublic A irlines (C lerical, O ffice, Fleet and Passenger Service
E m ployees) ................................................................................................................
R epublic A irlines (Flight A tte n d a n ts) ......................................................................
R epublic A irlines (Pilots) .............................................................................................
San M ateo H otel R estaurant E m ployers Assn ..................................................
S outhern C alifornia Edison C o .................................................................................
Tim ex C orp .......................................................................................................................
T ra n s W orld A irlines (P ilo ts )......................................................................................
W e st Bend C o .................................................................................................................
Y ou n g sto w n H ospital A s s n ........................................................................................

1,400
1,000
1,000
1,200
1,380
2,900
1,900
4,300
1,350
2,000
1,000
6,000
4,000
4,000
1,500
2,600
1,800
3,000
1,750
3,000
18,000

33
49
36
63
45
45
45
45
20
49
31

6,400
2,400
1,200
5,200
4,900
1,200
3,100
1,200
1,500

45
45
45
58
49
38
45
34
80

Total:

1 The list o f ‘situ a tio n s’ in th is table, w hich w as obtained from public
sources, su p plem ents th e list o f ‘a g re e m e n ts’ in ta b le 8, w hich w as obtained
from Bureau o f Labor S tatistics files. S ee appendix C fo r an explanation of
th e d iffe re n ce betw een ‘situ a tio n s’ and ‘a g re e m e n ts.’




44
80
33
36
45
54
34
45
49
65

84
21

99
99
99
93
93
71

99
35
31

104
104
104
145
127
218
104
107
118

4
4
4
4
1
1
9
9
9

4
9

4
9
1

4
1

9
4
4
4

9
1
1

4
1

9

2 S om e sm aller situations are included. They had until recently covered
at least 1,000 w o rke rs and m ay attain th a t coverage again.
3 See appendix B fo r identification of codes.

44

Tab le 11. C o llective barg ain in g s itu a tio n s 1 covering 1,000 w orkers or m ore2 w ith a g re e m e n ts expiring in 1983, by industry
C odes3
Industry and situation identification

G rand total:

378 situations ...................................................................................

N um ber of
w orkers

E xpiration
m onth

S tate

Union

Em ployer
unit

6
7
4
6
7
6
6
6

99
86
62
86
99
80
86
99

600
100
121
101
335
335
335
335

9
4
9
4
9
9
4
9

5
6
6
3
3
4
5
7
6
3
4
4
5
3
6
6
5
4
5
6
4
5
5
4
10
9
4
5
5
5
5
4

31
15
58
52
99
61
34
34
88
74
61
33
32
52
93
93
46
22
32
14
53
33
33
23
95
95
62
55
33
33
99
35

143
143
129
119
143
143
119
119
119
115
119
143
119
143
119
143
119
119
119
119
119
119
143
143
143
129
119
143
115
143
119
143

9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9

3,500
7,000
5,000

3
3
3

16
21
21

127
119
143

9
9
9

1,500
4,000
1,000

3
4
4

33
33
43

119
531
129

9
9
9

1,000
4,350
1,200
2,000
3,800
4,000
14,000

6
5
4
3
4
4
6

93
82
33
52
43
43
93

119
600
143
129
129
129
129

9
9
9
9
9
9
9

1,117,935

M eta ! m in in g
8 s itu a tio n s ..............................................................................................

29,200

A n a co nd a C o ....................,..............................................................................................
A na m a x M ining Co, Tw in Buttes O peration ........................................................
C ities S ervice Corp, C opper Div ..............................................................................
Inspiration C onsolidated C opper C o .......................................................................
Iron ore m ining c o s .......................................................................................................
K e n n e co tt C opper C orp ..............................................................................................
M agm a C opper C o ........................................................................................................
P helps D odge C orp ......................................................................................................

4,800
1,200
1,100
1,600
1,600
9,000
4,900
5,000

Total:

G e n e ra l b u ild in g c o n tra c to rs
32 s itu a tio n s ............................................................................................

92,925

A llied C o nstruction In d u s try .......................................................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra cto rs of Je ffe rson County, Inc, and others ....
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A ssociated G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra cto rs (com m ercial and industrial agreem ent)
A ssociated G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A ssociated G eneral C ontractors; and C onstruction E m ployers A s s n .......
A G C .....................................................................................................................................
AG C (C III),Allied B ldrs.W est III C trs A ssn D C ...................................................
AG C (C alum et B ldrs) & O th e r s ................................................................................
AGC, B altim ore Building D iv is io n .............................................................................
A G C ,O th e rs .......................................................................................................................
A G C ,O th e rs .......................................................................................................................
Building C o n tra cto rs E m ployers A s s n ...................................................................
B uilding C o n tra cto rs of S outhern N ew J e rs e y ...................................................
Building C o n tra cto rs A ssn; C onstruction League of In d ia n a p o lis...............
Building Trades Em ployers Assn t ...........................................................................
C onstruction C ontractors C ouncil, Inc of W ashington, DC ...........................
Fox R iver Valley C o n tra cto rs Assn, (residential) ..............................................
Fox R iver V alley C o n tra cto rs A s s n .........................................................................
G eneral Building C o n tra cto rs Assn, Inc.................................... .............................
H aw aii Em ployers C ouncil ..........................................................................................
Hawaii E m ployers C ouncil ..........................................................................................
Independent c o n tra c to rs .............................................................................................
K anaw ha V alley Builders A s s n .................................................................................
M id-A m erica R egional B argaining A s s n ................................................................
M id-A m erica Regional B argaining A s s n ................................................................
Q uad C ity Builders Assn .............................................................................................
S outhw estern M ighigan C o n tra cto rs A s s n ...........................................................

1,400
1,750
1,300
3,500
1,500
1,500
2,000
1,200
1,500
1,350
1,800
1,800
2,200
2,000
7,500
7,000
1,200
1,350
2,000
1,000
6,000
1,550
1,000
4,000
3,000
2,600
500
1,000
6,000
20,000
1,000
1,425

T otal:

H eavy construction contractors

Total:

34 s itu a tio n s ............................................................................................

A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra cto rs and C onnecticut C onstruction
Industries A ssn, Inc ...............................................................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra cto rs o f Illinois; Southern Illinois Builders
A ssn; and Egyptian C o n tra cto rs A ssn ...........................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C ontractors O f M is s o u ri.....................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C ontractors; Piledhving C ontractors Assn
(piledrivers) ................................................................................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra cto rs (heavy-highw ay and u tility ).......................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra cto rs O f S t L o u is .....................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra cto rs O f M is s o u ri.....................................................
A G C ....................................................................................................................................




110,700

45

Table 11. Continued—Collective bargaining situations1 covering 1,000 workers or more2 with agreements expiring in 1983, by
industry
C odes3
Industry and situation identification

N um ber of
w orkers

Expiration
m onth

S tate

Union

Em ployer
unit

4
5
4
4
4
3
4
4
5
6
4
5
5
5
6
5
4
6
1
4
3

43
91
33
33
16
16
23
23
59
61
61
32
14
34
34
34
81
81
99
31
46

143
129
143
129
531
115
119
143
129
143
119
129
143
143
129
531
143
129
127
531
143

9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9

1,200
1,500
850
1,350
1,000
2,000
2,200
2,000
1,800
1,200
1,000

7
7
4
7
5
8
4
6
5
6
6

59
86
23
58
99
34
22
93
33
84
93

170
116
164
170
116
143
100
143
185
187
143.

