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Bargaining Calendar

1981
U.S. Department of Labor
Bureau of Labor Statistics
March 1982
Bulletin 2127




&

■

Bargaining Calendar
liii
U.S. Department of Labor
Raymond J. Donovan, Secretary
Bureau of Labor Statistics
Janet L. Norwood, Commissioner
March 1982
Bulletin 2127




For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office
Washington, D.C. 20402 - Price $4.50




F r@ f® e ©

The Bureau of Labor Statistics has assembled a varie­
ty of information on anticipated union contract ad­
justments in 1982. As in previous years, the informa­
tion—identified by company and union—includes
major situations in which contracts expire, deferred
wage increases come due, escalator clauses are reviewed,
and contracts are reopened.
This bulletin combines articles that appeared in the
December 1981 and January 1982 issues of the Monthly
Labor Review (with minor revisions), information from
the Bureau’s file of major agreements (those covering
1,000 workers or more) expiring in 1982, and additional
information on bargaining situations compiled from
published sources. Together, the data represent virtually
all major private industry agreements scheduled to ex­
pire in 1982.
Tables I through 7 summarize data on contract ex­
pirations, reopeners, and deferred wage increases by in­
dustry, month, and other characteristics. Tables 8
through 11 list agreements on file with the Bureau and




additional situations (as explained in appendix C) by
month by industry. Table 12 lists agreement reopenings
by month.
Users should refer to appendix A for a list of common
abbreviations; to appendix B for identification of codes
used in the tables; and to appendix C for a technical
note on tables 1,2, and 8 through 11.
This bulletin was prepared in the Division of
Developments in Labor-Management Relations by
Mary Anne Andrews, Douglas LeRoy, and David
Schlein, assisted by Jane Greene. Computer program­
ming and tabulation of data were developed by the Office
of Statistical Operations.
Agreements on file with the Bureau’s Division of
Developments in Labor-Management Relations are
(with few exceptions) open to public inspection.
Material in this publication is in the public domain and
may, with appropriate credit, be reproduced without
permission.

Contents

Page

Bargaining calendar in 1982..............................................................................................................
Petroleum re fin in g ...................................................................................................................
Trucking.........................................................................................................................................
R u b b e r...........................................................................................................
Electrical machinery, equipment, and supplies........................................................................
Meat products industry.................................................................................
Automobiles .............................................................................................................................
Scheduled wage increases and cost-of-living provisions in 1982 ..................................................
Deferred wage increases............................................................................................................
Cost-of-living adjustments...............................................................
Adjustment form ula...............................................................................................
Timing, ‘‘caps ’’, and indexes...........................................................................................
Tables:
1. Calendar of major collective bargaining activity...............................................................
2. Major contract expiration and wage reopening dates, by industry...................................
3. Expiration, reopening, and wage adjustment provisions of selected collective
bargaining agreements.......................................................................................................
4. Workers receiving deferred wage increases in 1982, by major industry group
and size of increase .......................................................................................................
5. Prevalence of cost-of-living adjustment (cola ) clauses in major collective
bargaining agreements, October 1981..........................................................................
6. Workers receiving deferred increases in 1982 in bargaining units covering 1,000
workers or more, by month ..........................................................................................
7. Timing of 1982 cost-of-living reviews in major contracts, by year of contract
expiration and frequency of review ..............................................................................
8. Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or
more, by m o n th ...............
9. Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or
more, by industry...............................................................................................
10. Additional collective bargaining situations expiring in 1982 covering 1,000
workers or more, by month ..........................................................................................
11. Additional collective bargaining situations expiring in 1982 covering 1,000
workers or more, by industry........................................................................................
12. Selected agreements reopening in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by
m o n th .............................................................................................................................
Appendixes:
A. Common abbreviations.....................................................................................................
B. Identification of c o d e s.......................................................................................................
C. Explanatory note.................................................................................................................




IV

1
1
3
8
10
11
11
11
13
13

2
3
5
12
13
14
14
16
27
42
48
57

58
59
63

Bargaining Calsndar
in 1082

Collective bargaining in 1982 will be heavy, following a
year of light activity. About 3.6 million workers are
covered by major agreements expiring or reopening in
1982, compared with approximately 2.6 million in 1981.'
Except for the automobile and meat products indus­
tries, whose agreements expire in September, most talks
in key industries will occur before midsummer. Con­
tracts in petroleum refining expire in January; trucking
agreements terminate in March; contracts in rubber ex­
pire in April; and those in electrical products, in June
and July. Contracts in these six industries cover almost
I. 2 million workers. A notable change in the 1982
round of bargaining will probably be union attempts, in
some of these industries, to restore or retain previous
wage and benefit gains.
Attention will also focus on the construction indus­
try, where some 500,000 workers are covered by about
175 major agreements scheduled to expire or be re­
opened in 1982. In 1981, 225 major agreements, cover­
ing 700,000 workers, were renegotiated. Construction
employment in September 1981 was down slightly from
the level of a year earlier. After rising dramatically from
1979 levels, the unemployment rate in this industry has
remained about 16 percent since the end of 1980. The
industry has had slight declines in overall activity in the
last 2 years. The value of construction put in place de­
creased significantly in residential housing, whose work
force is substantially unorganized, but increased in the
more heavily organized commercial construction field.
Large wage increases may be proposed by unions in
areas where commercial construction activity continues
to be brisk. Average wage increases for the first three
quarters of 1981 were 13.9 percent for the first year and
II. 4 percent over the life of the agreement, compared to
11.5 percent and 9.3 percent for the total economy.
We do not know, of course, the economic conditions
that will exist at the time of the negotiations. But, as
the Nation entered the fourth quarter of 1981, the econ­
omy was sending out mixed signals. After a robust first
quarter, the economy slipped in the second and third
quarters. The Gross National Product increased 8.4 per­
cent in real terms in the first quarter, but declined 1.6
percent in the second quarter and rose only 0.6 percent
in the third quarter. Interest rates, although dropping
from recent record levels, have remained high. Employ­
ment displayed solid growth in the first half of the year,



1

but the expansion waned in the third quarter. The un­
employment rate, after being fairly stable in the first
half of 1981, dropped from 7.6 percent in June to 7 per­
cent in July, but began to increase in August and
reached 7.5 percent in September. The Consumer Price
Index ( c p i ), after slowing from a 9.6-percent annual
rate in the first quarter of 1981, to 7.4 percent in the
second quarter, increased to 13.5 percent in the third
quarter.
About 56 percent of the workers covered by agree­
ments with 1982 expirations or scheduled reopeners
have cost-of-living adjustment ( c o l a ) clauses. Although
there has not been a substantial increase in the preva­
lence of COLA provisions in major agreements in recent
years, concern about COLA clauses remains high. Be­
cause the majority of COLA provisions do not limit the
amount of the wage increase that can result, major con­
tracts that have such clauses and expire in 1982 have,
on the average, provided for a substantially larger total
wage increase over the life of the agreement than con­
tracts without COLA clauses. The following tabulation
shows the average annual wage change (in percent) of
the expiring contracts:
Negotiated
change
Contracts expiring in 1982 . .
With C OLA ........................
Without co la ................

5.9
4.7
7.4

Negotiated
. change
plus cola

8.1
8.8

—

Petroleum refining
Contracts covering 50,000 employees of the Nation’s
oil companies2 expire on January 8, 1982. The Oil,
Chemical and Atomic Workers Union ( o c a w ) repre­
sents the bulk of employees affected by negotiations.
The remainder are represented by the Operating Engi­
neers, Seafarers, Teamsters, and several local, inde­
pendent unions. Contract negotiations are conducted
locally by individual bargaining units, each of which

negotiates a separate agreement that historically follows
the lead of the first company to settle. Contracts in the
industry generally cover 2 years.
In the last round of negotiations in 1979, a pattern
for settlement in the industry was set when Gulf Oil
Corp., which set the pattern in the two previous con­
tract negotiations, and the OCAW agreed to a 2-year

contract on January 11, 1979. Afterwards, the OCAW
quickly negotiated similar accords with other major oil
companies. By the end of January, the union had settled
for all but 10,000 of the 60,000 employees it represented
at 100 petroleum refining and petrochemical companies.
The agreements generally provided for 73 cents-perhour wage increases in 1979, and 5-percent increases in
1980; increased company contributions to hospital in­
surance; and a January 1980 contract reopener for
wages, health benefits, and vacation provisions.
When the contract was reopened, an impasse oc­
curred, and the OCAW started a nationwide strike
against petroleum refining companies on January 8,
1980. Eleven weeks later, a settlement was reached with
Gulf that set the pattern for OCAW settlements with
other oil companies.3 However, the nationwide work
stoppage extended until early July, and became the
longest strike in the industry’s history. At its peak, the
strike involved refiners processing about 70 percent of
the Nation’s petroleum needs, but the companies’

Table 1.

white-collar employees continued to maintain operations
by working extended schedules.
Although the dispute began over the contract re­
opener issues, the settlements extended the existing con­
tracts for an additional year (to 1982). The agreements
provided for an immediate wage increase of 52 cents per
hour, plus a 5-percent increase already scheduled for
1980; a 10.5-percent increase in 1981; increased compa­
ny contributions to health insurance coverage; establish­
ment of dental plans; and improved vacations for long­
term employees.
The current negotiations are scheduled to begin in
November 1981. Eight major demands have been set by
OCAW’s National Oil Bargaining Policy Committee and
have been accepted by the rank-and-file. Reportedly,
guarantees against layoffs and plant closings head the
list of demands. Other proposals include employer con­
tributions to a supplemental pension plan; elimination
of employee payments to health plans; a 2-year agree­
ment; “substantial” wage increases; an 11th holiday;

Calendar of major collective bargaining activity

[Workers in thousands]
Contract expirations1

Scheduled wage reopenings

Year and month

Principal industry and activity
Number

Workers covered

Number

Workers covered

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

1,900

8,987.9

30

115.1

24

78.3

Total 1982 ........................................

620

3,579.2

January........................................................
February ......................................................
March ..........................................................
April ............................................................
M a y ...............................................................
June ............................................................

41
17
44
98
124
99

95.3
33.9
557.0
331.6
549.5
454.0

3
—
5
7
2
1

4.9
—
15.4
21.7
7.7
3.7

J u ly ...............................................................
August..........................................................
September...................................................

53
36
40

180.9
135.0
1,004.8

2
1
—

13.9
2.3
—

O ctober........................................................
November ...................................................
December ...................................................

26
27
15

59.6
117.3
60.2

1
1
1

1.4
1.1
6.2

Total 1983 ........................................

725

3,264.3

5

11.8

January........................................................
February ......................................................
March ..........................................................
April ............................................................
M a y...............................................................
June ............................................................
J u ly ...............................................................
August..........................................................
September...................................................
O ctober........................................................
November ....................................................
December ...................................................

31
38
70
104
96
114
39
98
52
42
16
25

73.8
144.8
211.8
279.5
364.1
478.0
100.1
1,152.9
174.6
175.6
31.6
77.4

—
1
—
—
1
3
—
—
—
—
—
—

—
1.8
—
—
4.3
5.7
—
—
—
—

Total 1984 ........................................

266

972.0

1

25.0

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

233
33
9
280

654.7
317.3
47.9
1,124.5

1
—
—

25.0
—
—
—

Trucking
Construction, rubber
Construction, apparel
Electrical equipment, food and kindred products,
construction
Electrical equipment
Food production (meatpacking)
Automotive, farm and construction equipment,
and apparel

Tobacco
Glass, construction
Construction
Aluminum, lumber, and construction
Construction, copper
Steel, telephone
Longshoring (East and Gulf Coasts)
Aerospace

—

—

Construction, metal containers
Bituminous coal

fully gathered.

1Twelve agreements covering 40,000 workers are excluded because they have no fixed ex­
piration or reopening date.
2These include 103 major agreements, covering 273,000 workers, which are due to expire
between October 1 and December 31, 1981; and 177 agreements, covering 853,000 workers,
which expired prior to October 1, but for which necessary information had not been




Petroleum refineries

Note: Only bargaining units in the private nonagricultural economy affecting 1,000 workers
or more are considered for this table. Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not
equal totals.

2

negotiations since the passage of the Motor Carrier Act
of 19804 and the election of the Teamsters’ new presi­
dent, Roy Williams.5
Coupled with approximately 30 local and area sup­
plemental agreements, the Master Freight Agreement
regulates the terms and conditions of employment of
most unionized drivers and warehouse workers in the
industry. Wage increases, cost-of-living adjustments, in­
creases in employer contributions to benefit plans, as
well as most other economic benefits and certain work­
ing rules are determined in national negotiations. Actu­
al wage rates, most working rules, and allocations to

improved vacations; and “no retrogression in previous
terms and conditions.”
Trucking
In November, the International Brotherhood of
Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of
America (iBT, Ind.) will begin negotiating its 3-year Na­
tional Master Freight Agreement, which covers approxi­
mately 300,000 truck drivers and warehouse workers
and expires on March 31, 1982. Employers will be rep­
resented by Trucking Management, Inc. ( t m i ), the in­
dustry’s main bargaining agent. These will be the first
Table 2.

Major contract expiration and wage reopening dates, by industry

. [Workers in thousands]
Total

Industry

Year of contract termination1

Workers
covered

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

1,900

Manufacturing .............
Food and kindred products . . .
Tobacco manufacturing...........
Textile mill products ...............
Apparel and other finished
products...............................
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.................................
Leather and leather products ..
Stone, clay, glass, and concrete
products...............................
Primary metals industries . . . .
Fabricated metal products . . . .
Machinery, except electrical ..
Electrical machinery, equipment,
and supplies........................
Transportation equipment . . . .
Instruments and related
products...............................
Miscellaneous manufacturing
industries .............................
Nonmanufacturing . . . .
Mining, crude petroleum and
natural gas production.........
Construction.............................
Transportation, except railroads
and trucking ........................
Railroads.................................
Trucking .................................
Communications......................
Utilities, gas and e le c tric .........
Wholesale tra d e ......................
Retail trade, except restaurants
Restaurants.............................
Finance, insurance, and real
estate...................................
Services, except hotels and
health services ....................
Hotels ......................................
Health services ......................

1983

1982
Contracts

1984

1985 or later

Con­
tracts

Workers
covered

Con­
tracts

Workers
covered

Con­
tracts

Workers
covered

Con­
tracts

8,987.9

620

3,579.2

725

3,264.3

266

972.0

9

896
100
8
18

3,897.6
306.1
23.4
47.1

279
33
1
7

2,094.1
161.4
1.1
15.2

358
34
7
5

1,222.6
73.5
22.3
19.5

118
10
—
2

245.7
15.9
—
7.5

5
1
—

52

475.1

42

446.4

3

9.0

2

7.4

15
15
63

66.2
22.7
90.6

2
8
18

4.3
14.0
22.3

11
4
26

59.3
5.8
43.8

2
3
12

2.6
2.9
16.8

—
—

—
—

30
31

63.7
60.5

6
7

13.8
11.8

8
12

14.4
22.1

4
4

12.1
9.5

1
—

19

37.8

16

30.8

1

1.5

_

—

—

—

—
14.7

—
—

—
—

—
1
1
1

—
.9
1.3
1.8

—

15
14

82.9
34.5

12
2

78.5
12.0

3
5

4.4
6.0

—
5

36
113
55
85

86.9
483.0
102.5
271.5

4
12
11
22

6.9
17.7
20.8
142.4

18
79
18
37

56.2
405.5
30.9
85.9

10
11
10
14

16.6
14.2
18.0
22.4

100
103

439.9
1,150.8

41
25

255.0
811.3

40
41

147.8
202.4

11
14

15.3
65.3

Workers
covered

1983 or
later

1982

Con­
tracts

Workers
covered

Con­
tracts

47.9

280

1,124.5

24

78.3

5

11.8

16.3
8.0
—

136
22
—
4

318.9
47.2
—
4.9

6
—
—
2

18.1
—
—
7.5

1
—
—

2.8
—
—

5

12.3
—
—
7.6

1
—

1.5

—

—

—

—
—

—

—
—
7

4.4
—

11
8

18.9
17.1

—
—

—
1

—
2.8

2

5.4

_

—
2

—
1.8

4
10
15
11

—

Workers
covered

Con­
tracts

Workers
covered

_
—

—

_

1
1

1.1
1.8

—

—

_

—

7.1
44.6
31.5
19.0

—
—
—

—
—
—

—
—
—

—
—
—

8
23

21.8
71.8

1
—

6.2

~

—

13

32.1

4

14.8

4

8.7

2

2.3

_
—

—

3

6.4

_

—

_

—

11

20.3

6

13.4

2

3.4

2

2.3

—

—

1

1.2

—

—.

—

—

1,004

5,090.3

341

1,485.1

367

2,041.6

148

726.4

4

31.6

144

805.6

18

60.2

4

9.0

16
476

200.6
1,540.2

1
169

1.3
452.5

12
186

36.6
751.9

2
96

162.0
272.0

—
2

—
4.3

1
23

.7
59.5

—
10

—
35.7

—
3

—
4.7

66
18
19
46
75
22
145
22

289.9
398.5
473.9
756.0
210.0
44.2
652.0
68.3

13
—
17
7
33
10
50
8

54.6
—
470.3
21.6
102.1
24.4
180.2
19.8

22
—
2
30
19
7
58
8

87.5
—
3.6
709.1
60.4
10.5
265.0
32.4

7
—
—
5
6
1
18
1

42.4
—
—
17.4
14.7
2.8
154.5
3.0

—
—
—
—
—
—
—
1

—
—
—
—
—
—
—
2.3

24
18
—
4
17
4
19
4

105.4
398.5
—
7.8
32.8
6.5
52.3
10.8

—
—
—
—
4
—
2

—
—
—
1
—
—
—
—

—
—
—
4.3
—
—
—

_

—
—
—
—
14.4
—
5.9
—

19

104.9

5

40.4

3

20.4

1

2.5

10

41.6

—

_

1
1

1.0
3.2

—
—

—
—

—

—

42
19
19

128.8
126.9
96.0

15
4
9

49.8
8.8
59.3

11
4
5

7
4
—

34.5
21.1
8.7

'Twelve agreements covering 40,000 workers are excluded because they have no fixed
expiration or reopening date.
2These include 103 major agreements, covering 273,000 workers, which were due to expire
between October 1 and December 31, 1981; and 177 agreements, covering 853,000 workers,
which expired prior to October 1, but for which necessary information had not been




Scheduled wage reopening
Unknown or
' in negotiation2

13.5
41.5

—
1
“

—
25.0
—

9
6
5

30.9
30.5
28.1

fully gathered.
Note: Only bargaining units in the private nonagricultural economy affecting 1,000 workers
or more are considered for this table. Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not
equal totals.

3

to avoid potential job losses. In return, the union (ac­
cording to press reports) will probably be asking for
concessions relating to job security, subcontracting, and
cost-of-living raises, which would be used to maintain
health, welfare, and pension benefits. Management has
expressed interest in negotiating more flexible work
rules (such as those relating to starting and quitting
times and weekend work) and reduced pension and
health benefits.

the health and welfare funds are set in the supplemental
agreements, as are addenda which provide local excep­
tions to economic benefits and working rules.
Some drivers in the Midwest, particularly in the Chi­
cago area, do not participate in national bargaining.
Seven Teamster locals and the Chicago Truck Drivers,
Helpers and Warehouse Workers Union (Ind.) represent
approximately 35,000 workers in bargaining with sever­
al employer associations. Since 1973, the Chicago area
agreements have terminated concurrently with the Mas­
ter Freight Agreement.
The last round of negotiations (in 1979) was influ­
enced by Federal wage guidelines, which sought to hold
average annual wage and benefit increases to 7 percent.
The Carter Administration threatened speedy deregula­
tion of the industry if a settlement violated these guide­
lines, and the Interstate Commerce Commission, which
regulates rates in the industry, threatened not to ap­
prove trucking rates that would incorporate wage in­
creases in excess of the guidelines. After a 10-day work
stoppage, which started as a selective strike against ap­
proximately 73 companies and quickly evolved into a
national lockout conducted by TMI, a settlement was
reached.6 This was the longest work stoppage in 15
years of national bargaining in the trucking industry.
The 3-year agreement provided hourly wage or
equivalent mileage increases of 80 cents in 1979, and 35
cents each in 1980 and 1981; semiannual COLA of 1 cent
per hour for each 0.3-point movement in the CPI; in­
creased employer contributions to the pension, and
health and welfare funds; and improvements in paid
holidays, paid funeral and jury duty leave, meal and
lodging allowances, and sick leave.
In the fall of 1980, TMI attempted to reopen the
agreement to delay or eliminate c o l a increases. Deregu­
lation was blamed, at least in part, for hardship in the
industry. The Teamsters refused to bargain nationwide,
but granted concessions, with employee approval, to in­
dividual companies in hardship cases. Such concessions
included flexible starting times, waiving of seniority pay
guarantees, and forgoing sick pay and vacations that ex­
ceed 3 weeks.
Information on 1982 demands is not yet available.
However, negotiations undoubtedly will be influenced
by the effects of deregulation and the state of the econo­
my. Trucking tonnage has been static since deregulation
began. There have also been a number of consolidations
and bankruptcies in recent years, as marginal companies
have been hit hard by recession and competition from
nonunionized trucking companies. Because of this (ac­
cording to press reports) the Teamsters may be willing
to accept a smaller economic package and may attempt
to negotiate a separate contract with short-haul truck­
ing companies, which have been most adversely affected
by competition from nonunionized trucking companies,




Rubber
Major labor contracts between the United Rubber,
Cork, Linoleum and Plastic Workers of America (Rub­
ber Workers) and the “Big Four” tiremakers— Good­
year Tire and Rubber Co.; Firestone Tire and Rubber
Co.; B. F. Goodrich Co.; and Uniroyal, Inc.— covering
nearly 55,000 workers, are up for renewal on April 20,
1982. Contracts with several smaller tire companies ex­
pire throughout the year.7 In the past, bargaining has
been conducted separately with each company. The
Rubber Workers has selected a “target” from among
the “Big Four” for full-scale bargaining. Once an ac­
cord has been reached, it has been used as a pattern for
subsequent settlements with companies throughout the
industry. Uniroyal was selected as the “target” in 1979;
Goodyear, in 1976.
In the last round of bargaining, the Rubber Workers
first attempted to reach an agreement with Uniroyal,
but an impasse occurred and a strike began on May 9,
1979. The union then turned its attention to Goodrich.
After 3 days of marathon negotiations, Goodrich and
the union signed a contract that also set the pattern for
employees at Uniroyal and Firestone.8The 3-year agree­
ments provided 72 cents per hour wage increases spread
over the life of the contract, plus an additional 40 cents
for skilled trades workers; quarterly COLA adjustments
set at 1 cent per hour for each 0.3-point movement in
the CPI in the first year, and 1 cent for each 0.26-point
movement in the second and third years; improved holi­
day, life insurance, medical, and pension benefits; 6
months’ advance notice of plant closings, with the
union having the right to bargain on such decisions;
and company pledges to remain neutral in the union’s
efforts to organize new tire plants. The union continued
negotiations with Goodyear, the last major holdout,
and reached agreement in July, 1 day before a strike
deadline. The settlement generally followed the pattern
set by Goodrich, Uniroyal, and Firestone. Goodyear,
however, refused to sign a neutrality pledge, but did es­
tablish an optical insurance plan.
The domestic tire and rubber industry, like several
other strategic manufacturing industries, has had prob­
lems in recent years. Sales have lagged over the last 3
years as a result of increased use of longer-wearing radi­
al tires, the auto industry slump, rising gasoline prices,

4

Table 3.

Expiration, reopening, and wage adjustment provisions of selected collective bargaining agreements

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

Industry and employer1

Employees
covered

Union2

Contract term
and reopening
provisions 3

1982 provisions for
automatic cost-ofliving review 4

1982 provisions for
deferred
wage increases5

Manufacturing
20

21

Food and kindred products:
California Processors, Inc.
Frozen Food Employers Association
(California)6
George A. Hormel and Co.
John Morrell & Co.
Sugar Cos. Negotiating Committee
(Hawaii)6
Wilson Foods Corp.
Tobacco manufacturers:
Phillip Morris, U.S.A. (Richmond, Va.)

Teamsters (Ind.)
Teamsters (Ind.)

60,000
8,000

July 1,1979 to July 1,1982
July 1, 1979 to June 30,1982

Food and Commercial Workers
Food and Commercial Workers
Longshoremen and
Warehousemen (Ind.)
Food and Commercial Workers

7,000
6,500
9,000

Sept. 1, 1979 to Aug. 31, 1982
Sept. 1, 1979 to Sept. 1, 1982
Feb. 1, 1980 to Jan. 31, 1983

January and July
January and July

6,000

Sept. 1, 1979 to Aug. 31, 1982

May

Bakery, Confectionery and Tobacco
Workers

7,200

Feb. 1,1980 to Jan. 31,1983

January, thereafter
quarterly

Feb. 1:

10 percent

Feb. 1:

43 cents
'

22

23

24

26

30

32

33

Textile mill products:
Dan River, Inc. (Danville, Va.)
Fieldcrest Mills, Inc. (Virginia and North
Carolina)
Apparel and other finished products:
Clothing Manufacturers Association of U.S.A.
Cotton Garment Manufacturers6
Fashion Apparel Manufacturers Association
Greater Blouse, Skirt and Undergarment
Association, Inc.
Industrial Association of Juvenile Apparel
Manufacturers, Inc. (Greater New York
City)
New York Coat and Suit Association
Lumber and wood products, except furniture:
Western States Wood Products Employers
Association (Boise-Cascade Corp., Champi­
on International Co., Crown Zellerbach
Corp., Georgia-Pacific Corp., International
Paper Co., ITT-Rayonier Inc., Louisiana-Pa­
cific Corp., Publishers Paper Co., Simpson
Timber Co., and Weyerhauser Co.)
Paper and allied products:
International Paper Co., Southern Kraft
Division

United Textile Workers
Clothing and Textile Workers

7,000
5,000

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

Clothing and Textile Workers
Clothing and Textile Workers
Ladies Garment Workers
Ladies Garment Workers

56,000
60,000
8,000
18,000

Oct. 1,1980 to Mar. 31,1982
Sept. 1,1979 to Aug. 31,1982
June 1,1979 to May 31,1982
June 1,1979 to May 31,1982

Ladies Garment Workers

6,000

June 1,1979 to May 30,1982

Ladies Garment Workers

20,000

May 1,1979 to May 31,1982

Woodworkers; Lumber Production and
Industrial Workers (Ind.)