9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
•9

1,900
6,350
1,100

6
5
4

84
33
23

170
127
115

9
9
9

1,800
935
1,000
8,000
2,500
1,100
1,400

5
4
3
5
5
5
6

32
53
52
33
91
31
87

116
115
170
170
170
170
170

9
9
9
9
9
9
9

1,900

5

34

170

9

1,850
1,900
1,200
750
700
1,100
1,650
1,275
1,200
2,200
1,300
2,600
1,100
2,800
1,300
900
1,500

5
5
5
4
4
6
4
5
8
4
8
5
5
8
4
6
6

34
33
34
74
74
93
23
74
58
72
43
43
54
99
22
43
93

170
168
119
116
170
164
127
127
127
127
127
127
127
127
164
170
170

9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9

H e a v y c o n s tr u c tio n c o n tra c to r s — C o n tin u e d
A G C of M is s o u ri.............................................................................................................
AGC, S ea ttle and Ta co m a C h a p te rs ......................................................................
C entral Illinois Builders, Div o f A so cia ted G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..................
C entral Illinois Builders, Div o f A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra c to rs ...............
C o n ne cticut C onstruction Industries Assn, Inc ..................................................
C o n ne cticut C onstruction Industries Assn, Inc ..................................................
C o n tra cto rs A ssn o f Eastern P e n n s y lv a n ia .........................................................
C o n tra cto rs A ssn o f Eastern P e n n s y lv a n ia .........................................................
E quipm ent O w ners A s s n .............................................................................................
H ighw ay C onstructors, I n c ..........................................................................................
H ighw ay C ontractors, I n c ............................................................................................
Indiana H ighw ay C onstructors, I n c .........................................................................
Labor R elations Div o f C onstruction Industries of M assachusetts, Inc ....
M ichigan Road Builders A ssn ...................................................................................
M ichigan Road Builders A ssn ...................................................................................
M ichigan Road Builders A ssn ...................................................................................
M ontana H eavy H ighw ay and Building C o n tra c to rs .........................................
M ontana H eavy H ighw ay and Building C o n tra c to rs .........................................
NECA, N o rthw est Line C o n tra c to rs ........................................................................
O hio C o n tra cto rs A ssn; A ssociated G eneral C o n tra c to rs .............................
O m aha H eavy C o n tra cto rs A ssn .............................................................................

4,000
7,000
6,000
1,000
2,100
2,000
1,500
3,000
1,000
6,000
2,450
3,300
1,200
4,000
6,000
1,000
2,000
1,000
1,200
1,400
1,200

S p e c ia l tra d e c o n tra c to r s
Total:

51 s itu a tio n s ............................................................................................

97,160

A ir C onditioning, R efrigeration, H eating and Piping A ssn ,In c and
ind e p e n de n t c o m p a n ie s .......................................................................................
A rizona S teel Field E rectors A s s n ..........................................................................
A ssn M aster P ainters and D ecorators of P h ila d e lp h ia ...................................
A ssn O f M echanical C o n tra c to rs .............................................................................
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra c to rs ..............................................................................
A sso cia te d U nderground C o n tra c to rs ...................................................................
B uilding C o n tra cto rs A s s n ...........................................................................................
C a lifornia C on fe ren ce O f M ason C o n tra cto rs Assns, In c ..............................
C hicago R oofing C o n tra cto rs A ssn ........................................................................
C olorado S heet M etal and A ir C onitioning C o n tra c to rs ..................................
C o n tracting P lasterers Assn o f S outhern C alifornia, I n c ...............................
D enver M etropolitan A ssn of Plum bing, H eating & C ooling C ontractors;
M echanical C o n tra cto rs A ssn of C o lo ra d o ...................................................
E lectrical C o n tra cto rs A ssn of th e C ity o f C h ic a g o ..........................................
E m ploying B ricklayers A ssn of D elaw are V alley ...............................................
Industrial C o n tra cto rs and Builders A ssn o f Indiana; C alum et Builders
A s s n ..............................................................................................................................
M ason C ontractors Assn o f W ashington, D .C.....................................................
M echanical C o n tra cto rs Assn o f M a ry la n d ..........................................................
M echanical C o n tra cto rs Assn ...................................................................................
M echanical C o n tra cto r A ssn .....................................................................................
M echanical C o ntractors Assn of C in c in n a ti.........................................................
M echanical C o ntractors Assn of Utah (Salt Lake C it y ) ..................................
M etrop o lita n D etroit Plum bing and M echanical C ontractors A ssn, Inc
(plum bers) ..................................................................................................................
M etropolitan D etroit Plum bing and M echanical C ontractors A ssn, Inc
(pipefitters) .................................................................................................................
M id-A m erica R egional Bargaining A s s n ................................................................
M illw rights, C onveyor and M achine E rector C o n tra c to rs ................................
N orth Te xa s C o n tra cto rs A s s n .................................................................................
N orth Texas C o n tra c to rs .............................................................................................
N orthern C alifornia Drywall C o n tra cto rs Assn (tapers a g re e m e n t)............
N E C A ..................................................................................................................................
N E C A ..................................................................................................................................
N E C A ..................................................................................................................................
N E C A ..................................................................................................................................
N E C A ..................................................................................................................................
N E C A ..................................................................................................................................
N E C A ..................................................................................................................................
NECA, A m e rica Line B uilders C h a p te r..................................................................
P ainting and D ecorating C o ntractors A ssn o f Essex County, I n c ..............
Plum bing C o n tra cto rs o f M etropolitan S t L o u is .................................................
Plum bing, H eat and C ooling C o n tra cto rs o f th e G reater Bay A r e a ..........




46

T a b le 11. C o n tin u e d -C o lle c tiv e b argainin g s itu a tio n s 1 covering 1,000 w orkers or m o re2 w ith a g re e m e n ts expiring in 1983, by
industry
C odes3
Industry and situation identification

N um ber of
w orkers

E xpiration
m onth

S tate

Union

Em ployer
unit

Special trad e c o n trac to rs— C ontinued

P ortland A ssn o f Plum bing, H eating and C ooling C ontractors, Inc.
(s te a m fitte rs ).............................................................................................................
PDCA ..................................................................................................................................
PDCA ..................................................................................................................................
PDC A ..................................................................................................................................
PDCA ..................................................................................................................................
S he e t M etal and Air C onditioning C ontractors Assn ......................................
S he e t M etal and A ir C onditioning N ational A ssn; Air C onditioning S heet
M etal A s s n .................................................................................................................
S he e t M etal and A ir C onditioning C ontractors Assn ......................................
S he e t M etal Assn, I n c ..................................................................................................
S teel E rectors Assn O f the B uilding Trades Em ployers Assn;
A sso cia te d G eneral C o n tra c to rs .......................................................................
T ri-S tate C o n tra cto rs A ssn ........................................................................................
V entilating and A ir C onditioning Assn of Chicago, I n c ...................................

850
1,600
7,000
2,000
2,000
1,100

4
6
9
5
6
6

90
74
33
91
93
43

170
164
164
164
164
187

9
9
9
9
9
9

2,700
1,800
1,300

6
5
3

93
91
90

187
198
187

9
9
9

1,400
1,800
4,200

6
5
5

14
99
33

116
119
187

9
9
9

Food and kindred products

22 s itu a tio n s ............................................................................................

41,830

A &P Tea Co, A nn Page Div ......................................................................................
A m erican C rystal, H olly Sugar, A m star and C onsolidated F o o d s ..............
B anquet Foods Corp ....................................................................................................
C alifornia + H awaiian Sugar Co .............................................................................
C am pbell Soup C o .........................................................................................................
C am pbell Soup C o .........................................................................................................
C hicago M eat P ackers’ W holesalers Assn and Independent C om panies
(D riv e rs ).......................................................................................................................
Dairy Industry Industrial R elations A ssn (M ilk processing and
distributing p la n ts )...................................................................................................
E ntenm ann’s, Inc ...........................................................................................................
Grain M illing C om panies .............................................................................................
H.J. Heinz Co ..................................................................................................................
ITT C ontinental Baking Co, M orton Frozen Foods ..........................................
J.R. S im plot Co ..............................................................................................................
M eat Trade Institute, Inc (including K osher M aster C on tra ct and
Provision M frs A s s n )..............................................................................................
M ichigan S ugar Co .......................................................................................................
M iller & Papst B rewing C o m p a n ie s ........................................................................
N orthern C alif Dairy Industry Labor R elations Assn ........................................
O re-lda Foods,Inc ..........................................................................................................
P lanters Peanuts, Div O f S tandard Brands, In c .................................................
Rath Packing C o ............................................................................................................
S oft Drink Bottling C om panies (drivers and h e lp e rs )......................................
Tropicana Products Inc ...............................................................................................

1,200
3,000
5,300
1,000
2,000
1,350

4
2
3
6
2
12

21
93
99
93
31
74

531
126
600
186
364
364

1
9
4
1
1
1

1,200

4

33

531

9

4,000
1,230
1,200
3,100
900
1,100

3
5
6
2
3
6

93
21
21
99
54
82

531
108
208
364
531
208

9
1
9
4
1
1

2,500
1,200
1,600
3,000
850
1,000
2,000
1,300
1,800

6
7
6
4
6
4
8
5
11

20
34
35
93
82
54
99
33
59

155
208
304
531
364
423
364
531
531

9
4
9
9
1
1
4
9
1

1
1
1

50
56
61

108
108
108

4
1
1

9
1
7

10
57
57

337
337
337

9
1
1

11

62

337

1

Total:

To ba cco m anufactures

3 s itu a tio n s ..............................................................................................

6,650

A m erican T o b a cco C o ..................................................................................................
Liggett & M yers Inc ......................................................................................................
Lorillard, Div of Loews Theatres, Inc ....................................................................

3,200
2,200
1,250

Total:

Te xtile mill products

3 s itu a tio n s ..............................................................................................

7,300

D yeing C om panies in N ew England .......................................................................
Erwin M ills Inc, Subs Of B urlington In d u s trie s ...................................................
Pacific C olum bia M ills I n c ..........................................................................................

4,800
1,500
1,000

Total:

A pparel and o th er te xtile products

1 s itu a tio n ................................................................................................

1,000

Allied C hem ical Corp, A uto m o tive Products D iv ...............................................

1,000

Total:




47

Table 11. C o n tin u e d -C o lle c tiv e barg ain in g s itu a tio n s 1 covering 1,000 w orkers or m o re2 w ith a g re e m e n ts expiring in 1983, by

Industry
C odes3
Industry and situation identification

N um ber of
w orkers

Expiration
m onth

S tate

Union

Em ployer
unit

5
5
5
5
5
5
5

93
93
99
92
92
99
92

100
119
100
100
100
100
100

4
4
4
4
4
4
4

7
6
8
6
5
6
10
3
6
4
5
6

99
72
72
23
59
12
63
43
31
35
63
90

231
231
231
231
231
231
231
127
231
231
231
175

4
1
1
4
1
4
1
1
1
1
1
9

1
4
3
1
6
6
11
6

33
31
21
21
41
33
23
33

204
243
100
323
243
243
243
204

9
1
1
1
9
9
9
9

1
6
3
2
6
3

22
50
34
72
22
32

121
305
335
335
305
335

1
4
1

4

99

137

4

12

21

4

21
14
14
21

337
141
356
337
337

9
9
9
9
9

Lum ber and w o od products

7 s itu a tio n s ..............................................................................................

13,300

B endix C orp, F orest D iv ..............................................................................................
C entral C alifornia “ Big T h re e ” ..................................................................................
D iam ond International ..................................................................................................
Edw ard J. Hines Lum ber Co .....................................................................................
R oseburg Lum ber C o ...................................................................................................
S t R egis P aper C o .........................................................................................................
W illa m e tte Industries I n c .............................................................................................

1,000
4,500
1,000
1,400
2,800
1,200
1,400

Total:

Paper and allied products

12 s itu a tio n s ............................................................................................

16,390

C o n tinental Can Co ......................................................................................................
C o n tinental Can Co, I n c ..............................................................................................
C row n Z e lle rb a ch C orp ...............................................................................................
H am m erm ill P aper Co ..................................................................................................
H udson Pulp & Paper C o r p .......................................................................................
Jam es R iver C o ...............................................................................................................
Ja m e s R iver-D ixie N orthern D iv is io n ......................................................................
O w e ns-Illinois Inc Lily D iv ...........................................................................................
Packaging C orp O f A m e ric a ......................................................................................
P roctor A nd G am ble Paper Products D iv ............................................................
S co tt P aper Co, S outhern D iv ...................................................................................
W e st C oast P aper & Paper C onverting Industry ..............................................

850
800
900
850
1,500
1,450
1,300
1,000
740
1,500
2,500
3,000

T otal:

Printing and publishing

8 situations ............................................................................................

11,100

C hicago N ew spaper P ublishers A ssn ...................................................................
D ayton Press I n c ............................................................................................................
P rinting Industries o f M etro N ew Y o r k ..................................................................
T im e Inc .............................................................................................................................
Tw in C ity C om m ercial P rin te rs .................................................................................
U nion E m ployees Assn D iv.of Printing Industry of Illin o is .............................
U nion E m ployers A ssn-D iv of G raphic A rts A ssn of D elaw are V a lle y .....
U nion E m ployers A s s n ................................................................................................

1,300
1,200
3,000
1,200
1,200
1,000
1,200
1,000

Total:

Chem icals and allied products

6 s itu a tio n s ..............................................................................................

12,650

A m erican C y a n a m id ......................................................................................................
C elanese C orp O f A m e ric a ........................................................................................
D ow C hem ical, M idland D iv is io n ..............................................................................
Ethyl C orp .........................................................................................................................
Jo hnson & J o h n s o n ......................................................................................................
M iles Laboratories I n c ..................................................................................................

1,000
4,000
4,000
1,000
1,750
900

Total:

'

1

1
1

R ubber and m iscellaneous plastic products

1 s itu a tio n ................................................................................................

1,650

O w ens-Illinois, I n c ..........................................................................................................

1,650

T otal:

Leath er and leather products

Total: <£5 s t a t i o n s ..............................................................................................

6,000

Fulton C ounty Tanners A s s n .....................................................................................
Luggage & Leather G oods M anufacturing A ssn o f NYC ..............................
M assa chu se tts Leather M anufacturers A s s n .....................................................
S hoe M anufacturers in Eastern M a s s a c h u s e tts ...............................................
S lipper A nd Playw ear Assn .......................................................................................

1,000
1,800
1,200
1,000
1,000




48

8
1
2

T ab le 11. C o n tin u e d — C o llective barg ain in g s itu a tio n s 1 covering 1,000 w orkers or m ore2 w ith a g re e m e n ts expiring in 1983, by
industry
C odes3
Industry and situation identification

N um ber of
w o rke rs

E xpiration
m onth

S tate

Union

Em ployer
unit

2
3
10
8
7
3
3
3

23
62
99
99
99
99
99
90

335
135
174
137
114
135
135
135

1
4
9
4
4
4
4
4

5
7
6
12
3
8
10
6
7
7
12
10
8
10
6
8
8
10
6

91
23
99
99
32
99
99
80
33
86
99
23
32
99
99
99
20
23
21

100
500
600
335
335
127
335
100
500
600
161
335
335
335
600
335
335
335
127

4
1
4
4
1
4
4
4
1
4
4
1
1
4
4
4
4
1
9

7
3
12
8
4
8
12

41
14
33
21
33
23
35

553
600
100
500
553
335
107

1
4
1
1
1
4
1

4
6
6
8
3
5
8

93
99
43
16
91
42
20

218
500
107
553
218
553
335

1
4
1
4
9
1
4

12
9
6
2
3
12
8

57
32
93
63
33
21
14

127
553
127
346
218
127
127

1
4
4
1
1
9
4

Ston e, clay and glass

8 situations ............................................................................................

27,300

A n c h o r H ocking Corp, S henango Div ....................................................................
C ha tta n o o g a G lass M fg C o .......................................................................................
C hinaw are M an u fa ctu re rs’ G roup (6 com panies) ..............................................
G lass C o ntainer Industrial C o u n c il...........................................................................
N ational R efra cto ries A g re e m e n t.............................................................................
O w ens Illinois, Inc (m achine o p e ra to rs )................................................................
O w ens-Illinois, I n c ..........................................................................................................
O w ens-Illinois, I n c ..........................................................................................................

900
3,000
1,500
3,000
6,000
1,600
9,500
1,800

Total:

Prim ary m etal industries

19 s itu a tio n s ............................................................................................