37,000

June 1,1980 to May 31,1983

June 1:

70 cents

Paperworkers and Electrical Workers
(IBEW)

8,000

June 1,1979 to May 31,1983

June 1:

4 percent to
nearest 1/2
cent

January and March

Rubber and miscellaneous plastic products:
B.F. Goodrich Co.
Firestone Tire and Rubber Co.
General Motors Corp., Inland Manufacturing
Division (Dayton, Ohio)
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.
Uniroyal, Inc.

Rubber Workers
Rubber Workers
Rubber Workers

9,300
15,300
6,900

Apr. 21,1979 to Apr. 20,1982
January and April
Apr. 20, 1979 to Apr. 19, 1982
January and April
Sept. 15, 1979 to Sept. 14, 1982 March and June

Rubber Workers
Rubber Workers

22,300
8,300

Apr. 21,1979 to Apr. 20,1982
June 18, 1979 to Apr. 19, 1982

January and April

Stone, clay, and glass products:
Brockway Glass Co., Inc.
Owens-Illinois, Inc.

Glass Bottle Blowers
Glass Bottle Blowers

7,150
12,400

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

April
April

Apr. 1:
Apr. 1:

55 cents
55 cents

215,200

Aug. 1, 1980 to Aug. 1, 1983

February, thereafter
quarterly

Aug. 1:

15-47 cents

March, thereafter
quarterly
March, thereafter
quarterly
February, thereafter
quarterly

Primary metal industries:6
8 major basic steel companies:
Allegheny Ludlum Steel Corp.; Armco Inc.;
Bethlehem Steel Corp.; Inland Steel Co.;
Jones and Laughlin Steel Corp.; National
Steel Corp.; Republic Steel Corp.; United
States Steel Corp.
Aluminum Co. of America

Steelworkers

Aluminum Workers

Aluminum Co. of America
Armco Steel Corp. (Middletown, Ohio)

9,150

Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corp.
Kaiser Steel Corp., Steel Manufacturing
Division (Fontana, Calif.)
National Steel Corp., Weirton Steel Division
(Ohio and West Virginia)
Reynolds Metals Co.
United States Steel Corp., salaried
employees

June 1,1980 to May 31,1983

5,550

Independent Steelworkers Union (Ind.)

Aug. 1, 1980 to July 31, 1983

10,000

Aug. 1, 1980 to Aug. 1,1983

Steelworkers

8,100

June 2,1980 to May 31,1983

Steelworkers

5,200

Aug. 1, 1980 to Aug. 1, 1983

See footnotes at end of table.




Aug. 1,1980 to July 31,1983

11,000

Steelworkers

June 1,1980 to May 31,1983

6,000

Armco Employees
Independent
Federation (Ind.)
Steelworkers

June 1,1980 to May 31, 1983

10,000

Steelworkers

5

March, thereafter
quarterly
February, thereafter
quarterly
February, thereafter
quarterly
March, thereafter
quarterly
February, thereafter
quarterly

June 7:

15-28 cents

June 7:

15-28 cents

Aug. 1:

15-47 cents

June 7:

15 cents

Aug. 1:

15-47 cents

Aug. 1:

25 cents

June 7:

15 cents

Aug. 1:

$12-36
bi-weekly

Table 3.

Continued— Expiration, reopening, and wage adjustment provisions of selected collective bargaining agreements

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

34

Industry and employer1

Employees
covered

Union2

Contract term
and reopening
provisions3

1982 provisions for
automatic cost-ofliving review4

1982 provisions for
deferred
wage increases5

11,000

Feb. 16,1981 to Feb. 19,1984

February

Feb. 15:

Machinery, except electrical:
Briggs and Stratton Corp. (Milwaukee, Wis.)
Caterpillar Tractor Co.

Allied Industrial Workers
Auto Workers

7,900
40,000

Aug. 1,1980 to July 31,1983
Oct. 1, 1979 to Sept. 30,1982

Auto Workers

31,000

Oct. 20, 1979 to Sept. 30,1982

International Harvester Co.

Auto Workers

35,000

Oct. 1,1979 to Sept. 30,1982

Steelworkers

7,800

July 20,1980 to Aug. 29,1983

February
March, thereafter
quarterly
March, thereafter
quarterly
March, thereafter
quarterly
January, thereafter
quarterly

Aug. 1:

Timken Co. (Columbus and Wooster, Ohio)

36

Steelworkers

Deere and Co. (Illinois and Iowa)

35

Fabricated metal products:
Continental Group, Inc.

Electrical machinery, equipment and supplies:
General Electric Co.
General Electric Co.
General Motors Corp. (New Jersey, New York
and Ohio)
GTE Sylvania, Inc.6
Hughes Aircraft Co. (California)
RCA Corp.
Rockwell International Corp. (Cedar Rapids,
Iowa)6
Western Electric Co. Inc.
Westinghouse Electric Corp.
Westinghouse Electric Corp.
Westinghouse Electric Corp.

371

Electrical Workers (UE, Ind.)
Electrical Workers (IUE)
Electrical Workers (IUE)

16,400
70,000
23,450

Multi AFL-CIO unions and Teamsters
(Ind.)
Carpenters
Electrical Workers (IBEW)
Electrical Workers (IBEW)
Communications Workers
Electrical Workers (UE, Ind.)
Electrical Workers (IUE)
Federation of Westinghouse
Independent Salaried Unions (Ind.)

July 1,1979 to June 27, 1982
July 1,1979 to June 27, 1982
Sept. 18,1979 to Sept. 14,1982

Dec. 1,1979 to Dec. 1,1982
Dec. 1,1979 to Dec. 1,1982
Oct. 1,1980 to Feb. 28,1983

22,650
5,500
18,000
11,250

Aug. 10, 1980 to Aug. 6, 1983
Sept. 4,1979 to July 11,1982
July 16,1979 to July 11,1982
July 16,1979 to July 26,1982

June and September
June
January and March,
thereafter quarterly
August
January
January
January

9,000

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

Auto Workers

8,300

Sept. 17,1980 to Sept. 16,1983

American Motors Corp., Jeep Corp. (Ohio)
Budd Co. (P&M)

Auto Workers
Auto Workers

5,750
9,000

Jan. 1,1980 to Jan 31,1983
Feb. 2,1980 to Mar. 4,1983

Chrysler Corp., Engineering Dept.
Chrysler Corp. (P&M)

Auto Workers
Auto Workers

5,400
64,000

Dana Corp.

Auto Workers

7,500

Ford Motor Corp.
General Motors Corp.
Mack Truck, Inc.

372

Auto Workers
Auto Workers
Auto Workers

158,000
400,000
6,250

Transportation equipment — aircraft:
Bendix Corp.
Lockheed Aircraft Corp., Lockheed-California
Division
McDonnell Douglas Corp. (California and
Oklahoma)
McDonnell-Douglas Corp. (St. Louis, Mo.)6
United Technologies Corp., Pratt Whitney
Aircraft Division (Connecticut)

373

38

39

Transportation equipment — shipbuilding:
General Dynamics Corp., Electric Boat
Division (Groton, Conn.)
Litton Systems, Inc., Ingalls Shipbuilding
Division (Pascagoula, Miss.)
Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Co.
(Virginia)
Pacific Coast Shipbuilding and Ship Repair
Firms
Professional, scientific and controlling
instruments; photographic and optical goods;
watches and clocks:
Honeywell, Inc. (Minneapolis and St. Paul,
Minn.)
Miscellaneous manufacturing:
National Association of Doll Manufacturers,
Inc. and Stuffed Toy Manufacturers
Association, Inc. (New York, N.Y.)

6,100

Apr. 30, 1980 to Apr. 29, 1983

14,000

Oct. 20, 1980 to Oct. 1,1983

Auto Workers

10,000

Oct. 17, 1980 to Oct. 9,1983

9,000
9,700

Machinists
Machinists

Metal Trades Council and Teamsters
(Ind.)
Metal Trades Council and Teamsters
(Ind.)
Steelworkers

6,400

May 11,1981 to May 13,1984
Nov. 28, 1978 to Nov. 28,1982

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

Feb. 1,1981 to Jan. 29,1984

35,000

July 1,1980 to June 29,1983

Teamsters (Ind.)

8,000

Feb. 1,1980 to Jan. 31,1982

Novelty and Production Workers

7,500

July 1,1979 to June 30, 1982

6

3 percent

Aug. 8:

3 percent

Sept. 20: 25-41 cents
Feb. 1: 3 percent
Apr. 27: 21-40 cents

May 3:

3 percent

Oct. 2: $1.38 per hour

May 5:

3 percent

January

Mar. 31,1980 to Oct. 31, 1983

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

Mar. 1:

July 1,1979 to June 30,1982

17,000

See footnotes at end of table.




12,750

March, thereafter
quarterly

March, thereafter
quarterly
Oct. 25, 1979 to Sept. 14, 1982 March and June
Sept. 17, 1979 to Sept. 14, 1982 March, thereafter
quarterly
Dec. 3, 1979 to Dec. 5, 1982
March, thereafter
quarterly
Oct. 4,1979 to Sept. 14,1982
March and June
Sept. 17,1979 to Sept. 14,1982 March and June
March, thereafter
Oct. 22, 1979 to Oct. 20,1982
quarterly

Machinists

Auto Workers

15-38 cents

March

13,000
13,000
5,200

8 percent

March and June

Oct. 6,1979 to Oct. 5,1982

Aug. 22:

15-27 cents

February, thereafter
quarterly

Mar. 1: 10 cents
Oct. 4: 50 cents
July 1: 40 cents

Table 3.

Continued — Expiration, reopening, and wage adjustment provisions of selected collective bargaining agreements

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

Industry and employer1

Employees
covered

Union2

Contract term
and reopening
provisions3

1982 provisions for
automatic cost-ofliving review4

1982 provisions for
deferred
wage increases5

Nonmanufacturing
12

44

Mine Workers (Ind.)

12,000

Bituminous Coal Operators Association5
42

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

Mine Workers (Ind.)

160,000

Trucking and warehousing:
Local Cartage, for Hire, and Private carriers
agreement (Chicago, III.)
National Master Freight agreements and
supplements:6
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
Standard Freightship Agreement, Unlicensed
personnel
Standard Tanker Agreement, Unlicensed
personnel
Steamship Trade Association of Baltimore,
Inc., Port of Baltimore

45

48

Airlines:6
United Airlines, Inc., flight attendants
Communications:
American Telephone and Telegraph Co., Long
lines dept.
Bell Telephone Co. of Pennsylvania

June 7,1981 to Sept. 30,1984
July 1,1981 to Oct. 1,1984

7,700

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

June:

50 cents

June:

50 cents

December

June 16:

Apr. 1,1979 to Mar. 31,1982

200,000
100,000
73,000

Chicago Truck Drivers (Ind.)

June, thereafter
quarterly
June

Apr. 1,1979 to Mar. 31,1982
Apr. 1,1979 to Mar. 31,1982
May 1,1979 to Apr. 30,1982

Masters, Mates and Pilots
Maritime Union

5,000
15,000

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

Longshoremen (ILA)

10,200

Oct. 1, 1980 to Sept. 30, 1983

Longshoremen and Warehousemen
(Ind.)
Seafarers

11,000

July 1,1981 to July 1,1984

10,750

June 16,1981 to June 15,1984

December

Seafarers

10,750

June 16,1981 to June 15,1984

December

7.5 percent

Oct. 1:

$1.20 per
hour
July 3: $1,462
average
June 16: 7.5 percent
June 16:

7.5 percent

Longshoremen (ILA)

5,000

Oct. 1,1980 to Sept. 30,1983

Oct. 1:

$1.20 per
hour

Air Line Pilots

9,100

Apr. 1,1980 to Mar. 31,1982

Communications Workers

23,300

Aug. 10,1980 to Aug. 6,1983

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

11,950

Aug. 10, 1980 to Aug. 6, 1983

August

Aug. 8:

3 percent

August

Aug. 8:

3 percent

20,500
5,500

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

August

Mar.: 3 percent
Aug. 8: 3 percent

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.

Aug. 10, 1980 to Aug. 6, 1983

August

Aug. 8:

3 percent

Aug. 10, 1980 to Aug. 6, 1983
Aug. 10, 1980 to Aug. 6,1983

August
August

Aug. 8:
Aug. 8:

Electrical Workers (IBEW)

16,000

Aug. 10,1980 to Aug. 6,1983

May

Aug. 8:

New England Telephone Co.
New Jersey Bell Telephone Co.

Electrical Workers (IBEW)
Electrical Workers (IBEW)

6,300
11,450

Aug. 10, 1980 to Aug. 6, 1983
Aug. 10, 1980 to Aug. 6, 1983

May
August

Aug. 8:
Aug. 8:

Southwestern Bell Telephone Co.
Western Electric Co., Inc.
Western Electric Co., Inc.

Communications Workers
Communications Workers
Communications Workers

88,000
14,750
14,000

Aug. 10, 1980 to Aug. 6, 1983
Aug. 10,1980 to Aug. 6,1983
Aug. 10, 1980 to Aug. 6, 1983

August
August
August

Aug. 8:
Aug. 8:
Aug. 8:

3 percent
50 cents to
$14.00
$1.43 to
$2.45
50 cents
50 cents to
$14.00
weekly
50 cents
18-19 cents
2-38 cents
per hour

Western Union Telegraph Co.
Wisconsin Telephone Co.

53

13,800
20,000
29,200

New England Telephone and Telegraph Co.

49

Electrical Workers (IBEW)
Communications Workers
Communications Workers

Telegraph Workers
Communications Workers

9,500
6,250

July 28, 1979 to July 27, 1982
Aug. 10,1980 to Aug. 6, 1983

August

Aug. 8:

Electrical Workers (IBEW)
Electrical Workers (IBEW)

7,500
13,850

June 1, 1980 to May 31,1982
Jan. 1,1980 to Dec. 30,1982

7,000

Feb. 1, 1980 to Jan. 30,1982

6,000

July 1,1979 to June 30,1982

Food and Commercial Workers

10,000

Aug. 8: 1979 to Sept. 7, 1982

Food and Commercial Workers
Food and Commercial Workers
Food and Commercial Workers

7,000
8,400
9,300

July 1, 1979 to June 26,1982
Sept. 1,1980 to Sept. 3,1983
May 26,1979 to May 5,1982

March

Food and Commerical Workers

6,500

Nov. 5, 1979 to Nov. 4, 1982

May

Electric, gas, and sanitary services:
Niagara Mohawk Power Corp. (New York)
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. (California)
Retail trade--general merchandise:
R. H. Macy and Co., Inc. (New York, N.Y.)
Woodward and Lothrop, Inc. (Maryland, D.C.
and Virginia)

54

Retail trade — food stores:
Chain and independent food stores (Illinois
and Indiana)6
Chicago area grocery stores (Illinois)
Cleveland Food Industries Committee (Ohio)
Denver retail grocers (Colorado)
Food Employers Council, Inc.
Retail meat industry and independent retail
operators (Los Angeles, Calif.)

Retail, Wholesale and Department
Store
Food and Commercial Workers

See footnotes at end of table.




7

Jan 1:

50 cents to
$13.00
weekly

3 percent

Feb. 7:

8 percent

Sept. 6:

40 cents

Table 3.

Continued — Expiration, reopening, and wage adjustment provisions of selected collective bargaining agreements

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

54

Industry and employer1

65

70

Contract term
and reopening
provisions3

1982 provisions for
automatic cost-of
living review4

1982 provisions for
deferred
wage increases5

Retail trade— food stores: (Continued)
Food Employers Labor Relations Association
of Northern California6
Food Industry Agreement (St. Louis, Mo.)
Food Market Agreement of Minneapolis
(Minnesota)
Jewel Cos., Inc., Jewel Food Division (Illinois
and Indiana)
Philadelphia Food Stores (Pennsylvania, New
Jersey and Delaware)
Retail Food Store Agreement (San Jose,
Calif.)
Stop and Shop Cos., Inc. (New England)

58

Employees
covered

Union2

Food and Commercial Workers

17.000

Mar. 5,1980 to Mar. 5,1983

Mar. 5:

Food and Commercial Workers
Food and Commercial Workers

8,500
7,200

May 6,1979 to May 7,1982
Mar. 3,1980 to Feb. 25,1983

Feb. 25:

14.000

United Retail Workers Union (Ind.)

58 cents

11 percent

Sept. 23,1979 to Sept. 18, 1982

Food and Commercial Workers

5.000

Mar. 9,1980 to Mar. 5,1983

September

Food and Commercial Workers

6,800

Jan. 1,1980 to Feb. 28,1983

February, thereafter
quarterly

Food and Commercial Workers

8.000

Feb. 11,1979 to Feb. 13,1982

Mar. 1:

45 cents

Retail trade — eating and drinking places:
Restaurant-Flotel Employers Council of
Southern California

Hotel and Restaurant Employees

10,000

Mar. 16, 1979 to Mar. 15,1983

Finance, insurance, and real estate:
Bronx Realty Advisory Board, Inc. (New York)
Building Managers Association of Chicago5
Realty Advisory Board of Labor Relations,
Inc., Apartment Buildings (New York, N.Y.)

Service Employees
Service Employees
Service Employees

11,000
12,500
20,000

Sept. 15, 1979 to Sept. 14,1982
Apr. 1,1980 to Mar. 31,1982
April 21, 1979 to April 20,1982

New York Hotel Trade Council

22,500

June 1,1978 to May 31,1985

June 1:

Hotel and Restaurant Employees
Hotel and Restaurant Employees

6,000
10,000

July 1,1980 to Aug. 14,1983
June 1,1977 to May 31,1982

Aug. 14:

$17.20-25.00
per week
8 percent

Hotel and Restaurant Employees

15,000

Apr. 2,1980 to Apr. 1,1984

Apr. 2:

35-70 cents

Actors

39,000

Feb. 7,1979 to Feb. 6,1982

Jan. 1:

15 percent

9,000

Apr. 1,1980 to Mar. 31,1982

Hotels, rooming houses, camps, and other
lodging places:
Hotel Association of New York City, Inc. (New
York)6
Hotel Employers Association of San Francisco
(California)
Hotel Industry (Hawaii)
Nevada Resort Association, Resort Hotels
(Las Vegas, Nev.)

78

Motion pictures:
Screen Actors Guild, Commercials Contract

80

Medical and other health services:
Kaiser-Permanente Medical Program of
Southern California (Los Angeles and
Orange Counties, Calif.)

Service Employees

1Geographical coverage of contracts is interstate unless specified.
2 Unions are affiliated with AFL-CIO, except where noted as independent (Ind.).
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 effec­
tive date of the changes becomes the new effective date of the agreement. For purposes of
this listing, the expiration is the formal termination date established by the agreement. In gener­
al, it is the earliest date on which termination of the contract could be effective, except for spe­
cial provisions for termination as in the case of disagreement arising out of wage reopening.
Many agreements provide for automatic renewal at the expiration date unless notice of termina-

tion 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 ource: Contracts on file with the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Oct. 1,1981. Where no con­
tracts are on file, table entries are based on newspaper accounts.

Electrical machinery, equipment, and supplies
Agreements covering about 250,000 workers are
scheduled to expire in the electrical machinery, equip­
ment, and supplies industry. Key negotiations occur at
General Electric Co. ( g e ) in June, covering 107,000 em­
ployees, and at Westinghouse Electric Corp. in July,
covering 50,500 employees. Other negotiations involving
large bargaining units in the industry in 1982 include
GM, 23,450 employees; Radio Corporation of America,
13,000; Hughes Aircraft Co., 13,000; General Telephone
and Electronics (Sylvania), 9,000; and Allen-Bradley
Co., 4,800.
As in the past, bargaining will be conducted at GE
and Westinghouse by the Coordinated Bargaining Com­
mittee of General Electric and Westinghouse Unions,
which now represents 13 labor organizations.1 Under
1
the committee agreement, each union negotiates a sepa­

and high interest rates. Also foreign competitors, such
as France’s Michelin Tire Co. and Japan’s Bridgestone
Tire Co., have steadily made headway in the U.S. tire
market.9
Since 1978, domestic tiremakers have slashed produc­
tion capacity by 23 percent, largely by permanently
closing 18 outmoded facilities. Since the last round of
negotiations, between 10,000 and 12,000 Rubber Work­
ers have lost their jobs because of plant closings and
40,000 have been temporarily laid off because of declin­
ing sales. Responding to these cuts, the union has
granted a number of wage-and-benefit and work-rule
concessions to forestall plant closings.
The union’s bargaining goals are still being formulat­
ed. However, job security, continuation of the cost-ofliving adjustment formula, and pension rules are ex­
pected to be key objectives.1
0




8

rate contract containing similar terms for each bar­
gaining unit. Contract negotiations usually start at GE.
In the past, the settlements at GE have influenced the
terms of subsequent accords in the industry.
Terms at some companies, however, will probably be
more like contracts in other industries than those in
electrical machinery. The agreement between GM and
the International Union of Electrical, Radio and Ma­
chine Workers ( i u e ) has much in common with auto
workers’ contracts. Similarly, the International Brother­
hood of Electrical Workers ( i b e w ) and the Communica­
tions Workers of America sometimes use telephone
industry settlements as their model.1
2
In the last contract negotiations, GE settled with the
IUE and the United Electrical, Radio, and Machine
Workers of America ( u e ) on July 2, 1979. The 3-year
contracts provided for 44.5 cents per hour wage in­
creases over the term of the contract; a 38 cent an hour
cost-of-living increase, plus future semiannual COLA ad­
justments of 1 cent per hour for each 0.2-point rise in
the CPI; a company-financed dental plan covering em­
ployees and their dependents; and improved sickness
and accident, medical, life insurance, and pension bene­
fits. By the end of the month, GE had also settled on
similar terms with the 11 other unions of the Coordi­
nated Bargaining Committee.
The Westinghouse settlements were similar to those
accepted at GE. The Federation of Westinghouse Inde­
pendent Salaried Unions settled first, on July 24, 1979.
The Federation agreed to change the fully employer-fi­
nanced pension plan to one that was partially paid for
by employees. Unlike the Federation, the three other
major unions struck on July 16, 1979, because of the
company’s demand that employees begin to make con­
tributions to the pension plans. The IBEW settled on
August 19, and the IUE and UE, on September 4, on the
same economic terms as those at GE. As a compromise
to reach agreement, Westinghouse dropped its proposal
for contributory pensions, and the unions accepted a
slight decrease in the pension benefits they had been de­
manding. The settlements also included improved job
protection provisions for workers adversely affected by
plant shutdowns, relocations, or production “cutbacks.”
The electrical products industry has problems that
could affect negotiations. Foreign competition has beset
it for some time. In some instances, foreign competitors,
such as Sanyo, Matsushita, and Sharp, have built plants
in the United States. Another problem is governmentmandated energy-efficiency standards for appliances,
which tend to increase manufacturing costs. In addition,
the general scaling-back of utility usage due to energy
conservation measures, and rising prices of electricity
and resultant curtailing of generating plant capacity
have reduced sales of heavy duty generators and trans­
mission equipment. The slump in the new housing mar­




ket, which accounts for about one-third of the unit sales
of major appliances in a normal year, has hurt demand
for major appliances. These problems have begun to
take their toll in layoffs because of sales declines. For
example, in October 1981, GE temporarily laid off all its
15,800 production workers at its Appliance Park facili­
ties in Louisville, Ky.
Negotiations between the Coordinated Bargaining
Committee and GE and Westinghouse were to begin in
November 1981. Although final union demands have
not been announced, union sources indicate that a ma­
jor demand in 1982 will include protection against au­
tomation and high technology (particularly the in­
troduction of robots and computers), wage increases,
and improved COLA benefits. Other likely proposals deal
with neutrality pledges, subcontracting, COLA and medi­
cal insurance plans for retirees, union security, and em­
ployee contributions to pension plans.
Meat products industry
Approximately 50,000 employees in the meat prod­
ucts industry are covered by agreements scheduled to
expire on August 31. All of the major old-line, union­
ized meatpacking firms— Armour and Co., George A.
Hormel and Co., Swift and Co., John Morrell and Co.,
and Wilson and Co.— as well as several smaller compa­
nies,1 will be involved in the negotiations. The United
3
Food and Commercial Workers International Union
( u f c w ) 14 represents about 90 percent of organized work­
ers in the industry. The remaining employees are repre­
sented by two independent unions—The National
Brotherhood of Packinghouse and Industrial Workers
and the Teamsters.
Contracts are negotiated with individual companies
either on a single plant or company-wide basis. Larger
packers, such as Armour, Morrell, Swift, and Wilson,
negotiate master agreements. One firm usually signs a
pattern-setting agreement, after which similar contracts
are negotiated by the others.1 Variations in contract
5
terms often occur because of differences in plant loca­
tions or company practices.
In the last round of negotiations, Morrell settled with
the u f c w in July 1979, more than a month in advance
of the August 31 expiration date. The 3-year contract
called for wage increases of 15 cents an hour in the first
year, 20 cents in the second, and 25 cents in the third;
semiannual COLA adjustments of 1 cent for each
0.3-point rise in the CPI; and improved vacation, dental,
optical, and pension benefits. The agreement set a pat­
tern for 28,000 workers at Swift, Hormel, Armour, and
Cudahy. After a 4-week strike, Oscar Mayer followed
the pattern in contracts with the UFCW for 4,000 em­
ployees in Iowa and Wisconsin.
Long-established packing companies have been faced
with many problems since the 1960’s. The meatpacking

9

year, and 1 cent per hour for each 0.26-point movement
in the third year, with a 14-cent diversion of COLA pay­
ment to help defray the cost of improvements in benefits.
A stock ownership plan was initiated, similar to that for
salaried employees. Other provisions included increased
employer contributions to the supplemental unemploy­
ment benefit fund; transfer rights, with full seniority, to
new plants manufacturing items similar to those in plants
represented by the union; and improved holiday, dental,
optical, medical, and life insurance benefits.
The agreement set a pattern for auto workers at
Ford, but not at financially beleaguered Chrysler, with
which the Auto Workers agreed, in October 1979, to a
wage-and-benefit package that was $203 million less
than the GM settlement pattern would have provided. In
exchange, Chrysler nominated union President Douglas
Fraser for a seat on its board of directors. In January of
both 1980 and 1981, the union agreed to further pay
and benefit cuts totaling $865 million to help Chrysler
meet the requirements of new Federal loan guarantee
legislation.
The industry is currently restructuring to produce the
smaller, more fuel-efficient cars now in demand. As it
does, plants are being closed, workers are being laid off,
and some production is being moved abroad. Even with
these changes, the industry faces huge challenges—for­
eign competition, high interest rates, a sluggish econo­
my, costly government safety and environmental
regulations, and financial problems. According to indus­
try figures, 1980 was the weakest sales year for Ameri­
can automakers in the domestic market in almost 20
years, and the industry lost $4 billion. With annual
sales only slightly improved over last year, Chrysler re­
ported a $287 million loss for first half of 1981; Ford, a
$379 million loss; and GM, a profit of $705 million.
Given the industry’s problems, there probably will be
a major change in the focus of negotiations. The Auto
Workers has already requested an early start to negotia­
tions and has shown an interest in job and income
guarantees, protection against contracting out of jobs,
profit-sharing, and stock ownership arrangements. GM
and Ford are reportedly considering offering profit-shar­
ing plans as a substitute for cost-of-living adjustment
provisions and are talking about substantial changes in
the industry’s wage structure and cuts in labor costs.
Ford is studying employment-guarantee alternatives,
while Chrysler is mulling over a modified cost-of-living
plan. All three companies are considering tougher rules
on absenteeism and “overmanning,” as well as relaxing
“restrictive” work rules.

industry is characterized by relatively wide fluctuations
in meat production and prices, with consequent changes
in sales volume. Profit per unit of output tends to be
low, so that packing companies must rely on high sales
volume and careful cost management to be successful.
In addition, there is keen competition and technological
change. In recent years, relatively new and aggressive
firms, such as Iowa Beef Processors, Inc., have taken
over an increasing share of the market for beef with
new, highly automated plants and new marketing tech­
niques. The old-line meat packers have suffered declin­
ing volume and profits and have been forced to close
many of their older, less efficient plants. Some older
companies have responded by placing greater emphasis
on more highly processed meat products and on brand
names.
The union’s bargaining goals are still being formulat­
ed. However, because of technological changes, mergers,
and plant closings in recent years, job security issues
are likely to loom as important items of discussion.
Automobiles
Master agreements between the International Union,
United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Imple­
ment Workers of America ( u a w ) and the “Big Three”
auto manufacturing companies— General Motors Corp.
( g m ), Ford Motor Co., and Chrysler Corp.—are up for
renewal on September 14, 1982. Approximately 550,000
actively employed auto workers will be involved,
380,000 at GM, 112,000 at Ford, and 56,000 at
Chrysler.1 UAW contracts at American Motors Corp.,
6
covering 9,500 workers, do not expire until September
1983.
The UAW bargains individually with each of the ma­
jor firms. In the past, the union has picked a target
company shortly before the contracts expired and di­
rected its primary efforts at reaching an agreement with
that firm. The major terms of the agreement would then
be offered to the other companies. The target firm varies
depending upon the union’s perception of its position
and that of the auto companies. In 1979, GM was the
target; in 1976, Ford; and in 1973, Chrysler.
In 1979, the last round of negotiations, the Auto
Workers settled with GM only hours before a strike
deadline.1 The 3-year agreement provided increased
7
benefits for current and future retirees; an immediate
wage increase of 24 cents per hour; and wage increases
of 3 percent each in 1979, 1980, and 1981. Quarterly
COLA adjustments were to be 1 cent per hour for each
0.3-point increase in the CPI for the first and second




10

S©h®dyl@d Wag® !ner@a§@s and!
Cost-of-Living Prowigioois dt 1982
ed

In 1982, about 4.3 million workers in private industry
are scheduled to receive wage increases under major
collective bargaining agreements that were negotiated in
earlier years. These “deferred” increases will average 6.3
percent— the highest average recorded since 1971 (7.7
percent). About 3.4 million workers covered by agree­
ments that will be in effect during part or all of 1982
may anticipate wage changes from cost-of-living adjust­
ment clauses. Some 2.3 million of these workers will
also receive deferred increases. About 3.7 million work­
ers will be covered by contracts expiring or with provi­
sions for reopening in 1982, making this a relatively
heavy bargaining year.1
8
This article focuses on deferred wage increases and
cost-of-living adjustments ( c o l a ) provided by the ma­
jor agreements that will remain in effect through 1982.
The analysis of deferred increases does not include con­
tracts covering 1.2 million workers which expired before
1982, but had not been renegotiated or for which data
were not available at this writing.1
9
Deferred wage increases
Deferred wage increases are those that are imple­
mented in one calendar year but had been negotiated in
an earlier year, usually as part of a multiyear agree­
ment. They include general wage adjustments covering
all workers, and changes which affect only a portion of
the bargaining unit such as those that alter skill differ­
entials or premiums.
The comparatively large mean deferred wage increase
in 1982 results from increases negotiated during 1981,
which averaged 8.5 percent and covered 1.3 million
workers. Deferred increases from contracts negotiated
during 1980, which covered 2.9 million workers, aver­
aged 5.1 percent.
The proportion of workers with cost-of-living provi­
sions in their contracts influences the size of average de­
ferred increases— contracts with COLA clauses generally
provide smaller deferred wage increases than those with­
out. Cost-of-living provisions covered only 21 percent of
the workers under settlements reached in 1981, compared
with 61 percent of those under 1980 settlements. Workers
covered by 1981 agreements with COLA will receive aver­
age deferred increases of 5.9 percent in 1982, compared
with 9.3 percent for those without such clauses.
The size of deferred increases varies significantly by



11

industry and prevalence of COLA. For example, the larg­
est increases, in both cents-per-hour and percentage
terms, will occur in the construction industry, where
COLA clauses are rare. About 1 million construction
workers are scheduled to receive average deferred wage
increases of 10.6 percent or $1.52 per hour in 1982.2
0
The 159,000 construction workers covered by contracts
with COLA clauses will receive deferred increases averag­
ing 7.5 percent, compared with 11.2 percent for the
869,000 workers under contracts without cost-of-living
provisions.
The metalworking industries, where COLA clauses
cover 90 percent of the workers, have deferred increases
averaging only 3.1 percent, or 32.1 cents per hour, for 1
million workers in 1982. (See tables 4 and 5.) For the
2.7 m illio n w o r k e r s w ith COLA c o v e r a g e , th e a v e r a g e d e ­
ferred in c r e a se is 2.7 p e r c e n t, c o m p a r e d w ith i 3 p e r ­
c e n t fo r th e r e m a in in g 92,000 w o r k e r s.
Table 6 shows distributions of workers receiving de­
ferred payments by month during 1982. In August, the
month with the greatest concentration, 1.2 million
workers, 80 percent of whom are in the steel manufac­
turing and telephone communications industries, are
scheduled for increases.
In general, multiple year contracts tend to provide
higher wage changes in the initial years than in subse­
quent years. For instance, 3-year agreements negotiated
in 1981 provided average adjustments of 11.3 percent
during the first year, 8.3 percent in the second year, and
6.8 percent in the third.
Cost-of-living adjustments
Fifty-six percent of workers covered by major agree­
ments have cost-of-living protection. Two-thirds of the
workers with COLA clauses will have at least one review
during 1982.2 (See table 7.) COLA provisions are
1
designed to help workers recover purchasing power lost
through price increases. The number of workers receiv­
ing COLA increases and the proportion of purchasing
power actually recovered under individual bargaining
agreements depends on the specific formula used to re­
late wage and price increases, the timing of COLA re­
views, and possible “caps” limiting the amount of COLA
payments. Through the first 9 months of 1981, cost-ofliving adjustments returned about three-quarters of the
rise in the Consumer Price Index (CPl).

The number of workers affected by COLA clauses has
been decreasing since 1977, largely because of employ­
ment declines in industries where such clauses are com­
mon. The slightly larger than proportionate drop in
COLA coverage in 1978, resulted from the elimination of
the COLA provision from the bituminous coal contract.
The following tabulation shows the total number of
workers and those under cost-of-living clauses (in mil­
lions) on January 1, 1971-82:2
2

Table 4.

Workers
Year
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976

With
COLA

All

3.0
4.3
4.1
4.0
5.3
6.0

10.8
10.6
10.4
10.2
10.3
10.1

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

Workers
With
All
COLA

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

9.8
9.6
9.5
9.3
9.1
9.0

6.0
5.8
5.6
5.4
5.3
5.1

Workers receiving deferred wage increases in 19S2, by major industry group and size of increase

[Workers in thousands]
Nonmanufacturing

Manufacturing

Selected industries

Selected industries

Average hourly
increases

All private
Number of
nonagricultural
Lumber
contracts
Paper and
Total1 Food and
industries
and
kindred
allied
wood
products
products
products
996

4,295

1,481

87

Under 15 cents .........
15 and under 2 0 .........
20 and under 2 5 .........
25 and under 3 0 .........
30 and under 3 5 .........

41
39
44
124
67

92
125
135
117
299

49
106
78
485
238

10

3
4

2
2
8

35
40
45
50
60

4 0 .........
4 5 .........
5 0 .........
6 0 .........
7 0 .........

35
30
20
115
59

106
88
36
375
222

56
38
16
153
103

6

1

1
20
15

70 and under 8 0 .........
80 and under 9 0 .........
90 and under 100 . . . .
100 and under 110 . . .
110 and under 120 . . .
120 and over .............

62
38
33
50
28
211

248
103
257
152
84
801

73
32
29
18

13
10
1
3

74.0

40.0

57.4

40.9

32.9

43.6

111.8
51.1

59.8
30.3

64.3
60.0

Total ...........................

60

55

Stone,
clay,
glass

73

Metal­
working

Total2

Contract
construction

Transportation,
communications,
gas, and electric
utilities

Warehousing,
wholesale and
retail trade

1,002

2,814

1,027

974

444

38
86
75
449
202

43
20
56
687
61

2
4

15
14
42
646
33

2
1
4
32

27
18
11
38
21

50
50
20
222
119

10
6
28
5

14
4
18
1
1

175
71
228
135
83
795

Services

147

CENTS PER HOUR

and
and
and
and
and

under
under
under
under
under

Mean in crease...........
With cost-of-living
clauses................
Without cost-of-living
clauses................
Median increase.........

4

37
21
1

1
12

62
1

13
7
7

3
2

1

6

10

8
42
2

23
13
10
9
110
61

2
12
31
3
39
31

47
33
29
94
28
741

4
14
32
13
44
41

120
24
8
14
8
3

4

3
3
10

15

55.0

32.1

91.8

151.7

48.5

63.1

66.2

54.0

29.8

48.1

116.6

33.3

55.6

97.8

69.0
70.6

62.9
55.0

55.5
28.7

124.4
75.0

158.1
150.0

124.8
28.5

67.4
62.5

64.1
50.5

4

72.0
70.0

67.5
29.9

72.0

107
657
102
18
21

58
753
76
55
155

6
17
8
3
64

22
719
43
3
15

7
9
18
41
64

2
8
12

16
39
32
5
3
2

96
301
441
238
117
135
389

48
61
161
93
87
119
361

2
38
33
74
10
2
14

42
152
36
40
19
8
8

4
48
52
10
1
6
5

PERCENT3
Under 2 percent.........
2 and under 3 ...........
3 and under 4 ...........
4 and under 5 ...........
5 and under 6 ...........

64
171
77
44
59

175
1,441
235
98
207

116
688
159
43
51

5
7
4
4
8

6 and under 7 ...........
7 and under 8 ...........
8 and under 9 ...........
9 and under 1 0 ...........
10 and under 1 1 .........
11 and under 1 2 .........
12 and over ................

73
114
127
85
39
44
99

160
495
565
268
124
139
389

64
194
124
31
7
5

12
19
13
14

Mean in crease...........
With cost-of-living
clauses................
Without cost-of-living
clauses................
Median increase.........

2
10

7
51
1

4
9
3
48
4

20
20
2

1
2

6.3

4.2

6.8

3.7

3.2

9.2
6.0

7.0
2.9

7.7
7.4

7.1
7.0

7.3

6.7

3.1

7.4

10.6

4.0

7.1

8.0

2.7

7.1

4.9

6.5

2.7

4.2

7.5

3.1

6.1

7.6

7.5
8.0

7.8
7.2.

6.6
2.7

9.7
7.7

11.2
10.9

8.2
2.7

10.6
7.5

8.1
8.2

Note: 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. Only bargaining units in the private, nonagricultural economy cov­
ering 1,000 workers or more are considered in this table. Because of rounding, sums of individ­
ual items may not equal totals. Dashes indicate there are no workers having wage increases
that fall within that stated range.

11ncludes workers in the following industry groups for which separate data are not shown: to­
bacco (22,000); textiles (12,500); apparel (18,000); furniture (13,000); printing (37,000); pe­
troleum refining (2,000); chemicals (32,000); rubber (4,000); leather (33,000); instruments
(25,000); and miscellaneous manufacturing (6,000).
2 Includes 199,000 workers in mining industry for which separate data are not shown, be­
cause earnings data are confidential, and 23,000 workers in the financial, insurance
and real estate industries.
3 Percent of straight-time average hourly earnings.




12

Five unions account for 57 percent of the workers un­
der major agreements with COLA clauses. The Automo­
bile Workers represent 962,000; the Communications
Workers, 609,000; the Teamsters, 513,000; the Steel­
workers, 486,000; and the Machinists, 310,000. Each of
the remaining unions represents fewer than 200,000
workers with cost-of-living provisions.
Adjustment formula. The most common rate of adjust­
ment is 1 cent per hour for each 0.3-point rise in the
CPI. Members of the Steel Industry Coordinating Com­
mittee2 and companies which follow the steel contract
3
pattern use this formula.
In addition, the 1979 Automobile Workers agree­

Table 5.

ments provided COLA payments at this rate using a
combined U.S.-Canadian index for the first 2 years, but
changed the formula to 1 cent for each 0.26-point rise
at the beginning of the 1981 contract year. COLA clauses
in rubber industry contracts provide 1 cent for each
0.26-point increase in the CPI beginning in 1981, the
second year of the agreements. The Bell System operat­
ing companies and manufacturing firms that follow
their contract pattern specify changes of 55 cents per
week plus 0.65 percent of each employee’s weekly rate
for each 1-percent movement in the CPI.
Timing, “caps”, and indexes.

COLA c la u s e s p r o v id e re­

v ie w s o f c h a n g e s in th e CPI a t r eg u la r in te r v a ls to d e te r-

Prevalence of cost-of-living adjustment (cola ) clauses in major collective bargaining agreements, October 1981

[Workers in thousands]
2-digit standard
industry
classification
(SIC)

Contracts with COLA clauses

All contracts
Industry

Workers
covered

Number of
contracts

Workers
covered

Number of
contracts

Percent of
workers covered by
COLA clauses

10
11
12
15
16

Total ...................................................................
Meta! mining ..............................................................
Anthracite m ining........................................................
Bituminous coal and lignite m ining.............................
Building construction general contractors..................
Construction other than building construction ...........

9,027
39
2
160
668
451

1,912
14
1
1
168
115

5,080
35
2

735
11
1

56.3
89.5
100.0

49
102

9
14

7.4
22.5

17
20
21
22
23

Construction-special trade contractors......................
Food and kindred products........................................
Tobacco manufacturing ............................................
Textile mill products...................................................
Apparel and other finished products ........................

421
305
23
50
475

193
99
8
20
52

36
94
20
3
148

20
33
6
2
6

8.6
31.0
85.9
6.4
31.1

24
25
26
27
28

Lumber and wood products, except furniture ...........
Furniture and fix tu re s .................................................
Paper and allied products..........................................
Printing, publishing and allied industries ....................
Chemicals and allied products....................................

66
28
88
64
79

15
17
62
30
39

2
8
2
32
30

1
6
1
12
13

2.4
28.9
2.3
50.6
38.7

29
30
31
32
33

Petroleum refining and related industries..................
Rubber and miscellaneous plastics ...........................
Leather and leather products ...................................
Stone, clay, glass, and concrete products ...............
Primary metals industries ..........................................

36
83
35
87
483

18
15
14
36
113

76

11

91.5

70
459

26
99

80.2
95.0

34
35
36
37
38

Fabricated metal products ........................................
Machinery, except electrical ......................................
Electrical machinery equipment and supplies ...........
Transportation equipment..........................................
Instruments and related products .............................

106
269
438
1,149
46

58
84
99
103
14

83
249
413
1,004
25

42
72
81
80
5

78.1
92.5
94.3
87.4
53.8

39
40
41
42
44

Miscellaneous manufacturing industries ....................
Railroad transportation...............................................
Local and urban tran sit...............................................
Motor freight transportation........................................
Water transportation...................................................

22
399
17
474
90

12
18
3
19
19

3
399
16
468
34

2
18
2
17
7

14.8
100.0
93.5
98.8
38.2

45
48
49
50
51

Transportation by air .................................................
Communications ........................................................
Electric, gas, and sanitary services ...........................
Wholesale trade — durables ......................................
Wholesale trade — nondurables ...............................

181
742
227
26
22

42
45
76
17
8

126
707
48
6
6

22
32
13
3
3

69.9
95.2
21.2
22.9
24.5

53
54
55
56
58

Retail trade— general merchandise...........................
Food store s.................................................................
Automotive dealers and service stations ..................
Apparel and accessory stores....................................
Eating and drinking places ........................................

84
525
13
8
68

23
99
9
5
22

25
203
1

4
36
1

29.8
38.8
9.7

59
60-65
70-89

Miscellaneous retail stores ........................................
Finance, insurance, and real e s ta te ...........................
Services .....................................................................

17
105
353

6
19
81

8
61
23

3
9
11

46.0
58.5
6.5

N ote: Due to rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals, and percentages may
not reflect shown ratios.




Dashes indicate absence of cost-of-living coverage,

13

mine if there are to be wage adjustments. Quarterly
reviews are the most common; they cover 2.1 million
workers, including those in the steel and automobile in­
dustries. Annual reviews affect 1.6 million workers,
most notably in communications— Bell System agree­
ments provide for reviews in August 1982. Semiannual
reviews cover nearly 1.3 million workers, including
more than 400,000 workers each in the railroad and
trucking industries; in both industries, the frequency of
review was changed from annual to semiannual in the
1978 and 1979 agreements.
“Caps”, or maximum limits may also affect the
amounts of cost-of-living adjustments. Slightly more
than 1.1 million workers have such caps in their con­
tracts. Currently, the largest single group with limits on
COLA adjustments are the 400,000 workers in the rail­
road industry.

Table 6. Workers receiving deferred increases in 1982 in
bargaining units covering 1,000 workers or more, by
month
[Workers in thousands]
Effective month

T o ta l........................................
January ..........................................
February ........................................
March .............................................
A p ril.................................................

Workers
covered

14,295
331
169
276

Construction
Metalworking
Metalworking, trade

M a y .................................................
June ...............................................
J u ly .................................................
A ugust.............................................
September......................................
O ctobe r..........................................

275

Construction, metalworking, food
stores
Construction
Mining, construction
Construction, utilities, food stores
Primary metals, communications
Mining, food stores
Transportation equipment

November ......................................
December ......................................

Construction
Mining

455
795
547
1,204
339
292
133
254

' This total is smaller than the sum of individual items because 775,000 workers will receive more than one increase. This total is based on data available as of Oct. 1,1981, and
thus may understate the number of workers receiving deferred increases for the entire year.

In addition, the amounts o f cost-of-living increases

are affected by the index used in the formulas. Con­
tracts covering about 80 percent of the workers under
COLA provisions use the BLS Consumer Price Index,
U.S. “all cities” average. About 265,000 workers are
under contracts with clauses using individual city index­
es. Automobile industry contracts, covering 695,000
workers, use a combination of the U.S. and Canadian
indexes because bargaining units in both countries are
involved.
Minimums or “guaranteed COLA” , which provide a
“floor” for the size of wage change under the provision,
cover 547,000 workers. These amounts are negotiated at

Table 7.

Principal industries affected

the time the contract is agreed upon and do not depend
upon CPI movements. Therefore, they are included in
our tabulations as specified wage changes.
Given the current economic climate, it is possible
that some of the increases discussed above will not be
implemented as scheduled. During 1981, there were a
number of contract reopenings that provided for sus­
pension of COLA provisions, wage decreases, or delays
in instituting previously negotiated increases.

Timing of 1982 cost-of-living reviews in major contracts, by year of contract expiration and frequency of review

[Workers in thousands]
First quarter
Type of contract, by expiration and frequency
of cost-of-living review

Second quarter

Third quarter

Full year1

Fourth quarter

Number of
contracts

Workers
covered

Number of
contracts

Workers
covered

Number of
contracts

Workers
covered

Number of
contracts

Workers
covered

Number of
contracts

Workers
covered

358
282
53
23

2,187
1,846
240
101

338
274
28
36

2,044
1,839
72
133

344
249
39
56

1,969
1,008
154
807

290
234
34
22

1,124
892
91
141

532
289
75
143
25

3,439
1,866
316
1,203
55

87
53
29
5

1,123
960
138
24

47
43
2
2

960
942
14
4

30
16
13
1

158
107
48
3

3
2
0
1

4
3
0
1

103
53
31
11
8

1,177
960
152
47
18

271
229
24
18

1,064
885
102
77

291
231
26
34

1,084
897
58
129

314
233
26
55

1,811
901
106
803

287
232
34
21

1,120
890
91
140

429
236
44
132
17

2,262
905
164
1,156
37

All contracts
T o ta l..............................................................
Q uarterly...................................................................
Semiannual ...............................................................
Annual........................................................................
Other2 ........................................................................
Contracts expiring in 19823
T o ta l...............................................................
Q uarterly...................................................................
Semiannual ..............................................................
Annual.......................................................................
Other2 ........................................................................
Contracts expiring in later years
T o ta l..............................................................
Q uarterly...................................................................
Semiannual ...............................................................
Annual........................................................................
Other2 ........................................................................

11ncludes only those reviews through the termination of the present agreements; does not
assume the continuation of existing reviews after contract expiration dates.
2 Includes monthly, combinations of annual and quarterly, combinations of annual and




semiannual, and reviews dependent on levels of the Consumer Price Index,
3 Contracts that have at least one review in the year.
n ote:
Qashes indicate data not available.

14

FOOTNOTES-

neymen and Apprentices of the Plumbing and Pipe Fitting Industry
of the United States and Canada; Sheet Metal Workers’ International
Association; International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and
Agricultural Implement Workers of America; and United Steelwork­
ers of America — and 2 independent unions — the International
Union, United Electrical, Radio, and Machine Workers of America;
and the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Ware­
housemen and Helpers of America.

1Major agreements are those that cover 1,000 workers or more.
2Major oil companies are Gulf, Cities Service, Texaco, Mobil,
Union Oil of California, Phillips Petroleum, Standard Oil of Califor­
nia (Chevron), British Petroleum, Standard Oil of Ohio (Sohio), Stan­
dard Oil of Indiana (Amoco), Atlantic Richfield, Shell Oil, Sun Oil,
Tenneco, Exxon, Conoco, Occidental, Getty, Marathon, Ashland,
Amerada Hess, and Charter.
Twelve small oil refineries, employing about 1,700 workers, had
settled with OCAW by mid-February, but the union continued to
strike against the major oil companies and other small refineries. The
Gulf accord quickly provided a basis for settlement for all major oil
refining companies, except Chevron, which resisted meeting the pat­
tern.

1 The CWA and IBEW agreements with Western Electric do not
expire until 1983.
" Rath Packing Co., Oscar Mayer and Co., Cudahy Co., Dubuque
Packing Co., and Hygrade Food Products.
1 The UFCW was created in June 1979 by a merger of the Amal­
4
gamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen of North America and
the Retail Clerks International Union.

4The act seeks to reduce regulation of the trucking industry by
making it easier to be certified to operate a route, by allowing owneroperators to haul certain freight that was previously denied to them,
and by eventually ending collective rate making.
Williams succeeded Frank Fitzsimmons, who died in May 1981.
' About 15,000 steel-haulers continued striking, with the last of the
strikers returning to work on May 7, 1979. The steel-haulers won a
return to the pre-1976 pay system, under which owner-operators re­
ceived a fiat percentage of the entire amount their employer received
for hauling a load. They also won pay for six days of sick leave. They
did not, however, win their demand for a separate, binding vote on
their supplemental agreement.

'Morrell set the pattern in 1979, and Wilson signed the pattern­
setting agreement in 1976. Before that Armour or Swift usually set
the pattern.
"’As of August 1981, an additional 107,000 employees were on in­
definite layoff at these three companies.
1 This was the first time industry bargaining was settled without a
strike against the target company since 1964, and the first industry
bargaining without a strike against any major producer since 1953.
"For an analysis of the bargaining schedule for 1982, see Mary
Anne Andrews and David Schlein, “Bargaining calendar will be
heavy in 1982,” Monthly Labor Review, December 1981, pp. 20-30.
"These units include 870,000 workers covered by 185 agreements
which expired or reopened prior to Oct. 1, 1981, but for whom settle­
ments were not reached or for which information was not available in
time to be included in these tabulations. About half of these workers
were in railroad industry agreements. Another 284,000 workers were
covered by 108 agreements expiring or reopening between Oct. 1 and
Dec. 31, 1981, after the closing date for this article.

7URW contracts, covering about 11,000 workers, at the General
Tire and Rubber Co., Kelly-Springfield Tire Co., Gates Rubber Co.,
Dunlop Tire and Rubber Co., Cooper Tire and Rubber Co., and
Armstrong Rubber Co., expire in 1982.
"In February of 1979, Firestone and the URW had signed a no­
strike, no-lockout agreement that obligated Firestone to accept the
URW designated industry settlement if the parties failed to reach an
accord on their own.

'About 481,000 construction workers will receive deferred in­
creases under settlements in which the parties agreed to a total wage
and benefit package, with the final allocation between wages and bene­
fits to be determined by the union. Because the final division was not
known at the time this article was prepared, the entire package has
been treated as a wage increase and may be overstated.

’ Foreign penetration of U.S. markets has not necessarily been
through imports. Michelin, for example, established tire plants in
Greenville and Anderson, South Carolina in 1975.
1 A change of union leadership could be a factor in the negotia­
1
1
tions. URW president Peter C. Bommarito, who has held the reins
since 1966, did not seek reelection at the union’s October 1981 con­
vention.

2 For more detailed information about cost-of-living provisions off­
1
setting inflation, see Victor J. Sheifer, “Cost-of-living adjustment:
keeping up with inflation?” Monthly Labor Review, June 1979, pp. 1417.