37,400

Alum inum Co O f A m erica ...........................................................................................
A rm co, I n c .........................................................................................................................
A sarco, I n c ........................................................................................................................
A sarco, Inc (Lead & Zinc Facilities) .......................................................................
C abot C o rp ........................................................................................................................
GK Technologies, I n c ...................................................................................................
Jessup S teel Co, a subsidiary of A thlone Industries I n c ...............................
K en n e co tt C orp (skilled trades) ...............................................................................
K eystone C onsolidated Industries, I n c ..................................................................
M agm a C opper Co, (sm elting and refining o p e ra tio n s )..................................
M anufacturers Industrial R elations A ssn ..............................................................
M idland-R oss Corp, N ational C astings D iv ..........................................................
N ational Steel Corp, G reat Lakes S teel D iv ........................................................
O hio F erro-A lloys C o rp .................................................................................................
Phelps D odge C orp (sm elting and refining o p e ra tio n s )..................................
S haron S teel C orp .........................................................................................................
S henango Furnace Co, Shenango, Inc, s u b s id ia ry ..........................................
S tandard S teel Titanium M etals C o r p ....................................................................
W ire and C able C om panies, N ew York, NY a re a ..............................................

2,100
3,500
3,550
1,400
1,050
1,600
1,350
1,700
1,500
2,800
4,000
1,050
1,300
1,000
1,500
3,400
1,600
1,800
1,200

Total:

Fabricated m etal products

7 s itu a tio n s ..............................................................................................

11,550

FM C Corp, N orthern O rdnance D iv ........................................................................
M oore Co, I n c ..................................................................................................................
O lin C o r p ............................................................................................................................
R em ington A rm s Co, I n c .............................................................................................
Stanadyne, I n c .................................................................................................................
U.S. S teel Corp, A m erican Bridge Div ..................................................................
W est Bend C o .................................................................................................................

2,300
1,000
3,000
1,500
950
1,600
1,200

Total:

M achinery, ex cep t electrical

7 s itu a tio n s ..............................................................................................

9,550

C aterpillar T ra c to r C o ...................................................................................................
H yster Co ..........................................................................................................................
S perry Rand Corp, V ickers Div ................................................................................
Torrington C o ...................................................................................................................
W ashington M etal Trades Inc ...................................................................................
W hite Farm E q u ip m e n t.................................................................................................
W orthington Corp, (Subs, o f M cG raw E d is o n )...................................................

1,400
850
1,000
800
2,500
1,400
1,600

Total:

E lectric and ele ctron ic equipm ent

12 s itu a tio n s ............................................................................................

49,450

AVX Corp, AVX C eram ics D iv ...................................................................................
CTS C orp ..........................................................................................................................
Fluorescent Lighting Fixture M a n u fa c tu re rs ........................................................
G TE A utom atic E lectric C o ........................................................................................
M agic C hef Inc A dm iral-M idw est Mfg ...................................................................
N ew Y ork Lam p and Shade Assn M frs A ssn, I n c ............................................
R aytheon C o ....................................................................................................................

1,000
1,000
1,000
2,000
2,100
1,500
9,000

Total:




49

Tab!© 11. Continued—Collective bargaining situations1 covering 1,000 workers or more2 with agreements expiring in 1083, by
industry
C odes3
Industry and situation identification

N um ber of
w o rke rs

E xpiration
* m onth

S tate

Union

E m ployer
unit

2
2
10
8
5

74
93
22
99
10

347
127
531
246
347

1
1
4
4
4

10
10
6
3

43
99
90
23

100
218
100
553

1
4
9
1

6
11
10
12

22
23
16
71

337
553
449
218

4
4
1
1

6

95

531

1

7
12
9
9
9

99
99
63
50
59

335
231
239
239
239

9
9
9
9
9

EI©etrie and steetronie equipment—
Continued
R o ckw e ll Inti Corp, C ollins R adio G r o u p ..............................................................
R o ckw e ll Inti Corp, C ollins R adio G r o u p ..............................................................
U niversal M fg C o r p ........................................................................................................
W estern E lectric C o .......................................................................................................
W hite-W estinghouse, Div o f W hite C onsolidated .............................................

2,500
1,200
1,000
22,650
4,500

Transportation equipment
4 s itu a tio n s ..............................................................................................

67,100

A C F Industries, Inc A m car D iv ..................................................................................
B oeing C o .........................................................................................................................
P acific C oast S hipbuilders A s s o c ia tio n .................................................................
V olksw agen O f A m erica I n c ......................................................................................

T otal:

1,500
50,000
11,000
4,600

Instruments and related products
4 s itu a tio n s ...............................................................................................

5,200

Jo h n so n & Jo h n so n and Ethicon I n c .....................................................................
Leeds & N orthrup, Div o f G eneral S ignal C o r p .................................................
Tim e x C orp .......................................................................................................................
Tim e x C orp .......................................................................................................................

1,600
1,400
1,000
1,200

T otal:

Local and interurban passenger transit
T otal:

1 situation

...............................................................................................

1,200

M T L .In c ...............................................................................................................................

1,200

Water transportation
5 s itu a tio n s ..............................................................................................

13,050

B asic S teel Industry S hipow ners .............................................................................
G reat Lakes A ssn O f S te v e d o re s ............................................................................
M obile S team ship A s s n ..............................................................................................
S outh A tla n tic E m ployers N egotiating C o m m itte e ............................................
S outheast Florida E m ployer’s Assn .......................................................................

1,600
6,000
1,000
3,250
1,200

Total:

Transportation by air
25 s itu a tio n s ............................................................................................

100,450

A m erican A irlines (Flight A tte n d a n ts ).....................................................................
B raniff A irw ays (Pilots) ................................................................................................
B raniff A irw ays (Flight A ttendants) .........................................................................
B raniff A irw ays G round S e r v ic e ...............................................................................
B raniff A irw ays C lerical S O ffic e ..............................................................................
E astern A irlines (P ilo ts )...............................................................................................
Frontier A irlines (A gents & C lerical) .......................................................................
N orthw est A irlines (P ilo ts )...........................................................................................
N orthw est A irlines (Flight A tte n d a n ts )...................................................................
O zark A irlines (Clerical and A g e n ts ).......................................................................
Pan A m erican W orld A irw ays (P ilo ts ).....................................................................
Pan A m erican W orld A irw ays (Clerical and Passenger Service
E m ployees) .................................... ...........................................................................
Pan A m erican W orld A irw ays (G round S e r v ic e )................................................
Pan A m erican W orld A irw ays (Flight E n g in e e rs )..............................................
R epublic A irlin e s (Clerical, O ffice, Flee t and Passenger S ervice
E m ployees) ................................................................................................................
R epublic A irlines (Flight A tte n d a n ts )......................................................................
R epublic A irlines (Pilots) .............................................................................................
Texas International A irlines (Clerical, O ffice, and A gent Em ployees) ......
T ra n s W orld A irlines (P ilo ts )......................................................................................
U nited A irlines (P ilo ts )..................................................................................................
U nited A irlin e s (Flight A tte n d a n ts )..........................................................................
U nited A irlin e s (G round S e rv ic e )..............................................................................
US A IR ................................................................................................................................
W e stern A irlines (C lerical and A gents) .................................................................
W e stern A irlin e s (G round S ervice) .........................................................................

6,200
1,380
2,900
1,900
4,300
4,000
2,700
1,550
2,600
1,750
2,320

3
12
12
12
12
8
6
6
12
12
1

99
99
99
99
99
99
99
99
99
99
99

341
104
104
218
531
104
104
104
531
218
104

4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4

10,000
7,600
1,050

1
7
1

99
99
99

531
341
215

4
4
4

6,400
2,400
1,200
1,700
3,100
4,540
9,300
13,500
1,660
4,500
1,900

12
12
12
1
12
9
3
10
3
5
6

99
99
99
99
99
99
99
99
99
99
99

104
104
104
531
104
104
104
218
104
500
531

4
4
4
4
4
4

T otal:




50

4

4
4
4
4

Tab le 11. C o n tin u e d — C o llective b a rgainin g s itu a tio n s 1 covering 1,000 w orkers or m ore2 w ith a g re e m e n ts expiring in 1983, by
industry
C odes3
Industry and situation identification

N um ber of
w orkers

E xpiration
m onth

S tate

Union

Em ployer
unit

C om m unication

Total:

6 s itu a tio n s ..............................................................................................

30,550

Bell T e lephone O f P e n n s y lv a n ia ..............................................................................
N ew York T e lephone Co (tra ffic )............................................................................
N ew Y ork T e lephone Co ( tra ffic ).............................................................................
N ew Y ork T e lephone Co (accounting, executive and treasurers
d e p a rtm e n t)................................................................................................................
R ochester T e lephone C orp (accounting, com m ercial engineering and
tra ffic d e p a rtm e n ts ).................................................................................................
W estern E lectric Co, Inc (distribution and w a re h o u s e )...................................

1,300
3,700
10,000

8
8
8

23
21
21

516
516
516

1
1
1

850

8

21

516

1

900
13,800

8
8

21
99

500
346

1
4

12
10
11
12
9
1
4
4
4
12
1
12
1
3
5

22
23
59
59
62
41
33
33
23
84
86
93
80
50
53

127
127
127
127
127
127
118
118
118
127
127
127
127
127
118

1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
4
4
1

4

31

531

9

4
6
1
9

91
92
21
21

531
531
531
531

9
9
9
9

1
2

22
34

364
364

4
4

3
8
6

34
21
21
40
43
31
91
91
86
94
86
50
50

364
364
364
364
184
364
364
155
364
364
364
364
364

4
4

Electric, gas, and sanitary services

15 s itu a tio n s ............................................................................................

40,630

A tla n tic C ity Electric Co (physical e m p ls )...........................................................
D uquesne Light C o ........................................................................................................
Florida Pow er And Light Co (m anual em pls) ......................................................
Florida Pow er C orp (m anual e m p ls ).......................................................................
M em phis Light, G as And W a te r Div (All D epts) ................................................
N orthern S tates Pow er C o ..........................................................................................
O hio Edison C o ...............................................................................................................
Peoples Gas Light And C oKe C o ...........................................................................
Philadelphia G as W o r k s ..............................................................................................
Public Service Co Of C olorado ................................................................................
S alt R iver Pow er D istrict and S alt R iver W ater Assn .....................................
S outhern C alifornia Edison C o .................................................................................
Utah Pow er And Light Co (all depts) ....................................................................
Virginia Electric And Pow er C o ................................................................................
W ashington G as Light C o ...........................................................................................

1,000
2,950
4,500
2,000
2,280
3,400
1,800
1,800
2,000
3,000
2,400
4,900
3,000
4,000
1,600

Total:

W holesale trad e - durable goods

..............................................................................................

1,000

Building M aterial D ealers O f G reater C lev ..........................................................

1,000

Total:

1 situation

W holesale trad e - nondurable goods

4 s itu a tio n s ..............................................................................................

5,500

A llied Em ployers I n c .....................................................................................................
Food Em ployers A ssn, I n c .........................................................................................
Produce Trade A s s o c ia tio n ........................................................................................
W holesale T o b a cco D istributors ..............................................................................

1,300
2,000
1,000
1,200

Total:

G eneral m erchandise stores

2 s itu a tio n s ..............................................................................................

3,800

B am berger’s .....................................................................................................................
M ontgom ery W ard & Co .............................................................................................

2,500
1,300

Total:

Food stores

36 s itu a tio n s ............................................................................................

145,250

A & P Tea C o ..................................................................................................................
A & P Tea Co, Inc .........................................................................................................
A & P, A cm e & P & C S tores ..................................................................................
A & P,Safew ay,M ilgram s,U nited S uper S to r e s ...................................................
A &p,Safew ay, M ilgram s A nd Independents ........................................................
A kron-C anton Food Industry C om m ittee .............................................................
A llied Em ployers, Inc (grocery ) ...............................................................................
A llied E m ployers,Inc .....................................................................................................
A lpha Beta, AJ Bayless, Low C o st,F u rr’s ,S a fe w a y ..........................................
A nchorage R etail G rocery S to r e s ...........................................................................
AJ Bayless, El R ancho, Food G ia n t.......................................................................
B altim ore Food E m ployers Labor R elations A s s n ............................................
B altim ore Food E m ployers Labor R elations A s s n ............................................

1,800
12,000
4,800
1,050
3,500
3,500
8,000
1,300
2,700
1,000
1,900
9,000
1,000

Total:




51

4

9
9
3
4

7
6
10
9
9

9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
9

T ab le 11. C o n tin u e d -C o lle c tiv e barg ain in g s itu a tio n s 1 covering 1,000 w orkers or m ore2 w ith a g re e m e n ts expiring in 1983, by
industry
C odes3
Industry and situation identification

N um ber of
w orkers

Expiration
m onth

State

Union

E m ployer
unit

2
2
4
7
7
10
2
2
3
9
5
5
3
3
12
3
9
5
11
5
3
8
8

41
41
34
50
50
20
93
23
21
21
74
99
34
99
21
99
84
70
99
21
34
50
50

364
364
364
364
364
364
364
531
184
364
531
364
364
184
364
155
531
364
364
364
364
184
155

9
9
9
9
4
4
9
9
4
9
9
4
4
9
9
9
9
4
9
4
9
9
9

3
7
5
5

21
93
93
93

531
218
600
218

9
9
9
9

2
10
10
12

5

93
41
41
93
93

145
145
145
145
145

9
9
9
9
9

6

93

364

4

12

93
35
99
99
21

193
163
238
414
118

4
4
4
4
9

93
21
22
93
33
33
93

905
332
145
531
145

9
9

F o o d s to re s — C o n tin u e d
C hain & Independent G rocery S to r e s ...................................................................
C hain & Independent Food S to r e s .........................................................................
C hain and Independent Food S to r e s .....................................................................
C olonial S tores Inc N C ,S C .......................................................................................
C olonial S tores Inc ........................................................................................................
First N ational S to re s ,In c ..............................................................................................
Food Em ployers Labor R elations A ssn o f N orthern C a lifo rn ia ....................
Food S tore E m ployers Labor C o u n c il...................................................................
G rand U nion (G rocery D epts) ...................................................................................
G rea te r NY Food Em ployers Labor R elations A s s n ........................................
J W eingarten and K ro g e r............................................................................................
K roger C o ..........................................................................................................................
K roger C o ..........................................................................................................................
N M innesota & N W isconsin Food M e rc h a n ts ...................................................
N Y -B ronx M eat & Food D ealers Inc ......................................................................
R etail Jo in t C o u n c il........................................................................................................
S afew ay S tores A nd King S oopers ........................................................................
S afew ay S to re s ,In c ........................................................................................................
S outhw est S u p e rm a rk e ts ............................................................................................
S ta r S u p e rm a rk e ts ,In c ..................................................................................................
U nited S uper M arket A s s n ..........................................................................................
W ashington,D C Food Em ployers Labor R elations Assn ................................
W ashington,D C Food Em ployers Labor R elations Assn ................................

2,800
7,200
3,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
17,000
2,000
1,700
4,000
1,000
4,500
2,000
1,600
1,800
4,000
1,500
2,800
4,800
2,000
12,500
12,000
2,500

A u to m o tiv e d e a le rs a n d s e rv ic e s ta tio n s
4 s itu a tio n s ..............................................................................................

4,500

A utom otive Parts D istributors A s s n ........................................................................
A utom otive R epair & M aintenance I n d .................................................................
Eastern M oto r Car Dealers, I n c ...............................................................................
N ew C ar D ealers Of C ontra C o s ta .........................................................................

1,300
1,000
1,200
1,000

Total:

E a tin g a n d d rin k in g p la c e s
5 s itu a tio n s ..............................................................................................

22,600

Long B each And O range C ounty R estaurant Assn .........................................
O n-sale Liquor D ealers (M in n e a p o lis )...................................................................
O n-sale Liquor D ealers (St. P a u l)............................................................................
San M ateo H otel R estaurant Em ployers A ssn ..................................................
S anta C lara C ounty H ospitality A ssn ....................................................................

6,500
3,000
3,000
5,200
4,900

Total:

M is c e lla n e o u s re ta il
..............................................................................................

6,500

Thrifty Drug A nd D iscount S to r e s ...........................................................................