"The Coordinating Bargaining Committee was established in 1966
to strengthen the negotiations in the industry. The Committee in­
cludes 11 AFL-CIO affiliated unions— International Union, Allied
Industrial Workers of America; United Brotherhood of Carpenters
and Joiners of America; International Union of Electrical, Radio and
Machine Workers; International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers;
International Brotherhood of Firemen and Oilers; American Flint
Glass Workers’ Union of North America; International Association of
Machinists and Aerospace Workers; United Association of Jour­




The data for 1982 are based on information available as of Oct. 1,
1981.
The firms are Allegheny Ludlum Industries, Inc.; Armco Steel
Corp.; Bethlehem Steel Corp.; Inland Steel Co.; Jones and Laughlin
Steel Corp.; National Steel Corp.; Republic Steel Corp.; United States
Steel Corp.; and Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel Corp.

15

Table 8. Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 w o rkers or more, by m onth
Codes2
Number of
workers

Month and agreement identification1

Grand total: 560 agreements ............................................................................

2,944

Industry

State

Union

Employer
unit

650

January

30 agreem ents.....................................................................................

67,250

0016430
0026580
0018140
0018100
0041900
0044280
0011280
0016320
0068020
0068160

Am Cyanamid Co Lederle Labs Pearl River NY ...............................................
Am Insulated Wire Corp & N E Cable Corp Mass & R l...................................
Atlantic Richfield Co & Arco Pipeline Company In te r.......................................
Atlantic Richfield Co C a lif.....................................................................................
Bowen-McLaughlin-York Co. Div. of Harsco Corp. Bair S id in g .......................
Bulova Watch Co Inc NY .....................................................................................
Desoto Inc Jackson Furn Div Jackson M iss......................................................
Dupont E I DE Nemours & Co Martinsville V a ..................................................
First National Stores Inc M a s s ............................................................................
First National Stores Inc M a s s ............................................................................

1,450
1,300
3,200
1,200
1,800
1,250
1,300
2,850
1,800
1,550

28
33
29
29
37
38
25
28
54
54

21
10
00
93
23
21
64
54
14
14

121
127
357
357
553
500
119
500
155
155

1
4
4
4
1
4
1
1
4
4

0063160
0071080
0018060
0044090
0067320
0002620
0003780
0018090
0037480
0060840

Food Employers Cncl Inc Los Angeles C a lif.....................................................
Government Services Inc DC Md & V a ..............................................................
Gulf Oil Co-US Port Arthur Refinery T e x ............................................................
Honeywell Inc Minneapolis & St Paul M in n .......................................................
I-A Indep Meat Markets Mo & I II.........................................................................
l-A Pineapple Companies Factory & Plantations H aw aii..................................
Itt Gwaltney Smithfield V a .....................................................................................
Mobil Oil Corp Beaumont Refinery Yard Unit T e x ............................................
Natl Union Electric Corp Eureka Div III ..............................................................
Northern Illinois Gas Company .............................................................................

1,150
1,100
2,500
6,500
1,000
4,200
1,300
1,550
1,500
1,800

54
58
29
38
54
20
20
29
36
49

93
50
74
41
00
95
54
74

118
145
357
531
155
480
531
357
218
127

2
4
1
4

0033200
0018130
0018000
5912400
0003000
0041130
0036410
0060380
0010280
0065410

Northrop Worldwide Aircraft Services Inc A la ...................................................
Shell Oil Co C a lif....................................................................................................
Standard Oil Co Amoco Oil Co T e x .....................................................................
Standard Oil Co of Calif Western Opers Richmond C a lif................................
Sugar Cos Negotiating Comm Hawaii..................................................................
Sun Shipbldg & Dry Dock Co P & M Chester P a .............................................
Sunbeam Corp Sunbeam Appliance Co III..........................................................
Utah Power & Light Co Utah Wyo & Id a h o ........................................................
Weyerhaeuser Company Okla & A r k ...................................................................
William Filene Sons Company Boston & vicin ity...............................................

1,200
1,150
1,350
1,100
9,000
2,800
1,050
4,000
2,000
3,300

45
29
29
29
20
37
36
49
24
53

63
93
74
93
95
23
00
70
14

218
127
343
364

1
4
4
1
2
1
1
4
4
4

Total:

33
33

33

218
357
357
357
480

f112

3
3
1
4
1
4

February

24 agreem ents.....................................................................................

92,200

0003110
0002550
0058000
0033260
0018050
5906220
5906180
0079810
5914900
0079580

Anheuser-Busch Inc St Louis M o ........................................................................
Campbell Soup Co Camden NJ ..........................................................................
Central Tele Co of F la ..........................................................................................
Cessna Aircraft Co Hutchinson Kans .................................................................
Exxon Corp Bayway Ref & Chem Pit Linden NJ ..............................................
Exxon Corp East Texas Div Prod Dept Houston Tex ......................................
Exxon Research and Engineering Co Florham Park N J ..................................
Health Manpower Mgmt Inc M in n .......................................................................
l-A Eugene Area Food Agmt O re g ......................................................................
l-A Screen Actors Guild In te r...............................................................................

1,800
1,300
1,050
2,100
1,000
1,000
1,400
5,000
1,000
39,000

20
20
48
35
29
29
73
80
54
78

43
22
59
47
22
74
22
41
92
00

531
155
127
218
531
500
500
118
184
102

4
1
4
1
4
1
4
2
3
3

0067480
0026180
0054120
0054140
5618470
0016810
5522150
0069070
5909600
0037100

Kroger Co Columbus O h io ...................................................................................
Ladish Co Cudahy Wis .........................................................................................
Marine Towing & Transp Emplrs Assn Oil Tankrs N Y .....................................
Marine Towing & Transp Emplrs Assn Opers Tug NY NJ ..............................
MTL Inc Honolulu Hawaii .....................................................................................
Procter & Gamble Co Ivorydale & St Bernard Pits O h io .................................
Regional Transportation District Denver C o lo ...................................................
Retail Apparel Merchants Assn N Y ....................................................................
Rockwell Inti Corp Collins Govt Telecoms Div C a lif.........................................
Rockwell Inti Corp Collins Radio Group Dallas T e x .........................................

4,150
2,000
1,000
2,000
1,200
2,100
1,500
2,500
1,200
2,500

54
34
44
44
41
28
41
56
36
36

31
35
00
20
95
31
84
21
93
74

184
218
239
239
531
500
197
305
127
347

4
1
2
2
1
4
1
2
4
4

Total:

See footnotes at end of table.




16

Table 8. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by month
Codes2
Number of
workers

Month and agreement identification1

Industry

State

Union

Employer
unit

36
49
54
79

42
93
10
93

127
127
184
600

1
1
4
4

February—Continued
0036510
0060770
0067600
0079930

Rockwell Inti Corp Collins Radio Grp C Rpds Io w a .........................................
San Diego Gas & Electric C o ..............................................................................
Stop & Shop Cos Inc Mass Rl Conn Maine NH & V t ......................................
Walt Disney Productions Disneyland Serv Anaheim C a lif................................

5,200
2,400
8,000
1,800

March

60 agreem ents.....................................................................................

470,050

0086320
0088850
0086130
0087110
0087100
0084700
0087090
0084210
0087330
0013020

AGC Balt Md ..........................................................................................................
AGC Jefferson Cnty Inc T e x ................................................................................
AGC Maryland Chpt Labor Rel Div Md ..............................................................
AGC of Am N Y State C h p tr................................................................................
AGC of Am NY State C h p tr.................................................................................
AGC of Am NY State Chptr Inc ..........................................................................
AGC of Am NY State Chptr Inc ..........................................................................
AGC of Am So Florida Chptr Broward Div ........................................................
AGC of Am South Florida C h p tr..........................................................................
Am Can Co Interstate ...........................................................................................

3,000
1,500
3,000
4,000
4,600
6,500
2,500
5,000
3,000
1,000

15
15
17
16
16
16
16
15
15
26

52
74
52
21
21
21
21
59
59
00

143
143
119
129
119
143
531
119
143
244

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
4

0060010
0084310
0074060
0002600
0052480
0060550
0008000
0060100
0060080
0060110

Arizona Public Service Co A riz ............................................................................
BTEA Westch & Putnam Bldg Constr N Y ..........................................................
Building Managers Assn of Chicago III...............................................................
Calif Metal Trades Assn Fresno & Madera Calif ..............................................
Central Penn Motor Carriers Conference Inc Pa ..............................................
Cin Gas & Elec Co & 1 oth Ohio & K y ..............................................................
Clothing Mfrs Assn of The Us of Am In te r........................................................
Commonwealth Edison Clerical C hicago............................................................
Commonwealth Edison Co III...............................................................................
Commonwealth Edison Co Clerical III.................................................................

2,300
1,300
5,000
2,000
10,000
1,700
56,000
1,450
5,650
2,700

49
15
65
20
42
49
23
49
49
49

86
21
33
93
23
00
00
33
33
33

127
129
118
531
531
127
305
127
127
127

4
2
2
2
2
4
2
1
1
4

0036140
0014280
0018070
0067060
0052120
0052140
0052130
0052620
0052220
0052730

Cutler-Hammer Inc Spec Prods Divs Milw Wis .................................................
Edition Bookbinders of NY Inc ............................................................................
Exxon Corp Exxon Co USA Baton Rouge Ref & Chem La ............................
First Natl Supermarkets Inc Conn & Western Mass ........................................
l-A Carolina Freight Council O-T-R Supp Agmt NC & S C ...............................
l-A Central States Area Local Cartage Supp Agmt In te r.................................
l-A Central States Area O-T-R Motor Freight Supp Inter ................................
l-A Central States Iron-Steel Spec Commd Agmt Inter ...................................
l-A Local Cartage Agmt For Hire & Pri Carriers III............................................
l-A Master Rai-Truck Freight Agmt In te r............................................................

1,200
1,000
2,400
2,700
4,000
67,000
41,000
14,850
7,700
2,500

36
27
29
54
42
42
42
42
42
42

35
21
72
16
50
00
00
00
33
00

218
243
121
155
531
531
531
531
542
531

4
2
1
4
3
3
3
3
3
3

0052760
0052150
0052350
0052340
0052330
0052320
0071530
0052280
5912540
5906100

l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A

Natl Master Freight Local Cartage Phila Pa & v ic ity ..................................
NJ-NY Area Genl Trucking Supp A g m t........................................ ................
So Conf Local Freight Forwarding Garage In te r.........................................
So Conf Local Freight Forwarding Off Ees In te r........................................
So Conf Local Freight Forwarding Pickup In te r..........................................
So Conf O-T-R Motor Freight Supp Agmt In te r..........................................
Standard Restaurant Agmt Cleve O h io ........................................................
Va Freight Council O-T-R Supp A g m t..........................................................
West Va Freight Local Cartage Supp A g m t................................................
West Va Freight O-T-R Supp Agmt Charleston W V a ...............................

5,400
19,000
2,350
1,800
15,250
12,400
2,500
1,300
1,400
1,200

42
42
42
42
42
42
58
42
42
42

00
20
00
00
00
74
31
00
55
55

531
531
531
531
531
531
145
531
531
531

3
3
3
3
3
3
3

0052640
0052630
0052650
0052660
0052470
0052210
0052030
0046000
0079960
0087680
0086690

l-A Western States Area Local Cartage Supplem ent.......................................
l-A Western States Area O-T-R Motor Freight Supp Inter ..............................
l-A Western States Area Office Supp In te r........................................................
l-A Western States Automotive Shop-Truck Agmt Inter ..................................
l-A Western States Trucking Maintenance In te r...............................................
Illinois Trucking Assns Inc & 1 oth Off & Cler ..................................................
Illinois Trucking Assns Inc Hwy Drivers..............................................................
Jewelry Mfrs Assn Inc & Assoc Jewelers Inc Conn NJ N Y ............................
Kaiser Foundation Hospitals C a lif.......................................................................
Laborers Negotiatg Comm of Agr of Ind Inc In te r............................................
Mechanical Contrs Assn of New Mexico Inc NMex .........................................

46,000
19,000
6,500
2,400
3,000
2,100
4,000
2,600
9,000
20,000
1,500

42
42
42
42
42
42
42
39
80
15
17

00
00
00
00
00

531
531
531
531
218
531
531
146
118
143
170

Total:

See footnotes at end of table.




17

33
00
00
93
00
85

3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
2
2
2
4
2
2

Table 8. Continued]—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by month
Codes2
Number of
workers

Month and agreement identification1

Industry

State

Union

Employer
unit

42
41
13
17
49
29
29
28
42

74
35
70
00
93
33
23
74
23

500
197
500
170
100
500
121
101
531

1
1
1
2
4
1
1
1
2

March—Continued
0052750
0050150
0083270
0085100
0060500
0063340
0018250
0016420
0052430

Merchants Fast Motor Lines Inc T e x ..................................................................
Milwaukee Transport Service Inc W is .................................................................
Mobile Oil Corp Producing Areas La Okla & T e x .............................................
Natl Automatic Sprinkler & Fire Control Assn Adelphi M d ..............................
Southern Calif Gas Co C a lif.................................................................................
Standard Oil Co of Ind Amoco Oil Co III............................................................
Sun Oil Co of Penn Marcus Hook Penn ............................................................
Union Carbide Corp Texas City T e x ...................................................................
Western Penn Motor Carriers Local Cartage Supp A g m t................................

1,250
1,200
1,800
7,000
5,900
1,100
1,100
1,550
3,900

April

Total:

95 agreem ents.....................................................................................

283,650

5911580
0086980
5915590
0085620
0087790
0088810
0087930
5523280
0086210
0084181

AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC

Baton Rouge Chptr L a ................................................................................
East Tenn Inc Knoxville Branch Tenn & N C ............................................
East Tenn Knoxville B ra n c h .......................................................................
of Am Baton Rouge Chptr La ....................................................................
of Am Chattanooga Chptr 7 .......................................................................
of Am Fla West Coast Chpt Fla ................................................................
of Am Lake Charles C h p t...........................................................................
of Am Mich Chptr Mich & Wis ...................................................................
of Am NE Florida Chpt Fla & Ga ..............................................................
of Am New Orleans La ...............................................................................

2,000
2,100
1,500
2,500
2,500
1,400
1,900
1,000
1,200
1,150

16
15
15
17
15
15
15
15
15
15

72
00
62
72
00
59
72
30
50
72

129
600
143
119
119
143
119
143
119
116

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
2

0084182
0084183
0085700
0087430
0011220
0012030
0012020
0086170
0087670
0002460

AGC of Am New Orleans La ...............................................................................
AGC of Am New Orleans La ...............................................................................
AGC of Am Wisconsin C h p t.................................................................................
AGC of Mid-Fla & 1 oth F I ...................................................................................
All-Steel Inc Aurora I I I ............................................................................................
Am Can Co 6 Plants W is ......................................................................................
American Can Company Green Bay M ill............................................................
Assoc Contrs of Ohio Inc Cent Ohio Div & 1 o th .............................................
Assoc Contrs of Ohio Inc Cent Ohio Div & 1 o th .............................................
Assoc Producers & Packers Inc W ash...............................................................

2,250
2,200
2,400
1,700
1,300
1,650
1,000
2,500
1,500
1,500

15
15
17
15
25
26
26
17
15
20

72
72
35
59
33
35
35
31
31
91

143
119
119
119
112
231
231
119
143
531

2
2
2
2
1
4
1
2
2
2

0019060
0084290
0085680
0065000
0084360
0085460
0089290
5801730
0060900
0063280
0002020
0087910
0029890
0012000
0086340
0083360
0086820
0029060
0019030
0004110

B F Goodrich Company In te r...............................................................................
Bldg Trades Emplrs Assn & 1 oth NYC Vic ......................................................
Bldg Trades Emplrs Assn Westchester & Putnam ...........................................
Bloomingdale Bros N Y C .......................................................................................
BTEA & 2 oths Ohio .............................................................................................
BTEA of Westchester & Putnam Counties N Y ..................................................
Calif Conf of Mason Contrs Assn Inc C a lif........................................................
Carpenter Contrs Assn of Cleve & 2 oths O h io ................................................
Central Maine Power Co Augusta Maine ...........................................................
Chicago Beer Wholesalers Assn III.....................................................................
Chicago Midwest Meat Assn III ...........................................................................
Cleve Plumbing Contrs Assn O h io ......................................................................
Colt Industries Firearms D ivision.........................................................................
Consol Papers Inc & Consoweld Corp W is .......................................................
Constr Emplrs Assn Ohio Bldg Chpt & AGC Cleve D iv ...................................
Constr Empls Assn & 2 oths K y ..........................................................................
Contrs Assn of Westchester & Putnam Cnty In c ..............................................
Emhart Indus Inc Berlin Plant Hardware Div C o n n ...........................................
Firestone Tire & Rubber Co Master Agmt In te r................................................
Genl Foods Corp Food Prods Div Woodburn O r ..............................................

9,350
2,800
3,000
5,600
5,000
1,300
4,000
5,000
1,100
1,350
3,550
1,300
1,300
2,700
3,000
2,100
1,250
1,900
15,300
1,400

30
15
17
53
15
17
17
15
49
51
20
17
34
26
15
15
16
34
30
20

00
21
21
00
31
21 .
93
31
11
33
33
31
16
35
31
61
21
16
00
92

333
143
119
600
119
115
115
119
127
531
155
170
553
231
143
143
129
218
333
531

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

0057170
0019080
0036670
0036680
0057980
0088750
0079680

Genl Telephone Co of Ind Inc In d ......................................................................
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co In te r.......................................................................
GTE Automatic Elec Co III D is t...........................................................................
GTE Automatic Elec Co Northlake III .................................................................
Hawaiian Telephone Co .......................................................................................
l-A Carpenters Genl Contracting Agmt Ga & F la ..............................................
l-A Industrial Maintenance Contrs Agmt Wash .................................................

2,200
22,300
1,500
3,000
3,700
1,500
2,000

48
30
36
36
48
17
73

32
00
33
33
95
50
91

346
333
218
127
127
119
118

4
4
4
1
4
3
3

See footnotes at end of table.




18

Table 8. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by month
Codes2
Number of
workers

Month and agreement identification1

Industry

State

Union

Employer
unit

April— Continued
0004040 l-A Meat Industry Independent Shops Ind Chi I I I ..............................................
0067370 l-A Retail Meat Cutters Contract Kans & M o ....................................................
0032730 Ingersoll-Rand Co Painted Post N Y ....................................................................

2,950
1,200
1,600

20
54
35

33
40
21

155
155
347

3
3
1

0003840
0023360
0088700
0025670
0026520
0037090
0087210
0087220
0046170
0087620

Iowa Beef Processors Inc Dakota C ity ...............................................................
Johns-Manville Sales Corp Waukegan I II...........................................................
Keystone Bldg Contrs Assn & Cent Penn Subcontrs A s s n .............................
Lynchburg Fndry Co Lynchburg Va ....................................................................
Lynchburg Fndry Co Radford Pit V a ...................................................................
Magnavox Co Magnavox Govt & Ind Electronics Co Ind ................................
Mason Contrs Assn Cleveland O h io ...................................................................
Mech Contrs Assn of Cleve Inc O h io ..................................................................
Milton Bradley Co Springield M a s s .....................................................................
NECA Greater Cleveland Chapt O h io .................................................................

2,300
1,000
4,000
2,000
1,200
1,200
1,950
1,700
1,800
1,500

20
32
15
33
33
38
17
17
39
17

46
33
23
54
54
32
31
31
14
31

155
121
119
335
335
107
115
170
332
127

1
1
2
1
1
4
2
2
4
2

0086900
0029810
0029730
0088650
0074030
0089460
0023700
0060760
0060880
0060270

NECA St Paul Chpt Minn .....................................................................................
Norris Indus Price Pfister Brass Mfg Co Calif ...................................................
Norris Industries Inc Vernon Facility C a lif..........................................................
Northeastern Fla Constr Mgmt & Negot Cncl Fla ............................................
Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co Wis .....................................................
Ohio Contractors Association In te r.....................................................................
Owens-Corning Fiberglass Corp Anderson S C a r.............................................
Public Service Elec & Gas Co N J .......................................................................
Public Service Elec & Gas Co N J .......................................................................
Public Service Elec And Gas Co N J ...................................................................

1,400
1,200
1,400
1,000
1,500
1,400
1,400
1,400
1,450
4,100

17
34
34
15
63
16
32
49
49
49

41
93
93
59
35
00
57
22
22
22

127
531
553
129
163
119
135
500
170
127

2
4
1
2
1
2
1
4
4
4

5912030
0003740
0074090
0032340
0006230
0083180
0008610
0084610
0018150
0087980

Quaker City Lumber Products Assn Philadelphia P a ........................................
Ralston Purina Co Van Camp Sea Food D iv.....................................................
Realty Advisory Bd On Lab Reis Inc Apt Bldgs NYC ......................................
Rexnord Inc West Milwaukee Opers W is ............................................................
Rock Hill Printing & Finishing Co S C ..................................................................
Rock Prod & Ready Mixed Concrete Emplrs So Cal .......................................
Schiffli Lace & Embroidery Mfrs Assn Inc NJ ...................................................
Southw Mich Contrs Assn & 1 oth M ic h ............................................................
Standard Oil Co of Calif Western Operations ...................................................
Steel & Iron Contrs Assn & Btea of Cleve O h io ...............................................

1,500
1,850
20,000
1,500
1,250
5,000
1,000
1,450
1,650
2,100

24
20
65
35
22
14
23
15
29
16

23
51
21
35
57
93
22
34
93
31

119
500
118
335
305
531
202
143
186
116

2
4
2
1
1
2
2
2
4
2

0052390
0019120
0052400
0052550
5707450
0052830
0052710
0052600
0052850
0052780
0052810
0011050
0036240
0068610
0016460

Truck Owners Assn of Seattle Inc W a s h ...........................................................
Uniroyal Inc P & M In te r........................................................................................
United Parcel Service Inc N J ...............................................................................
United Parcel Service Inc Atlantic Area ..............................................................
United Parcel Service Inc Central Area M o .......................................................
United Parcel Service Inc Central States In te r..................................................
United Parcel Service Inc Chicago III .......................... .......................................
United Parcel Service Inc No C a lif......................................................................
United Parcel Service New York City NY ...........................................................
United Parcel Service No & So O h io ..................................................................
United Parcel Service Upstate NY D is t..............................................................
Upholstered Furniture Mfrs Assn of So C a lif.....................................................
Wagner Electric Corp & 1 oth St Louis M o .......................................................
Waldbaum Ind Food Mart Div Conn & M a .........................................................
Warner Lambert & Co Detroit Allen Park & Rochester M ic h ..........................

1,000
8,300
3,200
6,550
1,300
20,000
4,000
5,000
3,500
1,550
1,700
1,550
1,700
1,500
1,100

42
30
42
42
42
42
42
42
42
42
42
25
36
54
28

91
00
22
00
43
00
33
93
21
31
21
93
43
10
34

531
333
531
531
531
531
531
531
531
531
531
205
347
155
357

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

23
15
17
16
15
15
17

00
34
34
63
88
00
00

134
143
100
600
531
143
119
___________

2
2
2
2
2
2
2

May

90 agreements ....................................................................................

339,850

Affiliated Dress Mfrs Inc & 2 oths In te r..............................................................
AGC of Am Detroit Chptr & 1 oth Mich .............................................................
AGC of Am Detroit Chptr & 1 oth Mich .............................................................
AGC of Am Hvy Constr Section Labor Reis Div A la ........................................
AGC of Am Nevada Chap & 2 o th s ....................................................................
AGC Ohio Bldg Chap Cin Div 2 oths Ohio & Ky ..............................................
AGC Ohio State Bldg Chap Cin Div Ohio & K y ................................................

15,000
3,500
1,000
5,000
1,000
1,800
3,500

Total:
0008270
0084160
0086930
0086650
0089080
0086330
0085660

See footnotes at end of table.




19

Table 8. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by month
Codes2
Number of
workers

Month and agreement identification1

Industry

State

Union

Employer
unit

12,400
5,000
5,000

15
15
15

86
86
86

600
119
129

2
2
2

[Way—Continued
0084091 AGC of Am Ariz Chpt & other Ariz .....................................................................
0084092 AGC of Am Ariz Chpt & other Ariz .....................................................................
0084093 AGC of Am Ariz Chpt & other Ariz .....................................................................
0086260
0023450
0060020
0087970
0089390
5902880
0040480
0074070
0002950
0003090

Allied Const Emplrs Assn Inc W is .......................................................................
Am Standard Inc 6 Pits Chinaware Depts In te r................................................
Arkansas Power & Light Co A rk ..........................................................................
Assoc Contrs of Ohio Inc Akron Div O h io .........................................................
Assoc Contrs of Ohio Inc Cinn Div Ohio & K y ..................................................
Assoc Tile Contrs of So Calif ..............................................................................
Avco Corp Avco Lycoming Eng Group Stratford C o n n ....................................
Bldg Owners & Mgrs Assn of San Francisco....................................................
Calif & Hawaiian Sugar Co Crockett C a lif..........................................................
Calif Brewers Assn & oths C a lif..........................................................................

2,700
1,800
2,200
1,200
3,500
1,000
1,950
1,000
1,000
1,300

15
32
49
15
15
17
37
65
20
20

35
00
71
31
00
00
16
93
93
93

119
174
127
119
119
115
553
118
186
531

2
4
4
2
2
2
1
2
1
2

0002540
0033930
0060570
0086080
0086200
0002520
0003890
0008920
0041060
0065040

Campbell Soup Co Sacramento C a lif.................................................................
Carrier Air Conditioning Co Mcminnville T e n n ...................................................
Conn Light & Power Company C o n n ..................................................................
Const Employers Assn Inc Louisville..................................................................
Constr League of Indianapolis Inc ......................................................................
Del Monte Corp Pits 126 & 1 2 7 ..........................................................................
Diamond Fruit Growers Inc Oreg ........................................................................
Fashion Apparel Manufacturers Association Pa ...............................................
Fruehauf Corp Md Shipbldg & Drydock Co B a lt...............................................
Gimbel Brothers Inc In te r.....................................................................................