6,500

Total:

1 situation

F in a n c e , in s u ra n c e a n d re a l e s ta te

5 s itu a tio n s ..............................................................................................

38,800

Blue C ross O f N orthern C a lifo rn ia ..........................................................................
B lue C ross-B lue Shield O f W is c o n s in ...................................................................
P rudential Insurance Co of A m e ric a .......................................................................
Prudential Insurance Co of A m e ric a .......................................................................
R ealty A dvisory B oard on Labor R elations (com m ercial a g m t)...................

1,200
1,200
16,500
1,900
18,000

Total:

11
9
10
12

S e rv ic e s
14 s itu a tio n s ............................................................................................

48,700

A ffilia te d H ospitals of San F ra n c is c o ....................................................................
A ssn O f Tele p h o n e A nsw ering S ervices ..............................................................
C asino H otels in A tla n tic C it y ...................................................................................
G arage & Parking Lot A g m t ......................................................................................
G reater C hicago H otel and M otel A s s n ................................................................
Illinois Assn O f H ealth Care F a c ilite s ....................................................................
K aiser-P erm anente M ed Care P ro g ........................................................................

1,750

6

1,300
9,300
1,000
8,000
4,000
7,000

5

Total:




52

9

11
3
12

10

118
118

4
9
9
9
4

Tab le 11. C o n tin u e d —-C o llective barg ain in g s itu a tio n s 1 covering 1,000 w orkers or m ore2 w ith a g re e m e n ts expiring in 1983, by
industry
C odes3
Industry and situation identification

N um ber of
w orkers

E xpiration
m onth

S tate

Union

Em ployer
unit

9
11
11
6
2
12
3

20
99
33
99
62
31
93

192
162
533
102
600
118
118

9
9
9
9
1
9
1

S e rv ic e s — C o n tin u e d
M otion Picture Lab T e c h n ic ia n s ...............................................................................
P honograph R ecord Labor A g m t .............................................................................
P rofessional Laundry A g re e m e n t.............................................................................
S creen A cto rs TV & T heatrical A g m t.....................................................................
V erdrup Te ch n o lo g ies C orp A rnold A F B ............................................................
Y oungstow n H ospital A s s n .........................................................................................
Y osem ite Park and C urry C o .....................................................................................

1,000
6,400
1,000
3,900
1,350
1,500
1,200

1 The list o f 'situ a tio n s’ in this table, w hich w as obtained from public
sources, su p plem ents th e list o f ‘a g re e m e n ts’ in table 9, w hich w as obtained
from Bureau o f Labor S tatistics files. S ee appendix C for an explanation of
the d iffe re n ce betw een ‘situ a tio n s’ and ‘a greem ents.’




2 Som e sm aller situations are included. They had until recently covered
at least 1,000 w o rke rs and m ay attain th a t co ve ra ge again.
3 See appendix B fo"r identification of codes.

53

Table 12. Selected agreem ents covering 1,000 workers or more subject to reopening in 1983, by month1
C odes2

N um ber of
w o rke rs

M onth o f reopening and
a g re e m e n t id e n tifica tion

Industry

Union

2,400
4,900
1,600

16
49
45

335
127
104

1,800

16

129

2,000
5,400
1,800
4,500
6,500

15
15
16
16
17

116
119
129
143
170

1,650
1,600

29
28

186
101

5,000
1,600
4,300
2,200
1,500
1,100
1,000

17
15
48
49
26
49
16

119
119
127
127
231
127
531

1,200
1,500
1,700
2,800
1,400

17
17
17
28
16

115
127
187
101
143

1,400
1,900

17
28

170
357

January
Pennsylvania H eavy and H ig h w a y C o n tra cto rs A s s n ....................................................
S outhern C a lifornia Edison C o ..............................................................................................
W estern A irlin e s Inc P ilots In te rs ta te ..................................................................................
February
S outhern D redge O w ners Assn In te rs ta te ........................................................................
M arc h
AGC H ouston and G alveston T e x .........................................................................................
AGC H ouston and G alveston T e x .........................................................................................
A G C H ouston and G alveston T e x .........................................................................................
A G C H ouston and G alveston T e x .........................................................................................
N ational A u to m a tic S prinkler and Fire C ontrol Assn In te rs ta te ................................
A pril
C heveron U SA C a lifo rn ia ........................................................................................................
U nion C a rbide C orp Texas C ity T e x ....................................................................................
M ay
AGC W isconsin C h a p te r...........................................................................................................
C o n stru ctio n Em ployers Assn Inc In te r s ta te ...................................................................
G eneral T elephone C om pany o f th e N o rth w est In te rs ta te ..........................................
Pennsylvania E le ctric C o ........................................................................................................
St. Jam es R iver Co O h io ...........................................................................................................
Toledo Edison Co O h io .............................................................................................................
W isconsin Road B uilders A s s n ..............................................................................................
June
M ason C o n tra cto rs Assn St Louis M o ...............................................................................
NECA and independent c o n tra c to rs Phoenix A r i z .........................................................
S heet M etal Em ployers Assn D e tro it M ic h ........................................................................
U nion C a rbide C orp Oak Ridge T e n n ..................................................................................
W isco nsin Road B uilders A s s n ..............................................................................................
O ctober

M ech a nica l C o n tra cto rs Assn H ouston T e x .....................................................................
U nion C a rbide C orp O ak R idge T e n n ..................................................................................
1 N e w spaper source.




2 See appendix B fo r id e n tifica tio n o f codes.

54

Appendix A. Commoni Abbreviations

AGC
Agmt
Am
Assn
Assoc
Bldg
Bldrs
BTEA
Cent
Chpt
Cler
Cncl
Consol
Comty
Cnty
Comm
Conf
Const
Contrs
Cust
Dept
Dir
Dist
Distr
Div or D
Estab
Emplr
Emps
Fndry
Hdware
Hosp
Hvy and Hwy
I-A
Indep
Indus
Inter
Inti
JC
Lab
Ltd
Mach
Maint
Mech
Metro
Mfrs
Mfg



So
Southe
Southw
Struc
Sub
Supt
Supvy
Tech
Tele
Transp
Un
US
Univ
Util

-Manager(s)
-Miscellaneous
-National
-National Electrical Contractors
Association
-Negotiation
-New England
-Northern
-Noninstructional
-Nonprofessional
-Northwestern
-Office
-Over-the-Road
-Painting & Decorating
Contractors Association
-Personnel
-Philadelphia
-Pittsburgh
-Plant
-Production and
Maintenance
-Products
-Professional
-Refinery
-Relations
-Restaurant
-Secretary
-Sheet Metal & Air Conditioning
Contractors Association
-Sheet Metal Contractors
Association
-Southern
-Southeastern
-Southwestern
-Structural
-Subsidiary
-Superintendent
-Supervisory
-Technical
-Telephone
-Transportation
-Union(s)
-United States
-University
-Utilities

Wareh
Whsale

-Associated General Contractors
-Agreement
-American
-Association
-Associated
-Building
-Builders
-Building Trades Employers
Association
-Central
-Chapter
-Clerical
-Council
-Consolidated
-Community
-County
-Committee
-Confidential, Conference
-Construction
-Contractors
-Custodial
-Department
-Director
-District
-Distributors
-Division
-Establishment
-Employer
-Employees
-Foundry
-Hardware
-Hospital
-Heavy and Highway
-Industry area (group of companies
signing same contract)
-Independent
-Industrial, Industry
-Interstate
-International
-Joint Council
-Labor
-Limited
-Machinery
-Maintenance
-Mechanical
-Metropolitan
-Manufacturers
-Manufacturing

-Warehouse
-Wholesale

Mgr(s)
Misc
Natl
NECA
Negot
New Eng
No
Noninstr
Nonprof
Northw
Off
O-t-R
PDCA
Pers
Phila
Pittsb
Pit
P and M
Prods
Prof
Ref
Rel
Rest
Secy
SMACC
SMCA

55

Appendix [1 Identification
=
©f 0©dl@i

industry @ d©s
@
9
10

11

12
13
14
15
16
17
20
21
22

23
24
25
26
27
28

29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38

39
40
41
42
44

Fisheries
Metal mining
Anthracite mining
Bituminous coal and lignite mining
Crude petroleum and natural gas
Mining and quarrying of nonmetallic minerals,
except fuels
Building construction—general contractors
Construction other than building construction—
general contractors
Construction—special trade contractors
Food and kindred products

45
48
49
50
52

Tobacco manufactures
Textile mill products
Apparel and other finished products made from
fabrics and similar materials
Lumber and wood products, except furniture
Furniture and fixtures
Paper and allied products
Printing, publishing, and allied industries
Chemicals and allied products
Petroleum refining and related industries
Rubber and miscellaneous plastics products

58
59
60
61
62

53
54
55
56
57

63
64
65
66
67
70

Leather and leather products
Stone, clay, glass, and concrete products
Primary metal industries
Fabricated metal products, except machinery
and transportation equipment
Machinery, except electrical
Electrical machinery, equipment, and supplies
Transportation equipment
Professional, scientific, and controlling
instruments; photographic and optical goods;
watches and clocks
Miscellaneous manufacturing industries
Railroad transportation

72
73
75
76
78
79
80
81
82
84

Local and suburban transit and interurban
passenger transportation
Motor freight transportation and warehousing
Water transportation




86
88
89
56

Air transportation
Communications
Electric, gas, and sanitary services
Wholesale trade
Retail trade—building materials, hardware, and
farm equipment dealers
Retail trade—general merchandise
Retail trade—food stores
Retail trade—automotive dealers and gasoline
service stations
Retail trade—apparel and accessory stores
Retail trade—furniture, home furnishings, and
equipment stores
Retail trade—eating and drinking places
Retail trade—miscellaneous retail stores
Banking
Credit agencies other than banks
Security and commodity brokers, dealers, ex­
changes, and services
Insurance carriers
Insurance agents, brokers, and service
Real estate
Combinations of real estate, insurance, loan,
and law offices
Holding and other investment companies
Hotels, rooming houses, camps, and other lodg­
ing places
Personal services
Miscellaneous business services
Automobile repair, automobile services, and
garages
Miscellaneous repair services
Motion pictures
Amusement and recreation services, except
motion pictures
Medical and other health services
Legal services
Educational services
Museums, art galleries, botanical and zoological
gardens
Nonprofic membership organizations
Private households
Miscellaneous services

Identification @ C©d@s— Continued
f
State ©©d©®1
10

NEW ENGLAND REGION

50

SOUTH ATLANTIC REGION—Continued

11
12
13
14
15
16

Maine
New Hampshire
Vermont
Massachusetts
Rhode Island
Connecticut

58
59

Georgia
Florida

60

EAST SOUTH CENTRAL REGION

61
62
63
64

Kentucky
Tennessee
Alabama
Mississippi

70

WEST SOUTH CENTRAL REGION

71
72
73
74

Arkansas
Louisiana
Oklahoma
Texas

80

MOUNTAIN REGION

81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88

Montana
Idaho
Wyoming
Colorado
New Mexico
Arizona
Utah
Nevada

90

PACIFIC REGION

91
92
93
94
95

Washington
Oregon
California
Alaska
Hawaii

20

MIDDLE ATLANTIC REGION

21
22
23

New York
New Jersey
Pennsylvania

30

EAST NORTH CENTRAL REGION

31
32
33
34
35

Ohio
Indiana
Illinois
Michigan
Wisconsin

40

WEST NORTH CENTRAL REGION

41
42
43
44
45
46
47

Minnesota
Iowa
Missouri
North Dakota
South Dakota
Nebraska
Kansas

50

SOUTH ATLANTIC REGION

51
52
53
54
55
56
57

Delaware
Maryland
District of Columbia
Virginia
West Virginia
North Carolina
South Carolina

OTHER INTERSTATE

00 or 99
1Agreements covering employees or operations wholly within one
State are designated by the State code listed. The regional code (10,
20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90) is used where an agreement covers
employees or operations in two States or more but does not go beyond



Interstate, interregional

the limits of the region. The interstate code (00) is used where the
agreement covers employees or operations in two States or more in
more than one region,

57

Identification of Codes—Continued
Union o©d©§2
100
101
102
104
105
106
107
108
109
112
114

Two or more AFL-CIO
Directly affiliated unions of the AFL-CIO
Actors
Air Line Pilots
Engineers; Professional and Technical
Asbestos Workers
Industrial Workers; Allied
Bakery, Confectionery and Tobacco Workers
Barbers3
Boilermakers
Brick and Clay Workers4

154
155
15’
8
161
162
163
164
166
168
169
170

Masters, Mates and Pilots
Meat Cutters1
0
TVietal Polishers
Molders
Musicians
Office Employees
Painters
Pattern Makers
Plasterers and Cement Masons
Plate Printers
Plumbers

115
116
118
119
120
121
124
126
127
128

Bricklayers
IronW orkers
Service Employees
Carpenters
Cement Workers
Chemical Workers
Coopers
Distillery Workers
Electrical Workers (IBEW)
Elevator Constructors

174
178
180
181
183
184
185
186
187
189

Potters5
Railroad Signalmen
Railroad Yardmasters
Railway Carmen
Railway Clerks
Retail Clerks1
0
Roofers
Seafarers
Sheet Metal Workers
Siderographers

129
132
133
134
135
137
140
141
142
143

Engineers; Operating
Firemen and Oilers
Garment Workers; United
Garment Workers; Ladies’
Glass Bottle Blowers5
Glass Workers; Flint
Granite Cutters6
Leather Goods, Plastic, and Novelty Workers
Hatters7
Laborers

192
196
197
201
202
204
205
208
215
218

Theatrical Stage Employees
Stove Workers
Transit Union; Amalgamated
Telegraph Workers
Textile Workers; United
Typographical Union
Upholsterers
Grain Millers
Flight Engineers
Machinists

144
145
146
147
150
152
153

Horseshoers
Hotel and Restaurant Employees
Jewelry Workers8
Lathers9
Letter Carriers
Maintenance of Way Employees
Tile, Marble and Terrazzo Finishers

220
221
231
232
233
236
238
239
241
243

Aluminum Workers4
Novelty Workers
Paperworkers
Train Dispatchers
Railway and Airway Supervisors1
1
Laundry and Dry Cleaning Union
Insurance Workers
Longshoremen’s Association
Farm Workers; United
Graphic Arts

244
305
312
314

Printing and Graphic
Clothing and Textile Workers
Furniture Workers
Glass and Ceramic Workers4

2 Unions with codes 100-399 are affiliated with the AFL-CIO.
3 Merged with the United Food and Commercial Workers Interna­
tional Union in 1980.
4 The Brick and Clay Workers and the Aluminum Workers
combined in 1980 to form the Aluminum, Brick and Clay Workers In­
ternational Union. In 1982, the Glass and Ceramic Workers merged
with the new union to form the Aluminum, Brick and Glass Workers
International Union.
5 In 1982, the Glass Bottle Blowers and the Potters merged to form
the Glass, Pottery, Plastics and Allied Workers International Union.
6 Merged with the Tile, Marble and Terrazzo Finishers in 1980.
7 Affiliated with the Clothing and Textile Workers in 1982.
8 Merged with the Service Employees in 1980.
9 Merged with the Carpenters in 1979.



1 The Meat Cutters and the Retail Clerks combined in 1979 to form
0
the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union.
1 Merged with the Railway Clerks in 1980.
1
58

Ideotifneatiors

C@des=C®rotiiiy@di
Union ood®s2—Continued!