1,400
1,800
1,700
2,000
2,500
1,700
1,000
8,000
1,500
4,400

20
35
49
15
15
20
20
23
37
53

93
60
16
00
32
90
90
23
52
00

531
187
127
119
119
531
531
134
320
332

1
1
4
2
2
4
4
2
1
4

5611880
5618260
0008760
0008790
0083280
0074190
0075090
5902240
0067790
0067330

Goodyear Atomic Corp Piketon O h io ..................................................................
Grace W R & Co Agricl Chem Grp Bartow Wks F la ........................................
Greater Blouse Skirt & Undergarment Assn Inc In te r......................................
Greater Blouse Skt & Ungmt Assn Inc N Y ........................................................
Homestake Mining Co Mining Operations Lead S D a k .....................................
Hospital Service & Medical-Surgical Plans of NJ .............................................
Hotel Assn of NY City Inc N y ..............................................................................
l-A Boilermakers emprs of Western Pa Area ....................................................
l-A Denver Retail Grocers C o lo ...........................................................................
l-A Food Industry Mich ..........................................................................................

1,600
1,350
18,000
3,000
1,400
1,450
25,000
1,150
9,300
8,500

28
14
23
23
10
63
70
15
54
54

31
59
00
21
45
22
21
00
84
43

357
121
134
134
335
163.
100
112
184
184

1
1
2
2
1
1
2
3
3
3

0075200
0085710
0052090
0071470
0079690
0079280
0089140
0008490
0063100
0008520

l-A Hotel Industry H aw aii......................................................................................
l-A Millwright Conveyor & Machine Erector M ic h ..............................................
l-A Natl Master Automobile Transporters Agmt In te r.......................................
l-A Rest & Bars Everett W a s h .............................................................................
l-A Television Videotape Agmt Syndication In te r..............................................
l-A Twin City Hospitals Minneapolis-St Paul M in n ............................................
III Regional Insulation Contrs Assn Chicago III..................................................
Indus Assn of Juvenile Apparel Mfrs Inc N Y .....................................................
Indus Emplrs And Distributors Assn Calif ..........................................................
Infants And Childrens Coat Assn Inc & oth N Y ................................................

10,000
1,250
4,800
1,500
5,000
6,100
1,200
6,000
3,500
5,600

70
17
42
58
78
80
17
23
50
23

95
34
00
91
00
41
30
21
93
21

145
119
531
145
162
903
106
134
480
134

3
3
3
3
3
1
2
2
2
2

5800200
0085830
0016950
0012170
0006190

Inti Paper Co Androscoggin Mill Jay M a in e.......................................................
Ironworkers Employers Assn of Western P enn.................................................
Kerr-McGee Nuclear Corp Grants N M e x ..........................................................
Kimberly-Clark Corp Neenah Mill W is .................................................................
Knitted Outerwear Mfgrs Assn Pa D is t...............................................................

1,000
2,400
1,050
1,300
5,000

26
17
10
26
23

11
23
85
35
23

100
116
357
231
134

1
2
1
1
2

5913190
0085400
0088480
0084550
0085000
0088240

Mason Contrs Assn of Allegheny Cnty P a .........................................................
Mason Contrs Assn of Milwaukee & 1 oth Wis ................................................
Master Bldrs Assn of Western Pa Inc C oun cil..................................................
Master Builders Assn of Western Pa I n c ...........................................................
Master Builders Assn of Western Pa I n c ...........................................................
Mech Contrs Assn of Central Ohio Inc ..............................................................

1,000
1,500
1,000
7,000
12,000
1,050

17
17
15
15
16
17

23
35
23
23
23
31

115
115
531
119
143
170

2
2
2
2
2
2

0088740
0085980
0085070
0008260
0008280
0087750

Mechanical Contrs Assn Rochester Inc & 1 oth N Y ........................................
Mechanical Contrs Chicago Assn In te r..............................................................
Metro Detroit Plumb & Mech Contrs Assn M ic h ...............................................
Natl Assn of Blouse Mfrs Inc N Y ........................................................................
Natl Skirt & Sportswear Assn Inc Inter ..............................................................
NECA Milw Chpt 4 cnties Wis .............................................................................

1,000
8,000
2,000
1,000
1,500
1,500

17
17
17
23
23
17

21
30
34
21
00
35

170
170
170
134
134
127

2
2
2
2
2
2

See footnotes at end of table.




20

Table 8. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by month
Codes2
Number of
workers

Month and agreement identification'

Industry

State

Union

Employer
unit

May—Continued
0085280
0085330
0008620
0060680

NECA of Detroit Southeastern Mich C h p t..........................................................
NECA St Louis Chpt M o .......................................................................................
New England Apparel Mfrs Assn ........................................................................
Niagara Mohawk Corp Upstate N Y .....................................................................

3,500
2,400
3,500
7,500

17
17
23
49

34
43
10
21

127
127
134
127

2
2
2
4

0026650
0008240
0060250
0085240
0060240
0008330
0060260
0011120
0085380
0063060

No Am Royalties Inc Wheland Foundry Div T e n n ............................................
Ny Coat & Suit Assn NY NJ Conn & P a ............................................................
PA Power & Light Co Eastern Pa .......................................................................
PDCA of Am Detroit & Wayne Chptrs Mich ......................................................
Pennsylvania Electric Co Pa ................................................................................
Phila Apparel Producers Assn Pa .......................................................................
Potomac Electric Power Co DC ..........................................................................
Roper Corp Roper Eastern Grp 3 Pits Md ........................................................
San Fran Elec Contrs Assn Inc C a lif..................................................................
San Francisco Employers Council Calif .............................................................

1,200
20,000
4,800
2,400
2,150
5,000
3,500
1,200
1,400
2,000

33
23
49
17
49
23
49
25
17
51

62
00
23
34
23
23
53
52
93
93

335
134
127
164
127
134
500
312
127
531

1
2
4
2
4
4
1
4
2
2

0084600
0016450
0029080
0004130
5917320
0006210
0036420
0060800
0011350

Southw Mich Contrs Assn & 1 oth M ic h .............................................................
Squibb E R & Sons Inc P & M NJ ......................................................................
Stanley Works Conn .............................................................................................
Stayton Canning Company Cooperative Salem & vicinity ...............................
Tri-State Contrs Assn Inc K y ...............................................................................
United Knitwear Mfrs League Inc N Y ..................................................................
Whirlpool Corp St Joseph Mich Div P its .............................................................
Wisconsin Power & Light Co ...............................................................................
Zenith Electronics Corp of Indiana Evansville Ind ............................................

1,800
1,950
2,400
2,300
1,100
3,600
1,550
1,750
1,000

15
28
34
20
15
22
36
49
25

34
22
16
92
61
20
41
35
32

119
357
218
531
143
134
218
127
484

2
1
1
4
2
2
1
4
1

June

69 agreem ents.....................................................................................

264,350

0084270
0084720
0002580
0088660
0016010
0068250
0041540
0085110
0086230
0086500

AGC Nev Chap & 2 oths So Nev .......................................................................
AGC Utah Chpt Utah ............................................................................................
Agripac Inc 4 Pits Oreg ........................................................................................
Air Conditioning Contrs of A rizona......................................................................
Allied Chem Corp Indus Chem D Syracuse W k s ..............................................
Almacs Inc Rl Mass C o n n ....................................................................................
Am Motors Corp Am General Corp Sub In d ......................................................
Assn of Contrng Plumbers of The City of N Y ...................................................
Assoc Bldg Contrs of Northwestern Ohio Inc ...................................................
Assoc Bldg Contrs of Northwestern Ohio Inc ...................................................

2,100
1,800
3,000
1,200
1,200
2,300
1,500
3,550
1,800
1,150

16
16
20
17
28
54
37
17
15
15

88
87
92
86
21
10
32
21
31
31

119
119
531
187
335
364
553
170
119
143

2
2
1
2
1
4
2
2
2
2

0008130
5618690
0069160
0040990
0008540
0008220
0002530
0033440
0032940
0085490

Assoc Garment Indus of St Louis Dress Branch III & M o ...............................
Associated Manufacturers Tubular Piping & Trimming N Y C ...........................
Automobile Dealers Ind Rel Assn NY ................................................................
Bath Iron Works Corp Bath & Brunswick M a in e ...............................................
Belt Assn Inc New York N Y .................................................................................
Bobbie Brooks Inc Master Agmt Interstate........................................................
Calif Processors Inc C a lif.....................................................................................
Chic Pneumatic Tool Co Utica N Y ......................................................................
Copeland Corporation O h io ..................................................................................
Detroit Mason Contrs A s s n ..................................................................................

3,000
1,200
1,000
4,500
3,800
1,550
55,000
1,150
2,800
3,300

23
23
55
37
23
23
20
35
35
17

00
21
21
11
21
00
93
21
31
34

134
134
553
320
134
134
531
100
347
115

2
2
2
4
2
4
2
1
4
2

0019330
0060440
0089450
0086970
0087320
0085530
5905410
5703730
0087270
0041030

Dunlop Tire & Rubber Corp Buffalo N Y .............................................................
East Ohio Gas Co O h io ........................................................................................
Eastern New York Construction Employers I n c ................................................
Eastern NY Construction Employers In c ............................................................
Eastern NY Construction Emplrs In c ..................................................................
Exec Cncl Cal Conf Mason Contr Assn Inc C a lif..............................................
Freightliner Corp Portland Oreg D ist...................................................................
General Electric Co Auburn N Y ...........................................................................
Genl Contrs Assn of NY City N y .........................................................................
Genl Dynamics Corp Electric Boat Div C o n n ....................................................

1,000
2,050
1,000
2,050
1,100
6,000
1,700
1,000
4,300
12,750

30
49
17
15
17
17
37
36
16
37

21
31
21
21
21
93
92
21
21
16

333
118
129
143
115
143
218
218
129
600

1
4
2
2
2
2
1
1
2
1

0000210 Genl Dynamics Corp Pomona Calif Dist Lodge ................................................

1,650

34

93

218

4

Total:

See footnotes at end of table.




21

Table 8. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by month
Codes2
Number of
workers

Month and agreement identification'

Industry

State

Union

Employer
unit

June—Continued
0037940
0036180
0037160
0057940
0068340
0075300
0075290
0060620
0012110

Genl Elec Co Med Sys Busn Div Milwaukee W is .............................................
Genl Elec Co Natl Agmt In te r..............................................................................
Genl Electric Co Chicago & Cicero Pits III.........................................................
Genl Tele Co of Kentucky K y ..............................................................................
Great A&P Tea Co Inc New E ngland.................................................................
Greater Milwaukee Hotel-Motel Assn Wise .......................................................
Greater Milwaukee Hotel-Motel Association......................................................
Gulf States Utilities Co Tex & L a ........................................................................
Hammermill Paper Co Erie Div P a ......................................................................

1,400
16,400
1,700
1,300
2,000
1,200
1,000
2,700
1,300

36
36
36
48
54
70
70
49
26

35
00
33
61
10
35
35
70
23

218
484
187
346
155
145
145
127
231

1
4
1
4
4
2
2
4
1

0068600
0068450
0008870
0052720
0012490
5705280
0019070
0084880
0085940
0085520

l-A Chicago Area Grocery Stores (5) Chic III ....................................................
l-A Grocery Agmt Quad-Cities Iowa & III.............................................................
l-A Independent Shops Cloth Hats & Caps N Y C ..............................................
l-A Master Cement & All Dry Bulk Commodities Inter .....................................
l-A West Coast P & P Convert Indus M ultiple...................................................
Kansas City Power & Light Co Prod Dept Mo ..................................................
Kelly-Springfield Tire Co Cumberland M d ...........................................................
Keystone Bldg Contrs Assn & 1 oth P a ..............................................................
Keystone Bldg Contrs Assn Inc Harrisburg Pa .................................................
Lathing & Metal Furring Contrs Assn of Calif I n c .............................................

7,000
2,000
1,300
5,000
3,800
1,000
1,800
1,400
1,400
1,250

54
54
23
42
26
49
30
15
15
17

33
00
21
00
90
43
52
23
23
93

364
184
142
531
244
127
333
143
129
147

3
3
1
3
3
4
1
2
2
2

0079300
0060650
0060660
0068670
0011310
0008740
0008310
0060230
0019260
0008600

League of Voluntary Hospitals & Homes of N Y .................................................
Long Island Lighting Co N Y ..................................................................................
Long Island Lighting Co N Y ..................................................................................
Major Food Chains III.............................................................................................
Manufacturing Woodwrks Assn Gr NY & 1 o th ..................................................
Natl Hand Embroidery & Novelty Mfrs Assn Inc N Y .........................................
New Eng Sportswear Mfrs Assn Boston Mass .................................................
Ohio Edison Co O h io .............................................................................................
Plastic & Metal Products Mfrs Assn Inc NYC ....................................................
Pleaters Stitchers & Embroiderers Assn Inc N Y ................................................

40,000
2,650
1,350
1,450
1,200
4,650
2,500
2,000
3,800
2,200

80
49
49
54
25
23
23
49
30
23

21
21
21
53
21
21
14
31
21
21

332
127
127
364
119
134
134
342
134
134

2
1
4
2
2
2
2
4
2
2

0088860
0085760
0068660
0004120
0026240
0040430
0089050
0050440
0003440

Plumbing Contrs Assn of Metro St Louis M o .....................................................
Smaccna Los Angeles Chptr & 1 oth Assn C a lif..............................................
Star Market Co Div Jewell Co. Inc DRI D iv ........................................................
Stayton Canning Co Cooperative Stayton & vicin ity.........................................
Stockham Valves & Fitting Inc Birmingham A la ................................................
Trico Products Corp Buffalo N Y ..........................................................................
UN Painting Contrs Assn & 1 oth Co Kans Nebr & W y o ................................
Varsity Transit Inc NY Div ....................................................................................
Watsonville Emplrs Frozen Food Assn Calif .....................................................

1,200
2,050
1,200
1,800
1,850
2,500
1,000
1,000
3,500

17
17
54
20
33
37
17
41
20

43
93
15
92
63
21
00
21
93

170
187
364
531
335
500
164
197
531

2
2
1
1
1
4
2
4
2

July

Total:

57 agreem ents......................................................................................

278,150

0084910
0036090
5904460
0087130
0019000
0079150
0079160
0079480
0008930
0029230

AGC of Am Mobile Chptr Ala & F la ....................................................................
Allen-Bradley Co Milwaukee W is .........................................................................
American Seating Company Grand Rapids M ic h ..............................................
Arizona Steel Erectors Assn Ariz ........................................................................
Armstrong Rubber Co Master Agmt ...................................................................
Assn of Motion Picture & Tv Producers Basic Agmt C a lif...............................
Assn of Motion Picture & Tv Producers Inc Calif .............................................
Assn of Private Hospitals In c ...............................................................................
Associated Garment Industries of St. Louis ......................................................
Babcock & Wilcox Co Power Generation Group O h io .....................................

2,500
4,800
1,000
1,500
3,000
20,000
2,000
7,000
3,200
2,100

16
36
25
17
30
78
78
80
23
34

00
35
34
86
00
93
93
21
43
31

600
484
553
116
333
192
531
118
134
112

2
1
1
2
4
2
2
2
1
1

0012360
5215350
0071050
0040870
0057131
0057132
0036170

Brown Co Kalamazoo M ic h ..................................................................................
Diamond-Sunsweet Inc Stockton Calif ...............................................................
East Bay Restaurant Assn Inc Alameda C ounty...............................................
Fairchild Industries Inc Farmingdale N Y .............................................................
Genl Tele Co of Michigan Plant M ic h .................................................................
Genl Tele Co of Michigan Traffic & Clerical Mich ............................................
Genl Elec Co Natl Agmt In te r..............................................................................

1,200
1,100
5,500
3,500
2,000
1,100
70,000

26
20
58
37
48
48
36

34
93
93
21
34
34
00

231
531
145
218
127
127
347

1
1
2
1
4
4
1

See footnotes at end of table.




22

Table 8. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by month
Codes2
Number of
workers

Month and agreement identification1

Industry

State

Union

Employer
unit

July—Continued
0041280 Genl Electric Co Evandale O h io ..........................................................................
0041270 Genl Electric Co Evendale O h io ..........................................................................
0012090 Great Northern Paper Co 2 Millinocket Mills M a in e .........................................

1,250
4,700
2,400

37
37
26

31
31
11

218
553
100

1
1
4

0011130
0012310
5905040
0003380
0069210
0069120
0084970
0068150
0067400
0032790

Hamilton Indus Two Rivers Wis ..........................................................................
Hammermill Paper Co Thilmany Pulp & Paper Div W is ...................................
Houston Sheet Metal Contrs Assn Inc T e x .......................................................
l-A Dried Fruit Industry Del Monte-Mayfair C a lif................................................
l-A Garage Attendents Agmt C h ica g o ................................................................
l-A Major Shoe Chain Stores NY ........................................................................
l-A Missouri River Basin A g m t.............................................................................
l-A Retail Meat Cutters Chicago & vicin ity.........................................................
l-A Retail Meat Cutters Contract Chicago III .....................................................
Ingersoll-Rand Torrington Co Conn ....................................................................

1,200
1,200
1,200
1,000
1,700
1,000
3,300
1,900
3,000
1,650

25
26
15
20
55
56
16
54
54
35

35
35
74
93
33
21
00
33
33
16

119
231
187
480
531
332
112
155
155
553

1
1
2
3
3
3
3
3
3
4

0041420
0065280
0060470
5908820
0079910
0085840
0071020
0079700
5912500
5912460

Jacksonville Shipyards Inc F la .............................................................................
Korvettes Inc Korvettes Dept Store Div NY ......................................................
Laclede Gas Co St Louis Mo ..............................................................................
Monterey Peninsula Hotel & Rest Assoc Inc Calif ...........................................
National Football League Management Council In te r......................................
Natl Elevator Industry Inc In te r............................................................................
Presidents Cncl of Food Bev & Lodging Portland & v ic in ty ............................
San Francisco Club In s titu te ................................................................................
Sears Roebuck & Co Seattle W a sh ....................................................................
Stop & Shop Cos Inc DBA Bradless Conn & W Mass ....................................

1,800
3,500
1,250
2,400
1,500
16,000
3,850
2,000
1,800
4,000

37
53
49
70
79
17
58
86
53
54

59
21
43
93
00
00
92
93
91
10

112
184
357
145
520
128
145
145
531
184

4
4
4
2
2
2
2
2
1
4

0068310
0041810
0029200
0041600
0012810
0068040
0014510
0057780
0057770
0036290
0000260
0036260
0036250
0036270
0036280
0012770
0037830

Stop & Shop Cos Inc Dba Bradlees New England ..........................................
Summa Corp Hughes Helicopters Div C a lif.......................................................
Trane Company La Crosse W is ...........................................................................
Trw Inc Harrisburg P a ............................................................................................
Union Camp Corp Franklin V a .............................................................................
Vornado Corp Non-Food Stores Interstate 5cos ..............................................
Wash Post Co DC ..................................................................................................
Western Union Telegraph Co In te r.....................................................................
Western Union Telegraph Co NY NJ ..................................................................
Westinghouse Elec Corp In te r.............................................................................
Westinghouse Elec Corp Aerospace Div M d .....................................................
Westinghouse Elec Corp Beaver Pit P a .............................................................
Westinghouse Elec Corp Interstate ....................................................................
Westinghouse Elec Corp Natl Agmt In te r..........................................................
Westinghouse Electric Corp Master Agmt In te r................................................
Westvaco Corp Container In te r...........................................................................
Whirlpool Corp St Paul Div M in n .........................................................................

3,000
1,600
1,800
1,200
1,250
7,000
1,000
9,500
1,000
11,250
2,200
2,400
13,850
4,950
18,200
1,200
1,650

54
37
34
37
26
53
27
48
48
36
34
36
36
36
36
26
36

to

184
119
218
500
100
184
323
201
346
500
127
127
127
484
347
231
531

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

600
320
112
155
335
335
305
364
553
205

2
1
1
4
4
4
4
1
1
4

333

1
1

93
35
23
54
00
53
00
SO
00

52
23
00
00
00
00

41

August

26 agreem ents.....................................................................................

103,700

0084200
0040970
5905010
0002000
0052700
0032300
0008030
0002050
0037800
0011320

AGC Ala Bldg Construction Agmt .......................................................................
Alabama Dry Dock & Shipbuilding Co Mobile A la ............................................
Am Standard Inc Wabco Constr Equip Peoria I II..............................................
Armour & Co Master Agmt Inter .........................................................................
Bowman Transportation Inc O-T-R & Pick Up In te r.........................................
Bucyrus-Erie Co Ind Pa & W is .............................................................................
Cluett Peabody & Co Inc Arrow Co Div In te r....................................................
Dubuque Packing Co Dubuque Io w a ..................................................................
Eagle Elc Mfg Co Inc & Eagle Plastics Long Island C ity.................................
Flexsteel Industries Inc Iowa Pa & T e x ..............................................................

8,000
1,200
1,000
4,300
2,100
2,000
4,600
2,300
1,500
1,000

15
37
35
20
42

0019190
0040760
0006340
0067020
0002170

Gates Rubber Co Denver C o ...............................................................................
Goodyear Aerospace Corp Akron O h io ..............................................................
l-A Knitgoods Agmt C leveland.............................................................................
Illinois Food Retailers Assns Ind Food S to re s ..................................................
John Morrell & Co In te r........................................................................................

2,650
1,300
1,050
4,350
6,100

30
37
22
54
20

Total:

See footnotes at end of table.




23

35
23
20
36
25

63
63
33
00

00
00
00
42
21
00
84
31
31

33
00

553
134
184
155

3
2
4

Table 8. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by month
Codes2
Number of
workers

Month and agreement identification1

Industry

State

Union

Employer
unit

August—Continued
0057480
0002100
0002110
5906780
0008100

New York Telephone Company NYC & 4 co u n tie s..........................................
Oscar Mayer & Co Davenport Pit Iowa D is t......................................................
Oscar Mayer & Co Madison Pit W is ...................................................................
Pittsb Forgings Co Greenville Steel Car Co Pa ................................................
Publix Shirt Corp Pa Tenn & Ga .........................................................................

8,300
1,550
2,500
1,000
1,000

48
20
20
37
23

00
42
35
23
00

516
155
364
553
305

4
1
1
1
2

0002180
0082060
0002220
0032690
0002230
0023370

Rath Packing Co Tex NC Ga & Io w a .................................................................
Sun Harvest Inc C a lif............................................................................................
Swift & Co & Estech Inc Master Agmt In te r......................................................
Textron Inc Fafnir Bearing Div New Britain C o n n .............................................
Wilson Foods Corp Master Agmt In te r...............................................................
3M Company Minn Mining & Mfg Co D St Paul M n .........................................

2,000
1,350
31,500
3,200
6,000
1,850

20
1
20
35
20
32

00
93
00
16
00
41

155
241
155
553
155
357

4
1
4
1
4
1

September

38 ag reem ents.....................................................................................

830,100

0032530
0079990
0074110
0068690
0033480
0060820
0040090
0040070
0040100
0040080

Acme-Cleveland Corp Natl Acme Co Div O h io .................................................
American Protective Services Inc Uptown Area Calif ......................................
Bronx Realty Advisory Board Inc New Y o rk ......................................................
Bruno Food Stores Inc & Food World Inc A la ..................................................
Caterpillar Tractor Co Towmotor Corp Central Agmt In te r..............................
Chi & Suburban Refuse Disposal Assn III...........................................................
Chrysler Corp Parts Depots In te r........................................................................
Chrysler Corp Production-Maintenance In te r.....................................................
Chrysler Corporation Engineering Inter ..............................................................
Chrysler Corporation Office & Clerical Inter ......................................................

1,200
2,200
11,000
2,700
25,000
1,500
2,500
64,000
5,400
3,400

35
73
65 .
54
35
49
37
37
37
37

31
93
21
63
00
33
00
00
00
00

354
559
118
184
553
531
553
553
553
553

1
1
2
1
4
2
4
4
1
4

0032220
0032740
0063330
0063020
0063000
0040190
0037060
0019040
0040220
0037820
0002070

Deere & Co Iowa & Illin o is...................................................................................
FMC Corp Bearing & Chain Divs Indianapolis...................................................
Food Emplrs Cncl Inc Food Indus Off Agmt C a lif............................................
Food Emplrs Cncl Inc Food Indus Wareh Agmt C a lif......................................
Food Emplrs Cncl Inc Whsale Delvry Drvrs Agmt C a lif...................................
Ford Motor Co Master Interstate.........................................................................
Genl Elec Co Tube Dept Owensboro K y ...........................................................
Genl Motors Corp Inland Div Dayton O h io ........................................................
Genl Motors Corp Master Agmt Interstate.........................................................
Genl Motors Corp Ohio NY & N J ........................................................................
Geo A Hormel & Co Austin Minn P it ..................................................................

32,000
2,000
1,550
4,050
1,400
158,000
1,050
6,900
400,000
23,450
1,650

35
35
51
51
51
37
36
30
37
36
20

00
32
93
93
93
00
61
31
0
00
41

553
335
531
531
531
553
107
333
553
347
155

4
4
2
2
2
1
1
4
4
1
4

0012640
0037470
0079420
0008680
0084930
0032250
0063180
0032260
0067450
0033800

Greater NY Folding Box & Display Mfrs Assn ..................................................
GTE Sylvania Ottawa Ohio ..................................................................................
l-A Security Agencies Uptown Agmt Bay Area Calif ........................................
l-A Sportswear Agmt No C a lif..............................................................................
l-A Western States Field Constr Agmt In te r......................................................
Inti Harvester Co Cler & Tech 7 Pits In te r.........................................................
Inti Harvester Co Depot & Distribution In te r......................................................
Inti Harvester Co Main Labr Agmt Prod-Maint In te r.........................................
Jewel Cos Inc Jewel Food Stores D Ind & III ...................................................
John Deere Horicon Works Company Horieon Wise .......................................

3,000
1,850
2,000
3,000
3,500
2,100
1,050
32,100
14,000
1,200

26
36
73
23
16
35
50
35
54
35

20
31
93
93
00
00
00
00
30
35

231
127
494
134
112
553
553
553
500
218

2
1
1
3
3
4
4
4
4
1

0083230
0019340
0089420
0087630
0085190
0037440
0033970

Kaiser Steel Corp P & M Ees Eagle Mont Mine C a lif......................................
Kelly-Springfield Tire Co Tyler T e x ......................................................................
Kern County Floor Covering Association ...........................................................
NECA So Fla Chap Inside C o n s t........................................................................
PDCA Chicago Chpt III..........................................................................................
Sanyo Manufacturing Corp Forest City Ark .......................................................
Sperry Rand Corp 2 Units NY & C a lif................................................................

1,150
1,150
1,700
1,400
6,700
1,900
1,350

10
30
17
17
17
36
35

93
74
53
59
33
71
21

600
333
164
127
164
347
347

1
1
2
2
2
1
1

Total:

See footnotes at end of table.




24

Table 8. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by month
Codes2 •
Number of
workers

Month and agreement identification'

Industry

State

Union

Employer
unit

October

Total:

24 agreem ents.....................................................................................

47,850

0016630
0008750
0068460
0060450
0060600
0041690
0057910
5510670
0033830
0075310

American Enka Corp Lowland T e n n ...................................................................
Bayly Corp Colo Utah Calif & W a s h ...................................................................
Colonial Stores Inc Raleigh Div N C ....................................................................
Consolidated Gas Supply Corp Clarksburg W V a ..............................................
Dayton Power & Light C o .....................................................................................
Genl Motors Corp Pit Protection Ees In te r........................................................
Genl Tele Co of III Ser Const & Supply Depts III .............................................
GTE Sylvannia Inc Seneca Falls N Y ..................................................................
Hesston Corp Hesston Kans ...............................................................................
Hotel Association of Ohio ....................................................................................

2,400
1,200
1,400
1,750
2,600
2,550
1,750
1,000
1,450
1,600

28
23
54
49
49
37
48
36
35
70

62
00
56
00
31
00
33
21
47
31

202
305
184
118
342
461
127
335
500
145

1
4
4
1
1
4
1
1
1
2

0002080
0068170
0023280
0008040
0067720
0067430
0068420
0040280
0033320
0079030
0019350
0011030
0040920
0060810

Hygrade Food Products Corp lo Mich & Wash F la ..........................................
l-A Chain & Independent Food Stores N Mex ..................................................
l-A Chinaware Manufacturers Group NY Pa & Ohio ........................................
l-A Cotton Garment & Outerwear Agmt Phila P a ..............................................
l-A Retail Meat Markets Frozen Food Locker C a lif..........................................
l-A Retl Butchers - Fish & Poultry Agmt Sf C a lif..............................................
Jewel Cos Inc Eisner Food Stores D Chicago III..............................................
Mack Trucks Inc Master Shop Agmt Pa NJ Md & Calif ..................................
Massey Ferguson Inc Master Inter .....................................................................
Pittsburgh Buildings Assn P a ...............................................................................
Rubbermaid Inc Wooster Ohio ............................................................................
Simmons Co In te r..................................................................................................
TRW Inc Tapco-Valves-Maint Plant-Replacement Ohio ..................................
Wise Public Service Corp .....................................................................................

1,250
2,300
1,300
1,550
1,500
3,500
1,400
6,250
1,500
1,200
1,300
2,100
4,000
1,000

20
54
32
23
54
54
54
37
35
73
30
25
37
49

00
85
00
23
93
93
33
00
00
23
31
00
31
35

155
364
174
305
155
155
539
553
553
118
333
205
500
129

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

November

26 agreem ents.....................................................................................

79,000

0033860
0032150
0079770
0046110
0041940
0033110
0079760
0016470
5910900
0067650

Allis-Chalmers Corp La Porte In d ........................................................................
Allis-Chalmers Corp West Allis Wis ....................................................................
Apt Bldg Owners & Mgrs Assn of Chicago III ...................................................
Armstrong Cork Co Lancaster Pa Floor P la n t...................................................
Bendix Autolite Corporation M ic h ........................................................................
Carrier Corp Syracuse N Y ....................................................................................
Chicago Real Estate Owners Council III ............................................................
Colgate-Palmolive Co Jersey City Pit NJ ...........................................................
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp & 2 oths Conn Ky & W V a .........................
Food Employers Council Inc Los Angeles C a lif................................................

1,000
1,900
3,000
2,000
1,200
3,250
4,500
1,200
1,150
6,500

35
35
73
39
37
35
73
28
49
54

32
35
33
23
34
21
33
22
00
93

553
553
118
333
553
187
118
500
357
364

1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
4
2

0057990
0014310
0075040
0002400
0075080
0052180
0067420
0079550
0067780
0000270

Genl Tele Co of Ind Inc In d .................................................................................
Graphic Arts Assn of Delaware Valley Inc P a ...................................................
Greater Boston Hotel & Motor Inn Assn M a s s .................................................
Greater NY Milk Dealers Labor NY Conn & N J ................................................
Hotel & Motel Assn of Greater St Louis Mo .....................................................
l-A Central States Area Tank Truck Agmt In te r................................................
l-A Chain & Ind Food Stores W is e ......................................................................
l-A Film Exchange Employees Agmt Interstate.................................................
l-A Retail Distribution Agmt S Diego C a lif..........................................................
ICI United States Inc Charlestown Ind ...............................................................

1,550
1,200
3,000
2,000
2,500
15,000
2,300
1,500
1,200
1,250

48
27
70
20
70
42
54
78
54
34

32
23
14
20
43
00
35
00
93
32

127
243
145
531
145
531
184
192
155
121

1
2
2
2
2
3
3
3
3
1

0008840
0023300
0000370
0040960
0041230
0041370

Londontown Corp London Fog Rainwear Outerwear In te r..............................
U S Potters Assn Pa Ohio & W V a ......................................................................
United Aircraft Corp Pratt & Whitney Aircraft D Conn .....................................
United Aircraft Corp Pratt & Whitney Aircraft D Conn .....................................
United Aircraft Corp Pratt & Whitney Aircraft C onn..........................................
United Aircraft Corp Pratt & Whitney Aircraft C onn..........................................

1,950
1,500
2,350
9,700
3,500
2,800

23
32
37
37
37
37

50
00
16
16
16
16

305
174
218
218
218
218

4
2
1
4
1
1

Total:

See footnotes at end of table.




25

Table 8. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by month
Codes2
Number of
workers

Month and agreement identification1

Industry

State

Union

Employer
unit

December

Total:

21 ag reem ents....................................................................................

88,500

0008440
0079740
0038000
0084940
0040150
0037670
0036930
0010120
5904940

Am Millinery Mfrs Assn Inc N Y ............................................................................
Assoc Hospitals of San Fran & East Bay Inc Calif ..........................................
Avx Corp Avx Ceramics Myrtle Beach S C a r ....................................................
Constructors Assn of Western P a ..................................................................... .
Dana Corp Master Agmt Pa Ohio Mich Ind III & W is .......................................
GTE Sylvania Inc Smithfeld N C ...........................................................................
Hughes Aircraft Co C a lif.......................................................................................
l-A Picture Frame Mfg Cos Chicago area III......................................................
l-A Race Track Clubs 15 Pari-Mutuel Clks Calif ...............................................

2,000
1,400
1,800
12,000
7,500
1,400
13,000
1,500
2,000

23
80
36
16
37
36
36
24
79

21
93
57
23
00
56
93
33
93

142
903
127
100
553
346
119
205
118

2
2
1
2
4
1
4
3
3

0029820
0005040
0005050
0026640
0060480
5917490
0060730
0060720
0060710
0036600

Inti Tele & Tele Genl Controls Div C a lif.............................................................
Liggett & Myers Inc Durham NC .........................................................................
Loews Theatres Inc Lorillard Div Louisville K y ..................................................
Mfrs Indus Reis Assn Mo Ohio Mass III & M ic h ...............................................
Mich Consolidated Gas Co Detroit & Ann Arbor M ic h .....................................
Occidental Chemical Co White Springs F la .......................................................
Pacific Gas & Elec Co Eng & Scientists C a lif...................................................
Pacific Gas & Elec Co Off & Cler C a lif..............................................................
Pacific Gas & Elec Co Oper-Maint-Constr C a lif................................................
RCA Corp Natl Agmt Ind Calif Pa NJ Ohio & F la .............................................

1,000
1,000
1,500
4,000
1,300
1,500
1,900
4,250
13,850
13,000

34
21
21
33
49
28
49
49
49
36

93
56
61
00
34
59
93
93
93
00

127
203
203
161
118
121
500
127
127
127

4
1
1
2
4
4
4
4
4
4

0060870 Salt River Proj Agricul Improvemt & Power Dist A r iz .......................................
0046240 Standard Plastic Prods Inc So Plainfield N J ......................................................

1,500
1,100

49
39

86
22

127
141

2
4

1 See appendix A for explanation of abbreviations.




2 See appendix B for explanation of abbreviations.

26

Table 9. Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification'

Grand total: 560 agreements ............................................................................

Expiration
month

State

Union

Employer
unit

8

93

241

1

5
9
5

45
93
85

335
600
357

1
1
1

3

70

500

1

5
4"

59
93

121
531

1
2

2,944,650

Agricultural production—crops

1 agreem ent.............................................................................................

1,350

0082060 Sun Harvest Inc C a lif............................................................................................

1,350

Total:

Metal mining

3 agreem ents...........................................................................................

3,600

0083280 Homestake Mining Co Mining Operations Lead S D a k .....................................
0083230 Kaiser Steel Corp P & M Ees Eagle Mont Mine C a lif......................................
0016950 Kerr-McGee Nuclear Corp Grants N M e x ..........................................................

1,400
1,150
1,050

Total:

Oil and gas extraction

1 ag reem ent..............................................................................................

1,800

0083270 Mobile Oil Corp Producing Areas La Okla & T e x .............................................

1,800

Total:

Monmetallic minerals, except fuels

2 ag reem ents............................................................................................

6,350

5618260 Grace W R & Co Agricl Chem Grp Bartow Wks F la ........................................
0083180 Rock Prod & Ready Mixed Concrete Emplrs So Cal .......................................

1,350
5,000

Total:

General building contractors

Total: 49 agreements ..........................................................................................

148,200

0084200
0086320
0086980
5915590
0088850
0087790
0084160
0088810
0087930
5523280

AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC

Ala Bldg Construction A g m t.......................................................................
Balt M d ...........................................................................................................
East Tenn Inc Knoxville Branch Tenn & N C ............................................
East Tenn Knoxville B ra n c h .......................................................................
Jefferson Cnty Inc T e x ................................................................................
of Am Chattanooga Chptr 7 .......................................................................
of Am Detroit Chptr & 1 oth Mich .............................................................
of Am Fla West Coast Chpt Fla ................................................................
of Am Lake Charles C h p t...........................................................................
of Am Mich Chptr Mich & Wis ...................................................................

8,000
3,000
2,100
1,500
1,500
2,500
3,500
1,400
1,900
1,000

8
3
4
4
3
4
5
4
4
4

63
52
00
62
74
00
34
59
72
30

600
143
600
143
143
119
143
143
119
143

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

0086210
0089080
0084181
0084182
0084183
0084210
0087330
0086330
0084091
0084092

AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC

of Am NE Florida Chpt Fla & Ga ..............................................................
of Am Nevada Chap & 2 o th s ....................................................................
of Am New Orleans La ...............................................................................
of Am New Orleans La ...............................................................................
of Am New Orleans La ...............................................................................
of Am So Florida Chptr Broward Div ........................................................
of Am South Florida C h p tr..........................................................................
Ohio Bldg Chap Cin Div 2 oths Ohio & Ky ..............................................
of Am Ariz Chpt & other Ariz .....................................................................
of Am Ariz Chpt & other Ariz .....................................................................

1,200
1,000
1,150
2,250
2,200
5,000
3,000
1,800
12,400
5,000

4
5
4
4
4
3
3
5
5
5

50
88
72
72
72
59
59
00
86
86

119
531
116
143
119
119
143
143
600
119

1
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

0084093 AGC of Am Ariz Chpt & other Ariz .....................................................................

5,000

5

86

129

2

See footnotes at end of table.




27

Table 9. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification1

Expiration
month

State

Union

Employer
unit

General building contractors—Continued
0087430
0086260
0086230
0086500
0087970
0087670
0089390
0084290
0084360

AGC of Mid-Fla & 1 oth FI ...................................................................................
Allied Const Emplrs Assn Inc W is .......................................................................
Assoc Bldg Contrs of Northwestern Ohio Inc ...................................................
Assoc Bldg Contrs of Northwestern Ohio Inc ...................................................
Assoc Contrs of Ohio Inc Akron Div O h io .........................................................
Assoc Contrs of Ohio Inc Cent Ohio Div & 1 o th .............................................
Assoc Contrs of Ohio Inc Cinn Div Ohio & K y .......................................... ........
Bldg Trades Emplrs Assn & 1 oth NYC Vic ......................................................
BTEA & 2 oths Ohio .............................................................................................

1,700
2,700
1,800
1,150
1,200
1,500
3,500
2,800
5,000

4
5
6
6
5
4
5
4
4

59
35
31
31
31
31
00
21
31

119
119
119
143
119
143
119
143
119

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

0084310
5801730
0086080
0086340
0083360
0086200
0086970
5905040
5902240
0088700

BTEA Westch & Putnam Bldg Constr N Y ..........................................................
Carpenter Contrs Assn of Cleve & 2 oths O h io ................................................
Const Employers Assn Inc Louisville..................................................................
Constr Emplrs Assn Ohio Bldg Chpt & AGC Cleve D iv ...................................
Constr Empls Assn & 2 oths K y ..........................................................................
Constr League of Indianapolis Inc ......................................................................
Eastern NY Construction Employers In c ............................................................
Houston Sheet Metal Contrs Assn Inc T e x .......................................................
l-A Boilermakers emprs of Western Pa Area ....................................................
Keystone Bldg Contrs Assn & Cent Penn Subcontrs A s s n .............................

1,300
5,000
2,000
3,000
2,100
2,500
2,050
1,200
1,150
4,000

3
4
5
4
4
5
6
7
5
4

21
31
00
31
61
32
21
74
00
23

129
119
119
143
143
119
143
187
112
119

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
2

0084880
0085940
0087680
0088480
0084550
0088650
0084610
0084600
5917320

Keystone Bldg Contrs Assn & 1 oth P a .............................................................
Keystone Bldg Contrs Assn Inc Harrisburg Pa .................................................
Laborers Negotiatg Comm of Agr of Ind Inc In te r............................................
Master Bldrs Assn of Western Pa Inc C o un cil..................................................
Master Builders Assn of Western Pa In c ............................................................
Northeastern Fla Constr Mgmt & Negot Cncl Fla ............................................
Southw Mich Contrs Assn & 1 oth M ic h .............................................................
Southw Mich Contrs Assn & 1 oth M ic h ............................................................
Tri-State Contrs Assn Inc Ky ...............................................................................

1,400
1,400
20,000
1,000
7,000
1,000
1,450
1,800
1,100

6
6
3
5
5
4
4
5
5

23
23
00
23
23
59
34
34
61

143
129
143
531
119
129
143
119
143

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

Heavy construction contractors

Total: 17 agreements ...........................................................................................

70,850

5911580
0084270
0086650
0084910
0087110
0087100
0084700
0087090
0084720
0084940

AGC Baton Rouge Chptr L a ................................................................................
AGC Nev Chap & 2 oths So Nev .......................................................................
AGC of Am Hvy Constr Section Labor Reis Div A la ........................................
AGC of Am Mobile Chptr Ala & F la ....................................................................
AGC of Am N Y State C h p tr................................................................................
AGC of Am NY State C h p tr.................................................................. ...............
AGC of Am NY State Chptr Inc ..........................................................................
AGC of Am NY State Chptr Inc ..........................................................................
AGC Utah Chpt Utah ............................................................................................
Constructors Assn of Western P a .......................................................................

2,000
2,100
5,000
2,500
4,000
4,600
6,500
2,500
1,800
12,000

4
6
5
7
3
3
3
3
6
12

72
88
63
00
21
21
21
21
87
23

129
119
600
600
129
119
143
531
119
100

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

0086820
0087270
0084970
0084930
0085000
0089460
0087980

Contrs Assn of Westchester & Putnam Cnty In c ..............................................
Genl Contrs Assn of NY City N y .........................................................................
l-A Missouri River Basin A g m t.............................................................................
l-A Western States Field Constr Agmt In te r......................................................
Master Builders Assn of Western Pa In c ...........................................................
Ohio Contractors Association In te r.....................................................................
Steel & Iron Contrs Assn & Btea of Cleve O h io ...............................................

1,250
4,300
3,300
3,500
12,000
1,400
2,100

4
6
7
9
5
4
4

21
21
00
00
23
00
31

129
129
112
112
143
119
116

2
2
3
3
2
2
2

3
4
5

52
72
34

119
119
100

2
2
2

Special trade contractors

Total: 47 agreements ..........................................................................................

121,600

0086130 AGC Maryland Chpt Labor Rel Div M d ...............................................................
0085620 AGC of Am Baton Rouge Chptr La ....................................................................
0086930 AGC of Am Detroit Chptr & 1 oth Mich ..............................................................

3,000
2,500
1,000

See footnotes at end of table.




28

Table 9. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification'

Expiration
month

State

Union

Employer
unit

Special trade contractors—Continued
0085700
0085660
0088660
0087130
0085110
0086170
5902880

AGC of Am Wisconsin C h p t.................................................................................
AGC Ohio State Bldg Chap Cin Div Ohio & K y ................................................
Air Conditioning Contrs of A rizona......................................................................
Arizona Steel Erectors Assn Ariz ........................................................................
Assn of Contrng Plumbers of The City of N Y ...................................................
Assoc Contrs of Ohio Inc Cent Ohio Div & 1 o th .............................................
Assoc Tile Contrs of So Calif ..............................................................................

2,400
3,500
1,200
1,500
3,550
2,500
1,000

4
5
6
7
6
4
5

35
00
86
86
21
31
00

119
119
187
116
170
119
115

2
2
2
2
2
2
2

0085680
0085460
0089290
0087910
0085490
0089450
0087320
0085530
0088750
0085710
0089140

Bldg Trades Emplrs Assn Westchester & Putnam ...........................................
BTEA of Westchester & Putnam Counties N Y ..................................................
Calif Conf of Mason Contrs Assn Inc C a lif........................................................
Cleve Plumbing Contrs Assn O h io ......................................................................
Detroit Mason Contrs A s s n ..................................................................................
Eastern New York Construction Employers I n c ................................................
Eastern NY Construction Emplrs In c ..................................................................
Exec Cncl Cal Conf Mason Contr Assn Inc C a lif..............................................
l-A Carpenters Genl Contracting Agmt Ga & F la ..............................................
l-A Millwright Conveyor & Machine Erector M ich..............................................
III Regional Insulation Contrs Assn Chicago III..................................................

3,000
1,300
4,000
1,300
3,300
1,000
1,100
6,000
1,500
1,250
1,200

4
4
4
4
6
6
6
6
4
5
5

21
21
93
31
34
21
21
93
50
34
30

119
115
115
170
115
129
115
143
119
119
106

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
3
2

0085830
0089420
0085520
0087210
5913190
0085400
0088240
0087220
0086690

Ironworkers Employers Assn of Western P enn.................................................
Kern County Floor Covering Association ...........................................................
Lathing & Metal Furring Contrs Assn of Calif I n c .............................................
Mason Contrs Assn Cleveland O h io ...................................................................
Mason Contrs Assn of Allegheny Cnty P a .........................................................
Mason Contrs Assn of Milwaukee & 1 oth Wis ................................................
Mech Contrs Assn of Central Ohio Inc ..............................................................
Mech Contrs Assn of Cleve Inc O h io .................................................................
Mechanical Contrs Assn of New Mexico Inc N M e x .........................................

2,400
1,700
1,250
1,950
1,000
1,500
1,050
1,700
1,500

5
9
6
4
5
5
5
4
3

23
53
93
31
23
35
31
31
85

116
164
147
115
115
115
170
170
170

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

0088740
0085980
0085070
0085100
0085840
0087620
0087750
0085280
0087630
0085330

Mechanical Contrs Assn Rochester Inc & 1 oth N Y ........................................
Mechanical Contrs Chicago Assn In te r..............................................................
Metro Detroit Plumb & Mech Contrs Assn M ic h ...............................................
Natl Automatic Sprinkler & Fire Control Assn Adelphi M d ..............................
Natl Elevator Industry Inc In te r............................................................................
NECA Greater Cleveland Chapt O hio..................................................................
NECA Milw Chpt 4 cnties Wis .............................................................................
NECA of Detroit Southeastern Mich C h p t..........................................................
NECA So Fla Chap Inside C o n s t........................................................................
NECA St Louis Chpt M o .......................................................................................

1,000
8,000
2,000
7,000
16,000
1,500
1,500
3,500
1,400
2,400

5
5
5
3
7
4
5
5
9
5

21
30
34
00
00
31
35
34
59
43

170
170
170
170
128
127
127
127
127
127

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

0086900
0085190
0085240
0088860
0085380
0085760
0089050

NECA St Paul Chpt Minn .....................................................................................
PDCA Chicago Chpt III..........................................................................................
PDCA of Am Detroit & Wayne Chptrs Mich ......................................................
Plumbing Contrs Assn of Metro St Louis Mo ....................................................
San Fran Elec Contrs Assn Inc C a lif..................................................................
Smaccna Los Angeles Chptr & 1 oth Assn C a lif..............................................
UN Painting Contrs Assn & 1 oth Co Kans Nebr & Wyo ................................

1,400
6,700
2,400
1,200
1,400
2,050
1,000

4
9
5
6
5
6
6

41
33
34
43
93
93
00

127
164
164
170
127
187
164

2
2
2
2
2
2
2

6
2
8
4
5
5
3
6
2
5

92
43
00
91
93
93
93
93
22
93

531
531
155
531
186
531
531
531
155
531

1
4
4
2
1
2
2
2
1
1

Food and kindred products

Total: 35 agreements ..........................................................................................
0002580
0003110
0002000
0002460
0002950
0003090
0002600
0002530
0002550
0002540

168,400

Agripac Inc 4 Pits Oreg ........................................................................................
Anheuser-Busch Inc St Louis M o ........................................................................
Armour & Co Master Agmt Inter .........................................................................
Assoc Producers & Packers Inc W ash...............................................................
Calif & Hawaiian Sugar Co Crockett C a lif..........................................................
Calif Brewers Assn & oths C a lif..........................................................................
Calif Metal Trades Assn Fresno & Madera Calif ..............................................
Calif Processors Inc C a lif.....................................................................................
Campbell Soup Co Camden NJ ..........................................................................
Campbell Soup Co Sacramento C a lif.................................................................

3,000
1,800
4,300
1,500
1,000
1,300
2,000
55,000
1,300
1,400

See footnotes at end of table.




29

____ _______

Table 9. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification1

Expiration
month

State

Union

Employer
unit

Food and kindred products—Continued
0002020
0002520
0003890
5215350
0002050
0004110
0002070
0002400
0002080
0003380

Chicago Midwest Meat Assn III ...........................................................................
Del Monte Corp Pits 126 & 1 2 7 ..........................................................................
Diamond Fruit Growers Inc Oreg ........................................................................
Diamond-Sunsweet Inc Stockton Calif ...............................................................
Dubuque Packing Co Dubuque Io w a ..................................................................
Genl Foods Corp Food Prods Div Woodburn O r ..............................................
Geo A Hormel & Co Austin Minn P it ..................................................................
Greater NY Milk Dealers Labor NY Conn & N J ........... .....................................
Hygrade Food Products Corp lo Mich & Wash F la ..........................................
l-A Dried Fruit Industry Del Monte-Mayfair C a lif................................................

3,550
1,700
1,000
1,100
2,300
1,400
1,650
2,000
1,250
1,000

4
5
5
7
8
4
9
11
10
7

33
90
90
93
42
92
41
20
00
93

155
531
531
531
364
531
155
531
155
480

2
4
4
1
1
1
4
2
4
3

0004040
0002620
0003840
0003780
0002170
0002100
0002110
0003740
0002180
0004120

l-A Meat Industry Independent Shops Ind Chi I II..............................................
l-A Pineapple Companies Factory & Plantations Haw aii..................................
Iowa Beef Processors Inc Dakota C ity ...............................................................
Itt Gwaltney Smithfield V a ....................................................................................
John Morrell & Co In te r........................................................................................
Oscar Mayer & Co Davenport Pit Iowa D is t......................................................
Oscar Mayer & Co Madison Pit W is ...................................................................
Ralston Purina Co Van Camp Sea Food D iv .....................................................
Rath Packing Co Tex NC Ga & Io w a .................................................................
Stayton Canning Co Cooperative Stayton & vicinity.........................................

2,950
4,200
2,300
1,300
6,100
1,550
2,500
1,850
2,000
1,800

4
1
4
1
8
8
8
4
8
6

33
95
46
54
00
42
35
51
00
92

155
480
155
531
155
155
364
500
155
531

3
3
1
1
4
1
1
4
4
1

0004130
0003000
0002220
0003440
0002230

Stayton Canning Company Cooperative Salem & vicinity ...............................
Sugar Cos Negotiating Comm Hawaii.................................................................
Swift & Co & Estech Inc Master Agmt In te r......................................................
Watsonville Emplrs Frozen Food Assn Calif .....................................................
Wilson Foods Corp Master Agmt In te r...............................................................

2,300
9,000
31,500
3,500
6,000

5
1
8
6
8

92
95
00
93
00

531
480
155
531
155

4
2
4
2
4

12
12

56
61

203
203

1
1

8
4
5

31
57
20

134
305
134

3
1
2

5
12
6

00
21
00

134
142
134

2
2
2

Tobacco manufactures

2 agreem ents............................................................................................

2,500

0005040 Liggett & Myers Inc Durham NC .........................................................................
0005050 Loews Theatres Inc Lorillard Div Louisville K y ..................................................

1,000
1,500

Total:

Textile mill products

3 agreements ...........................................................................................

5,900

0006340 l-A Knitgoods Agmt C leveland.............................................................................
0006230 Rock Hill Printing & Finishing Co S C ..................................................................
0006210 United Knitwear Mfrs League Inc N Y .................................................................

1,050
1,250
3,600

Total:

Apparel and other textile products

Total: 30 agreements ..........................................................................................

187,300

0008270 Affiliated Dress Mfrs Inc & 2 oths In te r..............................................................
0008440 Am Millinery Mfrs Assn Inc N Y ............................................................................
0008130 Assoc Garment Indus of St Louis Dress Branch III & M o ...............................

15,000
2,000
3,000

See footnotes at end of table.