319
320
321
323
332
333
334
335
341
342
343

Marine Engineers
Marine and Shipbuilding Workers
Maritime Union; National
Newspaper Guild
Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store
Rubber Workers
Shoe Workers; United1
2
Steelworkers
Transport Workers
Utility Workers
Woodworkers

516
517
519
520
521
524
527
528
529
530
531

Telephone unions; Independent
Basketball Players
Hockey Players
Football Players
Umpires
Packinghouse and Industrial Workers
Pulp and Paper; Western
Southern Labor Union
Western States Service Stations
Writers Guild (East and West)
Teamsters

345
346
347
352
354
356
357
358
360
362
364

Radio Association1
3
Communications Workers
Electrical Workers (IUE)
Broadcast Employees and Technicians
Mechanics Educational Society
Leather Workers
Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers
Transportation Union; United
Postal Workers
Flight Attendants
Food and Commercial Workers; United1
0

533
534
535
536
538
539
540
541
542
543
551

Laundry, Dry Cleaning, and Dyehouse Workers
Tool Craftsmen
Industrial Workers; National
Industrial Trade
Independent Unions; Congress of
Retail Workers
Directors Guild
Guards Union
Truck Drivers; Chicago
Allied Workers
Textile Foremen’s Guild

400
404
412
414
415
417
419
423
425
442
449

Two or more independent unions
Die Sinkers
Lace Operatives
Insurance Agents
Locomotive Engineers
Machine Printers
Mailers1
4
Distributive Workers1
5
Newspaper and Mail Deliverers
Shoe Craftsmen
Watch Workers

553
557
558
559
561
562
600

Auto Workers1
6
Log Scalers
Tool, Die and Mold Makers
Security Officers
Warehouse Industrial International Union
Composers and Lyricists Guild
Two or more unions—different affiliations
(i.e„, AFL-CIO and independent unions)
Engineers and Architects
Industrial Trades
Office, Sales and Technical Employees

454
459
461
465
469
470
471
480
484
490
494
500

Mine Workers
Allied Pilots Association
Guard Workers; Plant
Christian Labor Association
Utility Workers of New England
Atlantic Independent Union
Bakery Employees Union; Independent
Longshoremen and Warehousemen
Electrical Workers (UE)
Protection Employees; Plant
Watchmen’s Association
Single-firm independent union

701
702
704
705
708
715
717
903
904
905
907
970

1 Merged with the Clothing and Textile Workers in 1979.
2
1 Became part of the Masters, Mates and Pilots division of the In3
ternational Longshoremen’s Association in 1982.




Shoeworkers Protective Association
Texas Unions
Industrial Union; Amalgamated
Mine Workers; Progressive
American Nurses Association
Licensed Practical Nurses
Nurses’ association (other than ANA and
NFLPN)
Single independent associations
University Professors

1 Merged with the Typographical Union in 1979.
4
1 Merged with the Auto Workers in 1979.
5
1 Reaffiliated with the AFL-CIO in 1981.
6

59

Id e n tific a tio n @f C o d e s — C ontinued

Employer unit codes for tables 8 and 9
1
2
3

4

Employer unit codes for tables 10 and 11

Single company, one plant
Association agreement
Industry area agreement (group of com­
panies signing same agreement; no
formal association)
Single company multiplant agreement




1
9

4

60

Single company, one plant
Association agreement or industry area agree­
ment (group of companies signing same
agreement; no formal associa­
tion)
Single company, multiplant agreement

Appendix C. Explanatory Mote

Tables 1 and 2 include two types of collective bargain­
ing “ situations” that cover 1,000 workers or more:
(1) Those in which 1,000 workers or more are
covered by a single collective bargaining agreement.
These agreements are included in the Bureau’s agree­
ment file (except those in railroads and airlines).
(2) Those in which there is more than one agreement,
generally in the same industry and locality, with essen­
tially the same terms, together (but not individually)
covering 1,000 workers or more. Information on these
agreements, which are not within the scope of the
Bureau’s file, is generally obtained from contacts with
employers and unions or from press accounts. Although




61

they may consist of only a single agreement, situations
involving railroads and airlines, which are outside the
scope of the Bureau’s agreement file, are also included.
Information on each of the situations in the Bureau’s
agreement file scheduled to expire in 1983 is listed in
tables 8 and 9. Information on those situations not in­
cluded in the Bureau’s file is listed in tables 10 and 11.
Because of definitional differences, employment counts
in tables 8 and 10 (or in tables 9 and 11), do not sum to
the totals in tables 1 and 2. Employment in tables 8 and
9 is for the time the agreement was reached; employ­
ment in tables 10 and 11 and also in tables 1 and 2 is the
most recent figure available.




M ajo r C ollective
B argaining Agreemesnigs
A series of in-depth studies by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics of contract clauses in labor-management
agreements. The studies are widely used by negdtiators,
arbitrators, mediators, personnel administrators, policy­
makers, and industrial relations researchers.
The final publication in this series, Unions Secyrlty and
Dues Check©!! Provisions, and four other recent studies
are available from BLS regional offices and from the
Government Printing Office.
Use the form below to order all five current bulletins in
the series.

S e n d y o u r o rd e r to the
BLS reg ion al o ffic e
n e a re st you:
1603 JFK B u ild in g
Boston, M A 0 2 2 0 3
S uite 3 4 00
1515 B ro a d w a y
N e w York, N Y 10036

P.O. Box 13309
P h ila d e lp h ia , PA 19101
1371 P e a ch tre e S t.,N E .
A tlanta, G A 30 36 7
9th Floor
Federal O ffic e B u ilding
230 S outh-D earborn St.
C hicago, IL 60604

2nd Floor
555 G riffin Square Bldg.
Dallas, TX 75202

Y ou m ay also send your
order directly to:

911 W alnut St.
K ansas City, MO 64106

Superintendent of D ocum ents
U.S. G overnm ent
Printing O ffice
W ashington, D C 20402

450 G olden G ate Ave.
Box 36017
San Francisco, CA 94102

T itle

B u lle tin No.

G PO S to c k No.

P rice

□

W ag© A d m in is tra tio n P rovisions

1425-17

0 2 9 -0 0 1 -0 2 2 0 9 -3

$ 5 .5 0

□

W a g e -In c e n tiv e , P ro d u c tio n -S ta n d a rd ,
and T im e -S tu d y P rovisions

1425-13

0 2 9 -0 0 1 -0 2 3 7 8 -2

$ 5 .0 0

□

E m p lo y e r P ay and Leave
to r U n io n B usiness

1425-19

0 2 9 -0 0 1 -0 2 5 1 6 -5

$ 5 .5 0

□

P lan t M o v e m e n t, In te rp la n t T ra n s fe r,
a n d R e lo c a tio n A llo w a n c e s

1 4 2 5 -2 0

0 2 9-0 01-0 26 02-1

$5 .50

□

U nion Security and
D ues C h ec ko ff Provisions

1425-21

0 2 9 -0 0 1 -0 2 7 0 7 -9

$4.75

T o ta l O rd e r

□

E nclosed is c h e c k or m oney order payable to S up erinte nde nt of D ocum ents.

□

C ha rge to G PO D eposit A c c o u n t N o . ________________________________

□

C ha rge to M a ste rC a rd ! A c c o u n t N o ._________________________________ Expiration d a te __________________

□

C ha rge to VIS A !

A c c o u n t N o __________________ ________________ Expiration d a t e ------------------------------ -

"Available only on orders sent directly to Superintendent of D ocum ents.

N am e
O rg a n iz a tio n
(if a p p l i c a b l e ) ____________________________________________________________________________________________
S tre e t a d d re ss
C ity, State,
ZIP C od e___________________________ ________________________________
U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE : 1583

0 -3 8 1 -6 08

(4 2 3 2 )

[Bureau of Labor Statistics
Regional Offices

Region i
1603 JFK Federal Building
Government Center
Boston, Mass. 02203
Phone: (617) 223-6761

Region IV
1371 Peachtree Street, N.E.
Atlanta, Ga. 30367
Phone: (404) 881-4418

Regions Vli and V
SSl
911 Walnut Street
Kansas City, Mo. 64106
Phone: (816) 374-2481

Region II
Suite 3400
1515 Broadway
New York, N.Y. 10036
Phone: (212) 944-3121

Region V
9th Floor
Federal Office Building
230 S. Dearborn Street
Chicago, III. 60604
Phone: (312) 353-1880

Regions IX and X
450 Golden Gate Avenue
Box 36017
San Francisco, Calif. 94102
Phone: (415) 556-4678

Region ill
3535 Market Street
P.O. Box 13309
Philadelphia, Pa. 19101
Phone: (215) 596-1154

Region VI
Second Floor
555 Griffin Square Building
Dallas, Tex. 75202
Phone: (214) 767-6971