30

Table 9. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification'

Expiration
month

State

Union

Employer
unit

Apparel and other textile products—Continued
0008930
5618690
0008750
0008540
0008220
0008000
0008030

Associated Garment Industries of St. Louis ......................................................
Associated Manufacturers Tubular Piping & Trimming NYC ...........................
Bayly Corp Colo Utah Calif & W a s h ...................................................................
Belt Assn Inc New York N Y .................................................................................
Bobbie Brooks Inc Master Agmt Interstate........................................................
Clothing Mfrs Assn of The Us of Am In te r........................................................
Cluett Peabody & Co Inc Arrow Co Div In te r....................................................

3,200
1,200
1,200
3,800
1,550
56,000
4,600

7
6
10
6
6
3
8

43
21
00
21
00
00
00

134
134
305
134
134
305
305

1
2
4
2
4
2
4

0008920
0008760
0008790
0008040
0008870
0008680
0008490
0008520
0006190
0008840

Fashion Apparel Manufacturers Association Pa ...............................................
Greater Blouse Skirt & Undergarment Assn Inc In te r......................................
Greater Blouse Skt & Ungmt Assn Inc N Y ........................................................
l-A Cotton Garment & Outerwear Agmt Phila P a ..............................................
l-A Independent Shops Cloth Hats & Caps N Y C ..............................................
l-A Sportswear Agmt No C a lif..............................................................................
Indus Assn of Juvenile Apparel Mfrs Inc N Y .....................................................
Infants And Childrens Coat Assn Inc & oth N Y ................................................
Knitted Outerwear Mfgrs Assn Pa D is t...............................................................
Londontown Corp London Fog Rainwear Outerwear In te r..............................

8,000
18,000
3,000
1,550
1,300
3,000
6,000
5,600
5,000
1,950

5
5
5
10
6
9
5
5
5
11

23
00
21
23
21
93
21
21
23
50

134
134
134
305
142
134
134
134
134
305

2
2
2
3
1
3
2
2
2
4

0008260
0008740
0008280
0008310
0008620
0008240
0008330
0008600
0008100
0008610

Natl Assn of Blouse Mfrs Inc N Y ........................................................................
Natl Hand Embroidery & Novelty Mfrs Assn Inc N Y ........................................
Natl Skirt & Sportswear Assn Inc Inter ..............................................................
New Eng Sportswear Mfrs Assn Boston M a s s .................................................
New England Apparel Mfrs Assn ........................................................................
Ny Coat & Suit Assn NY NJ Conn & P a ............................................................
Phila Apparel Producers Assn Pa .......................................................................
Pleaters Stitchers & Embroiderers Assn Inc N Y ...............................................
Publix Shirt Corp Pa Tenn & Ga .........................................................................
Schiffli Lace & Embroidery Mfrs Assn Inc NJ ...................................................

1,000
4,650
1,500
2,500
3,500
20,000
5,000
2,200
1,000
1,000

5
6
5
6
5
5
5
6
8
4

21
21
00
14
10
00
23
21
00
22

134
134
134
134
134
134
134
134
305
202

2
2
2
2
2
2
4
2
2
2

12
4
1

33
23
70

205
119
343

3
2
4

4
7
1
8
7
6
5
10
4
5

33
34
64
00
35
21
52
00
93
32

112
553
119
205
119
119
312
205
205
484

1
1
1
4
1
2
4
4
2
1

Lumber and wood products

Total:

3 agreem ents...........................................................................................

5,000

0010120 l-A Picture Frame Mfg Cos Chicago area III......................................................
5912030 Quaker City Lumber Products Assn Philadelphia P a ........................................
0010280 Weyerhaeuser Company Okla & A r k ..................................................................

1,500
1,500
2,000

Furniture and fixtures

Total: 10 agreements ..........................................................................................
0011220
5904460
0011280
0011320
0011130
0011310
0011120
0011030
0011050
0011350

12,850

All-Steel Inc Aurora I I I ...........................................................................................
American Seating Company Grand Rapids M ic h ..............................................
Desoto Inc Jackson Furn Div Jackson M iss......................................................
Flexsteel Industries Inc Iowa Pa & T e x ..............................................................
Hamilton Indus Two Rivers Wis ..........................................................................
Manufacturing Woodwrks Assn Gr NY & 1 o th .................................................
Roper Corp Roper Eastern Grp 3 Pits Md ........................................................
Simmons Co In te r..................................................................................................
Upholstered Furniture Mfrs Assn of So C a lif.....................................................
Zenith Electronics Corp of Indiana Evansville In d ............................................

1,300
1,000
1,300
1,000
1,200
1,200
1,200
2,100
1,550
1,000

See footnotes at end of table.




31

Table 9. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification1

Expiration
month

State

Union

Employer
unit

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

00
35
35
34
35
11
20
23
35
90

244
231
231
231
231
100
231
231
231
244

4
4
1
1
1
4
2
1
1
3

11
35
54
00

100
231
100
231

1
1
1
4

3
11
7

21
23
53

243
243
323

2
2
1

6
1
10
11
1
5
12
2
5
3
4

21
21
62
22
54
31
59
31
22
74
34

335
121
202
500
500
357
121
500
357
101
357

1
1
1
1
1
1
4
4
1
1
4

Paper and allied products

Total: 14 agreements ..........................................................................................
0013020
0012030
0012020
0012360
0012000
0012090
0012640
0012110
0012310
0012490
5800200
0012170
0012810
0012770

24,000

Am Can Co In te rsta te ...........................................................................................
Am Can Co 6 Plants W is ......................................................................................
American Can Company Green Bay M ill............................................................
Brown Co Kalamazoo M ic h ..................................................................................
Consol Papers Inc & Consoweld Corp Wis .......................................................
Great Northern Paper Co 2 Millinocket Mills M a in e .........................................
Greater NY Folding Box & Display Mfrs Assn ..................................................
Hammermill Paper Co Erie Div P a ......................................................................
Hammermill Paper Co Thilmany Pulp & Paper Div W is ...................................
l-A West Coast P & P Convert Indus M ultiple...................................................
Inti Paper Co Androscoggin Mill Jay M a in e.......................................................
Kimberly-Clark Corp Neenah Mill W is .................................................................
Union Camp Corp Franklin V a .............................................................................
Westvaco Corp Container In te r...........................................................................

1,000
1,650
1,000
1,200
2,700
2,400
3,000
1,300
1,200
3,800
1,000
1,300
1,250
1,200

Printing and publishing

Total:

3 agreements ...........................................................................................

3,200

0014280 Edition Bookbinders of NY Inc ............................................................................
0014310 Graphic Arts Assn of Delaware Valley Inc P a ...................................................
0014510 Wash Post Co DC .................................................................................................

1,000
1,200
1,000

Chemicals and allied products

Total: 11 agreements ..........................................................................................
0016010
0016430
0016630
0016470
0016320
5611880
5917490
0016810
0016450
0016420
0016460

18,900

Allied Chem Corp Indus Chem D Syracuse W k s ..............................................
Am Cyanamid Co Lederle Labs Pearl River NY ...............................................
American Enka Corp Lowland Tenn ...................................................................
Colgate-Palmolive Co Jersey City Pit NJ ...........................................................
Dupont E I DE Nemours & Co Martinsville V a ..................................................
Goodyear Atomic Corp Piketon O hio..................................................................
Occidental Chemical Co White Springs F la .......................................................
Procter & Gamble Co Ivorydale & St Bernard Pits Ohio .................................
Squibb E R & Sons Inc P & M N J ......................................................................
Union Carbide Corp Texas City Tex ...................................................................
Warner Lambert & Co Detroit Allen Park & Rochester M ic h ..........................

1,200
1,450
2,400
1,200
2,850
1,600
1,500
2,100
1,950
1,550
1,100

Petroleum and coal products

Total: 13 agreements ..........................................................................................

20,300

Atlantic Richfield Co & Arco Pipeline Company In te r.......................................
Atlantic Richfield Co C a lif.....................................................................................
Exxon Corp Bayway Ref & Chem Pit Linden NJ ..............................................
Exxon Corp East Texas Div Prod Dept Houston Tex ......................................
Exxon Corp Exxon Co USA Baton Rouge Ref & Chem La ............................
Gulf Oil Co-US Port Arthur Refinery T e x ............................................................
Mobil Oil Corp Beaumont Refinery Yard Unit T e x ............................................
Shell Oil Co C a lif....................................................................................................
Standard Oil Co Amoco Oil Co T e x ....................................................................
Standard Oil Co of Calif Western Operations ...................................................

3,200
1,200
1,000
1,000
2,400
2,500
1,550
1,150
1,350
1,650

1
1
2
2
3
1
1
1
1
4

00
93
22
74
72
74
74
93
74
93

357
357
531
500
121
357
357
357
357
186

4
4
4
1
1
1
4
4
4
4

5912400 Standard Oil Co of Calif Western Opers Richmond C a lif................................

1,100

1

93

357

1

0018140
0018100
0018050
5906220
0018070
0018060
0018090
0018130
0018000
0018150

See footnotes at end of table.




32

Table 9. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification1

Expiration
month

State

Union

Employer
unit

3
3

33
23

500
121

1
1

Petroleum and coal products—Continued
0063340 Standard Oil Co of Ind Amoco Oil Co III............................................................
0018250 Sun Oil Co of Penn Marcus Hook Penn ............................................................

1,100
1,100

Rubber and misc. plastics products

Total: 12 agreements ..........................................................................................

76,850

Armstrong Rubber Co Master A g m t...................................................................
B F Goodrich Company In te r...............................................................................
Dunlop Tire & Rubber Corp Buffalo N Y .............................................................
Firestone Tire & Rubber Co Master Agmt In te r................................................
Gates Rubber Co Denver C o ...............................................................................
Genl Motors Corp Inland Div Dayton O h io ........................................................
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co In te r.......................................................................
Kelly-Springfield Tire Co Cumberland Md ..........................................................
Kelly-Springfield Tire Co Tyler T e x ......................................................................
Plastic & Metal Products Mfrs Assn Inc NYC ...................................................

3,000
9,350
1,000
15,300
2,650
6,900
22,300
1,800
1,150
3,800

7
4
6
4
8
9
4
6
9
6

00
00
21
00
84
31
00
52
74
21

333
333
333
333
333
333
333
333
333
134

4
4
1
4
1
4
4
1
1
2

0019350 Rubbermaid Inc Wooster Ohio ............................................................................
0019120 Uniroyal Inc P & M In te r.......................................................................................

1,300
8,300

10
4

31
00

333
333

1
4

5
10
4
4
11
8

00
00
33
57
00
41

174
174
121
135
174
357

4
3
1
1
2
1

1
4
4
12
5
6

10
54
54
00
62
63

127
335
335
161
335
335

4
1
1
2
1
1

7
4
4
6
11
12

31
16
16
93
32
93

112
553
218
218
121
127

1
1
1
4
1
4

0019000
0019060
0019330
0019030
0019190
0019040
0019080
0019070
0019340
0019260

Stone, clay, and glass products

6 agreem ents...........................................................................................

8,850

Am Standard Inc 6 Pits Chinaware Depts In te r................................................
l-A Chinaware Manufacturers Group NY Pa & Ohio ........................................
Johns-Manville Sales Corp Waukegan III...........................................................
Owens-Corning Fiberglass Corp Anderson S C a r.............................................
U S Potters Assn Pa Ohio & W V a ......................................................................
3M Company Minn Mining & Mfg Co D St Paul M n .........................................

1,800
1,300
1,000
1,400
1,500
1,850

Total:
0023450
0023280
0023360
0023700
0023300
0023370

Primary metal industries

Total:
0026580
0025670
0026520
0026640
0026650
0026240

6 agreements ...........................................................................................

11,550

Am Insulated Wire Corp & N E Cable Corp Mass & R l...................................
Lynchburg Fndry Co Lynchburg Va ....................................................................
Lynchburg Fndry Co Radford Pit V a ...................................................................
Mfrs Indus Reis Assn Mo Ohio Mass III & M ic h ...............................................
No Am Royalties Inc Wheland Foundry Div T e n n ............................................
Stockham Valves & Fitting Inc Birmingham A la ................................................

1,300
2,000
1,200
4,000
1,200
1,850

Fabricated metal products

Total: 12 agreements ..........................................................................................
0029230
0029890
0029060
0000210
0000270
0029820

20,200

Babcock & Wilcox Co Power Generation Group O h io .....................................
Colt Industries Firearms D ivision.........................................................................
Emhart Indus Inc Berlin Plant Hardware Div C o n n ...........................................
Genl Dynamics Corp Pomona Calif Dist Lodge ................................................
ICI United States Inc Charlestown Ind ...............................................................
Inti Tele & Tele Genl Controls Div C a lif.............................................................

2,100
1,300
1,900
1,650
1,250
1,000

See footnotes at end of table.




33

Table 9. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification'

Expiration
month

State

Union

Employer
unit

Fabricated metal products— Continued
Ladish Co Cudahy Wis .........................................................................................
Norris Indus Price Pfister Brass Mfg Co Calif ...................................................
Norris Industries Inc Vernon Facility C a lif..........................................................
Stanley Works Conn .............................................................................................

2,000
1,200
1,400
2,400

2
4
4
5

35
93
93
16

218
531
553
218

1
4
1
1

0029200 Trane Company La Crosse W is ...........................................................................
0000260 Westinghouse Elec Corp Aerospace Div M d .....................................................

1,800
2,200

7
7

35
52

218
127

1
1

0026180
0029810
0029730
0029080

Nonelectrical machinery

Total: 23 agreements ..........................................................................................

124,850

0032530
0033860
0032150
5905010
0032300
0033930
0033110
0033480
0033260
0033440

Acme-Cleveland Corp Natl Acme Co Div O h io .................................................
Allis-Chalmers Corp La Porte In d ........................................................................
Allis-Chalmers Corp West Allis Wis ....................................................................
Am Standard Inc Wabco Constr Equip Peoria I II ..............................................
Bucyrus-Erie Co Ind Pa & W is .............................................................................
Carrier Air Conditioning Co Mcminnville T e n n ............................. ......................
Carrier Corp Syracuse N Y ....................................................................................
Caterpillar Tractor Co Towmotor Corp Central Agmt In te r..............................
Cessna Aircraft Co Hutchinson Kans .................................................................
Chic Pneumatic Tool Co Utica N Y ......................................................................

1,200
1,000
1,900
1,000
2,000
1,800
3,250
25,000
2,100
1,150

9
11
11
8
8
5
11
9
2
6

31
32
35
33
00
60
21
00
47
21

354
553
553
112
335
187
187
553
218
100

1
1
1
1
4
1
1
4
1
1

' 0032940
0032220
0032740
0033830
0032730
0032790
0032250
0032260
0033800
0033320
0032340
0033970
0032690

Copeland Corporation O h io ..................................................................................
Deere & Co Iowa & Illinois...................................................................................
FMC Corp Bearing & Chain Divs Indianapolis...................................................
Hesston Corp Hesston Kans ...............................................................................
Ingersoll-Rand Co Painted Post N Y ....................................................................
Ingersoll-Rand Torrington Co Conn ....................................................................
Inti Harvester Co Cler & Tech 7 Pits In te r.........................................................
Inti Harvester Co Main Labr Agmt Prod-Maint In te r.........................................
John Deere Horicon Works Company Horieon Wise .......................................
Massey Ferguson Inc Master Inter .....................................................................
Rexnord Inc West Milwaukee Opers W is ...........................................................
Sperry Rand Corp 2 Units NY & Calif ................................................................
Textron Inc Fafnir Bearing Div New Britain C o n n .............................................

2,800
32,000
2,000
1,450
1,600
1,650
2,100
32,100
1,200
1,500
1,500
1,350
3,200

6
9
9
10
4
7
9
9
9
10
4
9
8

31
00
32
47
21
16
00
00
35
00
35
21
16

347
553
335
500
347
553
553
553
218
553
335
347
553

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

Electric and electronic equipment

Total: 32 agreements ..........................................................................................

227,950

0036090
0038000
0036140
0037800
5703730
0037940
0036180
0036170
0037060
0037160

Allen-Bradley Co Milwaukee W is .........................................................................
Avx Corp Avx Ceramics Myrtle Beach S C a r ....................................................
Cutler-Hammer Inc Spec Prods Divs Milw Wis .................................................
Eagle Elc Mfg Co Inc & Eagle Plastics Long Island C ity .................................
General Electric Co Auburn N Y ...........................................................................
Genl Elec Co Med Sys Busn Div Milwaukee W is .............................................
Genl Elec Co Natl Agmt In te r..............................................................................
Genl Elec Co Natl Agmt In te r..............................................................................
Genl Elec Co Tube Dept Owensboro K y ...........................................................
Genl Electric Co Chicago & Cicero Pits III.........................................................

4,800
1,800
1,200
1,500
1,000
1,400
16,400
70,000
1,050
1,700

7
12
3
8
6
6
6
7
9
6

35
57
35
21
21
35
00
00
61
33

484
127
218
553
218
218
484
347
107
187

1
1
4
1
1
1
4
1
1
1

0037820
0036670
0036680
0037670
0037470
5510670
0036930
0037480
0036600

Genl Motors Corp Ohio NY & N J ........................................................................
GTE Automatic Elec Co III Dist ...........................................................................
GTE Automatic Elec Co Northlake III .................................................................
GTE Sylvania Inc Smithfeld N C ...........................................................................
GTE Sylvania Ottawa Ohio ..................................................................................
GTE Sylvannia Inc Seneca Falls N Y ..................................................................
Hughes Aircraft Co C a lif.......................................................................................
Natl Union Electric Corp Eureka Div III ..............................................................
RCA Corp Natl Agmt Ind Calif Pa NJ Ohio & F la .............................................

23,450
1,500
3,000
1,400
1,850
1,000
13,000
1,500
13,000

9
4
4
12
9
10
12
1
12

00
33
33
56
31
21
93
33
00

347
218
127
346
127
335
119
218
127

1
4
1
1
1
1
4
1
4

See footnotes at end of table.




34

Table 9. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification'

Expiration
month

State

Union

Employer
unit

Electric and electronic equipment—Continued
1,200

2

93

127

4

Rockwell Inti Corp Collins Radio Group Dallas T e x .........................................
Rockwell Inti Corp Collins Radio Grp C Rpds Io w a .........................................
Sanyo Manufacturing Corp Forest City Ark .......................................................
Sunbeam Corp Sunbeam Appliance Co III.........................................................
Wagner Electric Corp & 1 oth St Louis M o .......................................................
Westinghouse Elec Corp In te r.............................................................................
Westinghouse Elec Corp Beaver Pit P a .............................................................
Westinghouse Elec Corp Interstate .....................................................................
Westinghouse Elec Corp Natl Agmt In te r..........................................................
Westinghouse Electric Corp Master Agmt In te r................................................

2,500
5,200
1,900
1,050
1,700
11,250
2,400
13,850
4,950
18,200

2
2
9
1
4
7
7
7
7
7

74
42
71
33
43
00
23
00
00
00

347
127
347
218
347
500
127
127
484
347

4
1
1
1
1
4
1
4
4
4

0036420 Whirlpool Corp St Joseph Mich Div P its ............................................................
0037830 Whirlpool Corp St Paul Div M in n .........................................................................

1,550
1,650

5
7

41
41

218
531

1
4

5909600 Rockwell Inti Corp Collins Govt Telecoms Div C a lif.........................................
0037100
0036510
0037440
0036410
0036240
0036290
0036260
0036250
0036270
0036280

Transportation equipment

Total: 33 agreements ...........................................................................................

721,700

0040970
0041540
0040480
0040990
0041940
0041900
0040090
0040070
0040100
0040080

Alabama Dry Dock & Shipbuilding Co Mobile Ala ............................................
Am Motors Corp Am General Corp Sub In d ......................................................
Avco Corp Avco Lycoming Eng Group Stratford C o n n ....................................
Bath Iron Works Corp Bath & Brunswick M a in e ...............................................
Bendix Autolite Corporation M ic h ........................................................................
Bowen-McLaughlin-York Co. Div. of Harsco Corp. Bair S id in g .......................
Chrysler Corp Parts Depots In te r........................................................................
Chrysler Corp Production-Maintenance In te r.....................................................
Chrysler Corporation Engineering Inter ..............................................................
Chrysler Corporation Office & Clerical Inter ......................................................

1,200
1,500
1,950
4,500
1,200
1,800
2,500
64,000
5,400
3,400

8
6
5
6
11
1
9
9
9
9

63
32
16
11
34
23
00
00
00
00

320
553
553
320
553
553
553
553
553
553

1
2
1
4
1
1
4
4
1
4

0040150
0040870
0040190
5905410
0041060
0041030
0041280
0041270
0040220
0041690

Dana Corp Master Agmt Pa Ohio Mich Ind III & W is .......................................
Fairchild Industries Inc Farmingdale N Y .............................................................
Ford Motor Co Master Interstate.........................................................................
Freightliner Corp Portland Oreg D is t....................................................................
Fruehauf Corp Md Shipbldg & Drydock Co B a lt...............................................
Genl Dynamics Corp Electric Boat Div C o n n ....................................................
Genl Electric Co Evandale O h io ..........................................................................
Genl Electric Co Evendale O h io ..........................................................................
Genl Motors Corp Master Agmt Interstate.........................................................
Genl Motors Corp Pit Protection Ees In te r........................................................

7,500
3,500
158,000
1,700
1,500
12,750
1,250
4,700
400,000
2,550

12
7
9
6
5
6
7
7
9
10

00
21
00
92
52
16
31
31
00
00

553
218
553
218
320
600
218
553
553
461

4
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
4
4

0040760
0041420
0040280
5906780
0041810
0041130
0040920
0040430
0041600
0000370

Goodyear Aerospace Corp Akron O h io ..............................................................
Jacksonville Shipyards Inc F la .............................................................................
Mack Trucks Inc Master Shop Agmt Pa NJ Md & Calif ..................................
Pittsb Forgings Co Greenville Steel Car Co Pa ................................................
Summa Corp Hughes Helicopters Div C a lif.......................................................
Sun Shipbldg & Dry Dock Co P & M Chester Pa .............................................
TRW Inc Tapco-Valves-Maint Plant-Replacement Ohio ..................................
Trico Products Corp Buffalo N Y ..........................................................................
Trw Inc Harrisburg P a ...........................................................................................
United Aircraft Corp Pratt & Whitney Aircraft D Conn .....................................

1,300
1,800
6,250
1,000
1,600
2,800
4,000
2,500
1,200
2,350

8
7
10
8
7
1
10
6
7
11

31
59
00
23
93
23
31
21
23
16

553
112
553
553
119
112
500
500
500
218

1
4
4
1
4
1
1
4
1
1

0040960 United Aircraft Corp Pratt & Whitney Aircraft D Conn .....................................
0041230 United Aircraft Corp Pratt & Whitney Aircraft C o n n ..........................................
0041370 United Aircraft Corp Pratt & Whitney Aircraft C o n n ..........................................

9,700
3,500
2,800

11
11
11

16
16
16

218
218
218

4
1
1

See footnotes at end of table.




35

Table 9. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification’

Expiration
month

Employer
unit

State

Union

1
1
4

21
41
32

500
531
107

4
4
4

11
3
4
12

23
00
14
22

333
146
332
141

1
2
4
4

3
2
2
6

35
95
84
21

197
531
197
197

1
1
1
4

Instruments and related products

Total:

3 agreements ...........................................................................................

0044280 Bulova Watch Co Inc NY .....................................................................................
0044090 Honeywell Inc Minneapolis & St Paul M in n ......................................................
0037090 Magnavox Co Magnavox Govt & Ind Electronics Co Ind ............................... *

8,950
1,250
6,500
1,200

Miscellaneous manufacturing industries

4 agreem ents...........................................................................................

7,500

Armstrong Cork Co Lancaster Pa Floor P la n t...................................................
Jewelry Mfrs Assn Inc & Assoc Jewelers Inc Conn NJ N Y ............................
Milton Bradley Co Springield M a s s .....................................................................
Standard Plastic Prods Inc So Plainfield N J ......................................................

2,000
2,600
1,800
1,100

Total:
0046110
0046000
0046170
0046240

Local and interurban passenger transit

4 agreem ents............................................................................................

4,900

Milwaukee Transport Service Inc W is .................................................................
MTL Inc Honolulu Hawaii .....................................................................................
Regional Transportation District Denver C o lo ...................................................
Varsity Transit Inc NY D iv ....................................................................................

1,200
1,200
1,500
1,000

Total:
0050150
5618470
5522150
0050440

Trucking and warehousing

Total: 39 agreements ...........................................................................................

370,000

0052700
0052480
0052120
0052140
0052130
0052180
0052620
0052220
0052720
0052730

Bowman Transportation Inc O-T-R & Pick Up In te r .........................................
Central Penn Motor Carriers Conference Inc P a ..............................................
l-A Carolina Freight Council O-T-R Supp Agmt NC & S C ...............................
l-A Central States Area Local Cartage Supp Agmt In te r.................................
l-A Central States Area O-T-R Motor Freight Supp Inter ................................
l-A Central States Area Tank Truck Agmt In te r................................................
l-A Central States Iron-Steel Spec Commd Agmt Inter ...................................
l-A Local Cartage Agmt For Hire & Pri Carriers III............................................
l-A Master Cement & All Dry Bulk Commodities Inter .....................................
l-A Master Rai-Truck Freight Agmt In te r............................................................

2,100
10,000
4,000
67,000
41,000
15,000
14,850
7,700
5,000
2,500

8
3
3
3
3
11
3
3
6
3

00
23
50
00
00
00
00
33
00
00

335
531
531
531
531
531
531
542
531
531

4
2
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3

0052090
0052760
0052150
0052350
0052340
0052330
0052320
0052280
5912540
5906100

l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A

Natl Master Automobile Transporters Agmt In te r.......................................
Natl Master Freiaht Local Cartage Phila Pa & v ic ity ..................................
NJ-NY Area Genl Trucking Supp A g m t........................................................
So Conf Local Freight Forwarding Garage In te r.........................................
So Conf Local Freight Forwarding Off Ees In te r........................................
So Conf Local Freight Forwarding Pickup In te r..........................................
So Conf O-T-R Motor Freight Supp Agmt In te r..........................................
Va Freight Council O-T-R Supp A g m t..........................................................
West Va Freight Local Cartage Supp A g m t................................................
West Va Freight O-T-R Supp Agmt Charleston W V a ...............................

4,800
5,400
19,000
2,350
1,800
15,250
12,400
1,300
1,400
1,200

5
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3

00
00
20
00
00
00
74
00
55
55

531
531
531
531
531
531
531
531
531
531

3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3

0052640
0052630
0052650
0052660
0052470
0052210
0052030
0052750
0052390

l-A Western States Area Local Cartage S upplem ent.......................................
l-A Western States Area O-T-R Motor Freight Supp Inter ..............................
l-A Western States Area Office Supp In te r........................................................
l-A Western States Automotive Shop-Truck Agmt Inter ..................................
l-A Western States Trucking Maintenance In te r...............................................
Illinois Trucking Assns Inc & 1 oth Off & Cler ..................................................
Illinois Trucking Assns Inc Hwy Drivers..............................................................
Merchants Fast Motor Lines Inc T e x ...................................................................
Truck Owners Assn of Seattle Inc W a s h ............................................................

46,000
19,000
6,500
2,400
3,000
2,100
4,000
1,250
1,000

3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
4

00
00
00
00
00
33
00
74
91

531
531
531
531
218
531
531
500
531

3
3
3
3
3
2
2
1
2

See footnotes at end of table.




36

Table 9. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification'

Expiration
month

3,200
6,550
1,300
20,000
4,000
5,000
3,500
1,550
1,700
3,900

State

Union

Employer
unit

4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
3

22
00
43
00
33
93
21
31
21
23

531
531
531
531
531
531
531
531
531
531

4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
2

2
2

00
20

239
239

2
2

1

63

218

1

2
7
7
10
11
6
4
4
8
7
7

59
34
34
33
32
61
32
95
00
00
20

127
127
127
127
127
346
346
127
516
201
346

4
4
4
1
1
4
4
4
4
4
4

3
5
4
9
3
11
3
3
3

86
71
11
33
00
00
33
33
33

127
127
127
531
127
357
127
127
127

4
4
4
2
4
4
1
1
4

Trucking and warehousing— Continued
0052400
0O5255O
5707450
0052830
0052710
0052600
0052850
0052780
0052810
0052430

United Parcel Service Inc N J ...............................................................................
United Parcel Service Inc Atlantic Area .............................................................
United Parcel Service Inc Central Area M o .......................................................
United Parcel Service Inc Central States In te r..................................................
United Parcel Service Inc Chicago III .................................................................
United Parcel Service Inc No C a lif......................................................................
United Parcel Service New York City NY ..........................................................
United Parcel Service No & So O h io ..................................................................
United Parcel Service Upstate NY D is t..............................................................
Western Penn Motor Carriers Local Cartage Supp A g m t................................

Water transportation

2 ag reem ents...........................................................................................

3,000

0054120 Marine Towing & Transp Emplrs Assn Oil Tankrs N Y .....................................
0054140 Marine Towing & Transp Emplrs Assn Opers Tug NY NJ ..............................

1,000
2,000

Total:

Transportation by air

1 ag reem ent..............................................................................................

1,200

0033200 Northrop Worldwide Aircraft Services Inc A la ...................................................

1,200

Total:

Communication

Total: 11 agreements ...........................................................................................
0058000
0057131
0057132
0057910
0057990
0057940
0057170
0057980
0057480
0057780
0057770

33,450

Central Tele Co of F la ..........................................................................................
Genl Tele Co of Michigan Plant M ic h .................................................................
Genl Tele Co of Michigan Traffic & Clerical Mich ............................................
Genl Tele Co of III Ser Const & Supply Depts III .............................................
Genl Tele Co of Ind Inc In d .................................................................................
Genl Tele Co of Kentucky K y ..............................................................................
Genl Telephone Co of Ind Inc Ind ......................................................................
Hawaiian Telephone Co .......................................................................................
New York Telephone Company NYC & 4 cou nties..........................................
Western Union Telegraph Co Inter .....................................................................
Western Union Telegraph Co NY NJ .................................................................

1,050
2,000
1,100
1,750
1,550
1,300
2,200
3,700
8,300
9,500
1,000

Electric, gas, and sanitary services

Total: 37 agreements ..........................................................................................
0060010
0060020
0060900
0060820
0060550
5910900
0060100
0060080
0060110

103,350

Arizona Public Service Co A r iz ............................................................................
Arkansas Power & Light Co A rk ..........................................................................
Central Maine Power Co Augusta M a in e ...........................................................
Chi & Suburban Refuse Disposal Assn III..........................................................
Cin Gas & Elec Co & 1 oth Ohio & K y ..............................................................
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp & 2 oths Conn Ky & W V a .........................
Commonwealth Edison Clerical C hicago............................................................
Commonwealth Edison Co III...............................................................................
Commonwealth Edison Co Clerical III.................................................................

2,300
2,200
1,100
1,500
1,700
1,150
1,450
5,650
2,700

See footnotes at end of table.




37

Table 9. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification’

Expiration
month

State

Union

Employer
unit

Electric, gas, and sanitary services—Continued
0060570
0060450
0060600
0060440
0060620
5705280
0060470
0060650
0060660
0060480

Conn Light & Power Company C o n n ..................................................................
Consolidated Gas Supply Corp Clarksburg W V a ..............................................
Dayton Power & Light C o .....................................................................................
East Ohio Gas Co O h io ........................................................................................
Gulf States Utilities Co Tex & L a ........................................................................
Kansas City Power & Light Co Prod Dept Mo ..................................................
Laclede Gas Co St Louis Mo ..............................................................................
Long Island Lighting Co N Y .................................................................................
Long Island Lighting Co N Y .................................................................................
Mich Consolidated Gas Co Detroit & Ann Arbor M ic h .....................................

1,700
1,750
2,600
2,050
2,700
1,000
1,250
2,650
1,350
1,300

5
10
10
6
6
6
7
6
6
12

16
00
31
31
70
43
43
21
21
34

127
118
342
118
127
127
357
127
127
118

4
1
1
4
4
4
4
1
4
4

0060680
0060840
0060230
0060250
0060730
0060720
0060710
0060240
0060260
0060760

Niagara Mohawk Corp Upstate N Y .....................................................................
Northern Illinois Gas C om pany............................................................................
Ohio Edison Co O h io ............................................................................................
PA Power & Light Co Eastern Pa .......................................................................
Pacific Gas & Elec Co Eng & Scientists C a lif...................................................
Pacific Gas & Elec Co Off & Cler C a lif..............................................................
Pacific Gas & Elec Co Oper-Maint-Constr C a lif................................................
Pennsylvania Electric Co P a ................................................................................
Potomac Electric Power Co DC ..........................................................................
Public Service Elec & Gas Co N J .......................................................................

7,500
1,800
2,000
4,800
1,900
4,250
13,850
2,150
3,500
1,400

5
1
6
5
12
12
12
5
5
4

21
33
31
23
93
93
93
23
53
22

127
127
342
127
500
127
127
127
500
500

4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
1
4

0060880
0060270
0060870
0060770
0060500
0060380
0060810
0060800

Public Service Elec & Gas Co N J .......................................................................
Public Service Elec And Gas Co N J ....................................................................
Salt River Proj Agricul Improvemt & Power Dist A r iz .......................................
San Diego Gas & Electric C o ..............................................................................
Southern Calif Gas Co C a lif.................................................................................
Utah Power & Light Co Utah Wyo & Id a h o .......................................................
Wise Public Service C o rp ......................................................................................
Wisconsin Power & Light Co ...............................................................................

1,450
4,100
1,500
2,400
5,900
4,000
1,000
1,750

4
4
12
2
3
1
10
5

22
22
86
93
93
00
35
35

170
127
127
127
100
127
129
127

4
4
2
1
4
4
4
4

5
9

93
00

480
553

2
4

4
9
9
9
5

33
93
93
93
93

531
531
531
531
531

2
2
2
2
2

4
5
7
7
7
1

00
00
21
91
00
14

600
332
184
531
184
364

1
4
4
1
4
4

Wholesale trade—durable goods

2 agreements ...........................................................................................

4,550

0063100 Indus Emplrs And Distributors Assn Calif ..........................................................
0063180 Inti Harvester Co Depot & Distribution In te r......................................................

3,500
1,050

Total:

Wholesale trade— nondurable goods

5 agreements ...........................................................................................

10,350

Chicago Beer Wholesalers Assn III.....................................................................
Food Emplrs Cncl Inc Food Indus Off Agmt C a lif............................................
Food Emplrs Cncl Inc Food Indus Wareh Agmt C a lif......................................
Food Emplrs Cncl Inc Whsale Delvry Drvrs Agmt C a lif...................................
San Francisco Employers Council Calif .............................................................

1,350
1,550
4,050
1,400
2,000

Total:
0063280
0063330
0063020
0063000
0063060

General merchandise stores

6 agreem ents...........................................................................................

25,600

Bloomingdale Bros N Y C .......................................................................................
Gimbel Brothers Inc In te r.....................................................................................
Korvettes Inc Korvettes Dept Store Div NY ......................................................
Sears Roebuck & Co Seattle W ash....................................................................
Vornado Corp Non-Food Stores Interstate 5cos ..............................................
William Filene Sons Company Boston & vicinity...............................................

5,600
4,400
3,500
1,800
7,000
3,300

Total:
0065000
0065040
0065280
5912500
0068040
0065410

See footnotes at end of table.




38

Table 9. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification1

Expiration
month

State

Union

Employer
unit

Food stores

Total: 33 agreements ..........................................................................................

110,850

0068250
0068690
0068460
0068020
0068160
0067060
0063160
0067650
0068340
0067420

Almacs Inc Rl Mass C o n n ....................................................................................
Bruno Food Stores Inc & Food World Inc A la ..................................................
Colonial Stores Inc Raleigh Div N C ....................................................................
First National Stores Inc M a s s ............................................................................
First National Stores Inc Mass ............................................................................
First Natl Supermarkets Inc Conn & Western Mass ........................................
Food Employers Cncl Inc Los Angeles C a lif.....................................................
Food Employers Council Inc Los Angeles C a lif................................................
Great A&P Tea Co Inc New England .................................................................
l-A Chain & Ind Food Stores W ise ......................................................................

2,300
2,700
1,400
1,800
1,550
2,700
1,150
6,500
2,000
2,300

6
9
10
1
1
3
1
11
6
11

10
63
56
14
14
16
93
93
10
35

364
184
184
155
155
155
118
364
155
184

4
1
4
4
4
4
2
2
4
3

0068170
0068600
0067790
5914900
0067330
0068450
0067320
0067780
0068150
0067400

l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A
l-A

Chain & Independent Food Stores N Mex ..................................................
Chicago Area Grocery Stores (5) Chic III ....................................................
Denver Retail Grocers C o lo ...........................................................................
Eugene Area Food Agmt O re g ......................................................................
Food Industry Mich ........................................................................................
Grocery Agmt Quad-Cities Iowa & III............................................................
Indep Meat Markets Mo & I I I .........................................................................
Retail Distribution Agmt S Diego C a lif..........................................................
Retail Meat Cutters Chicago & vicin ity.........................................................
Retail Meat Cutters Contract Chicago III .....................................................

2,300
7,000
9,300
1,000
8,500
2,000
1,000
1,200
1,900
3,000

10
6
5
2
5
6
1
11
7
7

85
33
84
92
43
00
00
93
33
33

364
364
184
184
184
184
155
155
155
155

3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3

0067370
0067720
0067430
0067020
0068420
0067450
0067480
0068670
0068660

l-A Retail Meat Cutters Contract Kans & Mo ....................................................
l-A Retail Meat Markets Frozen Food Locker C a lif..........................................
l-A Retl Butchers - Fish & Poultry Agmt Sf C a lif..............................................
Illinois Food Retailers Assns Ind Food S to re s ..................................................
Jewel Cos Inc Eisner Food Stores D Chicago III..............................................
Jewel Cos Inc Jewel Food Stores D Ind & III ...................................................
Kroger Co Columbus Ohio ....................................................................................
Major Food Chains III.............................................................................................
Star Market Co Div Jewell Co. Inc DRI D iv .......................................................

1,200
1,500
3,500
4,350
1,400
14,000
4,150
1,450
1,200

4
10
10
8
10
9
2
6
6

40
93
93
33
33
30
31
53
15

155
155
155
184
539
500
184
364
364

3
3
3
2
4
4
4
2
1

5912460
0068310
0067600
0068610

Stop & Shop Cos Inc dba Bradlees Conn & W Mass ....................................
Stop & Shop Cos Inc dba Bradlees New England ..........................................
Stop & Shop Cos Inc Mass Rl Conn Maine NH & V t ......................................
Waldbaum Ind Food Mart Div Conn & M a .........................................................

4,000
3,000
8,000
1,500

7
7
2
4

10
10
10
10

184
184
184
155

4
4
4
4

6
7

21
33

553
531

7
2

21
21

332
305

Automotive dealers and service stations

Total:

2 agreements ...........................................................................................

2,700

0069160 Automobile Dealers Ind Rel Assn NY ................................................................
0069210 l-A Garage Attendents Agmt C h icag o................................................................

1,000
1,700

*

2
3

Apparel and accessory stores

Total:

2 ag reem ents...........................................................................................

3,500

0069120 l-A Major Shoe Chain Stores NY ........................................................................
0069070 Retail Apparel Merchants Assn NY ....................................................................

1,000
2,500

■

See footnotes at end of table.




39

3
2

Table 9. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification1

Expiration
month

State

Union

Employer
unit

Eating and drinking places

5 agreements ...........................................................................................

14,450

East Bay Restaurant Assn Inc Alameda C ounty...............................................
Government Services Inc DC Md & V a ..............................................................
l-A Rest & Bars Everett W a s h .............................................................................
l-A Standard Restaurant Agmt Cleve O h io ........................................................
Presidents Cncl of Food Bev & Lodging Portland & v ic in ty ............................

5,500
1,100
1,500
2,500
3,850

Total:
0071050
0071080
0071470
0071530
0071020

7
1
5
3
7

93
50
91
31
92

145 .
145
145
145
145

2
4
3
3
2

5
4

22
35

163
163

1
1

5
9
3
4

93
21
33
21

118
118
118
118

2
2
2
2

11
6
6
11
5
10
5
7

14
35
35
43
21
31
95
93

145
145
145
145
100
145
145
145

2
2
2
2
2
2
3
2

9
11
11
2
4
9
10

93
33
33
22
91
93
23

559
118
118
500
118
494
118

1
1
1
4
3
1
2

Insurance carriers

2 ag reem ents............................................................................................

2,950

0074190 Hospital Service & Medical-Surgical Plans of NJ .............................................
0074030 Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co W is .....................................................

1,450
1,500

Total:

Real estate

4 agreem ents............................................................................................

37,000

Bldg Owners & Mgrs Assn of San Francisco.....................................................
Bronx Realty Advisory Board Inc New Y o rk .......................................................
Building Managers Assn of Chicago III................................................................
Realty Advisory Bd On Lab Reis Inc Apt Bldgs NYC ......................................

1,000
11,000
5,000
20,000

Total:
0074070
0074110
0074060
0074090

Hotels and other lodging places

8 agreements ...........................................................................................

46,700

Greater Boston Hotel & Motor Inn Assn M a s s .................................................
Greater Milwaukee Hotel-Motel Assn Wise ........................................................
Greater Milwaukee Hotel-Motel Association.......................................................
Hotel & Motel Assn of Greater St Louis Mo ......................................................
Hotel Assn of NY City Inc N y ..............................................................................
Hotel Association of Ohio .....................................................................................
l-A Hotel Industry H aw aii.......................................................................................
Monterey Peninsula Hotel & Rest Assoc Inc Calif ...........................................

3,000
1,200
1,000
2,500
25,000
1,600
10,000
2,400

Total:
0075040
0075300
0075290
0075080
0075090
0075310
0075200
5908820

Business services

7 agreements ............................................................................................

16,300

American Protective Services Inc Uptown Area Calif ......................................
Apt Bldg Owners & Mgrs Assn of Chicago III ...................................................
Chicago Real Estate Owners Council III ............................................................
Exxon Research and Engineering Co Florham Park N J ..................................
l-A Industrial Maintenance Contrs Agmt Wash .................................................
l-A Security Agencies Uptown Agmt Bay Area Calif ........................................
Pittsburgh Buildings Assn P a ...............................................................................

2,200
3,000
4,500
1,400
2,000
2,000
1,200

Total:
0079990
0079770
0079760
5906180
0079680
0079420
0079030

See footnotes at end of table.




40

'

Table 9. Continued—Collective bargaining agreements expiring in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification1

Expiration
month

State

Union

Employer
unit

7
7
11
2
5

93
93
00
00
00

192
531
192
102
162

2
2
3
3
3

12
7
2

93
00
93

118
520
600

3
2
4

7
12
2
5
3
6

21
93
41
41
93
21

118
903
118
903
118
332

2
2
2
1
4
2

7

93

145

2

Motion pictures

5 agreements ............................................................................................

67,500

Assn of Motion Picture & Tv Producers Basic Agmt C a lif...............................
Assn of Motion Picture & Tv Producers Inc Calif ............................................
l-A Film Exchange Employees Agmt Interstate.................................................
l-A Screen Actors Guild In te r...............................................................................
l-A Television Videotape Agmt Syndication In te r..............................................

20,000
2,000
1,500
39,000
5,000

Total:
0079150
0079160
0079550
0079580
0079690

Amusement and recreation services

3 agreem ents...........................................................................................

5,300

5904940 l-A Race Track Clubs 15 Pari-Mutuel Clks Calif ...............................................
0079910 National Football League Management Council In te r......................................
0079930 Walt Disney Productions Disneyland Serv Anaheim C a lif................................

2,000
1,500
1,800

Total:

Health services

Total:
0079480
0079740
0079810
0079280
0079960
0079300

6 agreem ents...........................................................................................

68,500

Assn of Private Hospitals In c ...............................................................................
Assoc Hospitals of San Fran & East Bay Inc Calif ..........................................
Health Manpower Mgmt Inc Minn .......................................................................
l-A Twin City Hospitals Minneapolis-St Paul Minn ............................................
Kaiser Foundation Hospitals C a lif.......................................................................
League of Voluntary Hospitals & Homes of N Y ................................................

7,000
1,400
5,000
6,100
9,000
40,000

Membership organizations

Total:

1 agreem ent.............................................................................................

2,000

0079700 San Francisco Club In s titu te ................................................................................

2,000

1 See appendix A for explanation of abbreviations.




2 See appendix B for explanation of abbreviations.

41

Table 10. Additional collective bargaining situations1expiring in 1982 covering 1,000
workers or more, by month
Codes2
Number of
workers

Month and agreement identification

Grand total: 247 situations...................................................................................

Industry

State

Union

Employer
unit

949,700

January
Total: 16 situations .................................................................................................

42,900

American Oil Co W hiting..........................................................................................................
Assn of Hosps of Santa Clara C n ty ......................................................................................
Atlantic Richfield C o .................................................................................................................
Atlantic Richfield Co Long Beach .........................................................................................
Honeywell, Inc M inneapolis.....................................................................................................
Indiana Highway Constructors ...............................................................................................
Kroger, Schnucks, Thor St Louis...........................................................................................
Northern States Power Co M innesota..................................................................................
Schweiger Industries J efferson..............................................................................................
Shell Oil Co Illinois ..................................................................................................................

1,250
1,000
2,200
1,100
8,500
7,000
1,400
3,500
1,000
1,200

29
80
29
29
38
16
54
49
25
29

93
93
00
93
41
32
43
41
35
23

357
903
357
357
531
143
155
127
205
357

1
2
4
1
4
3
3
1
1
1

Shell Oil Co Martinez ..............................................................................................................
Southern California Food Emplrs Cncl .................................................................................
Sun Oil Co Marcus H o o k ........................................................................................................
Sunbeam Corp C hicago..........................................................................................................
Texaco, Inc Port A rth u r............................................................................................................
Utah Power & L ig h t.................................................................................................................

1,200
1,200
1,700
1,050
7,400
2,200

29
54
29
36
29
49

93
93
23
33
74
80

357
118
357
218
357
127

1
3
1
1
1
4

20
80
53

00
93
22

531
163
184

4
1
3

February
Total: 3 situations....................................................................................................

11,150

Anheuser-Busch, Inc.................................................................................................................
Kaiser Foundation Hosp Richmond ......................................................................................
Kaufmanns & Gimbels Pittsburgh..........................................................................................

8,000
1,150
2,000

March
Total: 17 situations .................................................................................................

92,300

AGC Baltimore ..........................................................................................................................
AGC Emplrs Negot Comm Terre H a u te ...............................................................................
AGC So Florida Chpt ..............................................................................................................
AGC So Florida Chpt Bldrs Div .............................................................................................
Assoc Mens Wear Retailers of New York, In c ....................................................................
Building Mgrs Assn Chicago ..................................................................................................
Cartage Exchange of C h icag o...............................................................................................
Cincinnati Gas & Electric C o ..................................................................................................
Dried Fruit Industry Fresno.....................................................................................................
Eastern Air Lines Flight Attendants ......................................................................................

2,500
9,000
1,200
1,400
1,500
12,500
35,000
1,000
2,000
6,000

15
15
15
17
56
65
42
49
20
45

52
32
59
59
21
33
33
31
93
00

119
143
129
115
332
118
400
500
531
341

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
3
4

Ingersoll-Rand Co New York .................................................................................................
Memphis Furniture C o ..............................................................................................................
Northern California Foundries................................................................................................
Queens Transit & 3 others New York ..................................................................................
Southern California Gas & Electric C o .................................................................................
Uniform Mfrs Exchange New Y o rk ........................................................................................
United Airlines Flight A tten dants...........................................................................................

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

35
25
33
41
45
23
45

21
62
93
21
93
21
00

247
312
161
341
342
305
104

1
1
3
3
1
2
4

See footnotes at end of table.




42

Table 10. Continued—Additional collective bargaining situations1 expiring in 1982 covering 1,000
workers or more, by month
Codes2
Number of
workers

Month and agreement identification

Industry

State

Union

Employer
unit

April
Total: 29 situations .................................................................................................

64,600

AGC Arkansas..........................................................................................................................
AGC & BRICA Baton R oug e..................................................................................................
AGO C hatanooga.....................................................................................................................
AGC Chatanooga.....................................................................................................................
AGC New O rle a n s ...................................................................................................................
AGC Lower Peninsula Michigan ............................................................................................
American Can Co Green Bay ................................................................................................
Assoc Bldg Contrs Terre H aute.............................................................................................
BTEA of Westchester & Putnam Counties ..........................................................................
Cartage Exchange of C h icag o...............................................................................................

1,500
1,500
1,400
1,200
12,500
3,500
1,000
1,000
3,000
3,100

15
17
15
16
15
15
26
15
15
42

71
72
62
62
72
34
35
32
21
33

143
116
119
143
600
129
231
129
119
218

2
2
2
2
2
2
1
2
2
2

Chicago Beer W holesalers.....................................................................................................
Chicago Area F o und ries..........................................................................................................
Chicago Midwest Meat A s s n ..................................................................................................
Des Moines Const Cncl, Inc ..................................................................................................
General Contrs independent Jacksonville............................................................................
Highway Constructors, Inc Louisville.....................................................................................
Kellogg Co Battle C re e k .........................................................................................................
Maryland Shipbuilding & Drydock C o .....................................................................................
Montana Hvy Hwy & Bldg C ontrs..........................................................................................
Montana Hvy Hwy & Bldg C ontrs..........................................................................................

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

50
33
20
15
15
16
20
37
16
16

33
33
33
42
59
61
34
52
81
81

531
161
155
119
143
119
208
320
129
143

4
3
2
2
3
2
1
1
2
2

New Jersey Mens & Boys Clothing S to re s ..........................................................................
Norris Industries Vernon .........................................................................................................
PDCA Cleveland .......................................................................................................................
Public Service Electric & Gas Co New J e rs e y ....................................................................
Rexnord, I n c ..............................................................................................................................
Rock Hill Printing & Finishing Co ..........................................................................................
Seattle Warehouse Distr C o ...................................................................................................
Union Carbide Corp T e x a s .....................................................................................................
Wisconsin Road Bldrs A s s n ....................... ............................................................................

1,000
1,400
1,500
1,600
1,500
1,300
2,500
1,700
2,000

56
34
15
49
35
22
50
28
16

22
93
31
22
35
57
91
74
35

184
553
164
500
334
337
531
100
129

3
1
2
1
1
1
3
1
2

May
Total: 59 situations .................................................................................................

238,450

AGC Akron ................................................................................................................................
AGC & others Arizona .............................................................................................................
AGC & others D e tro it...............................................................................................................
AGC A rizona..............................................................................................................................
AGC Detroit ...............................................................................................................................
AGC Detroit ...............................................................................................................................
Allied Const Emplrs Assn Milwaukee ...................................................................................
Allied Const Indus Cincinnati ..................................................................................................
Allied Emplrs, Inc Seattle ........................................................................................................
Assn of Uptown Converters New Y o rk .................................................................................

1,000
1,000
2,300
6,000
2,300
2,000
2,500
3,000
1,700
1,150

15
15
17
15
15
15
15
15
54
50

31
86
34
86
34
34
35
31
91
21

143
168
116
143
531
129
143
143
155
332

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

Bobbie B roo ks...........................................................................................................................
Chain & Indep Food Stores St L o u is ....................................................................................
Cloak Suit & Dress Trucking Assn New Y o rk ......................................................................
Constr Emplrs of No Central West Virginia..........................................................................
Const Emplrs Labor Relations Assn Syracuse....................................................................
Denver Retail Grocers .............................................................................................................
Electrical Contr Assn Chicago ...............................................................................................
Four Cotton Dress Assns .......................................................................................................
Gimbel Brothers, Inc New Y o rk .............................................................................................
Great Lakes Fabricators & Erectors Assn Detroit ..............................................................

1,500
8,500
4,900
1,000
1,000
9,000
7,000
11,000
5,000
1,000

23
54
42
15
15
54
17
23
53
17

00
43
21
55
21
84
33
21
21
34

134
184
134
119
143
184
127
134
332
129

4
3
2
2
2
3
2
2
4
2

See footnotes at end of table.




43

Table 10. Continued—Additional collective bargaining situations' expiring in 1982 covering 1,000
workers or more, by month
Codes2
Number of
workers

Month and agreement identification

Industry

State

Union

Employer
unit

May—Continued

Health Manpower Mgmt, Inc St Paul-M inneapolis..............................................................
Houston Lighting & Power Co ...............................................................................................
Indust Emplrs & Distr C alifornia.............................................................................................
Jonathan Logan, In c .................................................................................................................
Kanawha Valley Bldrs Assn Charleston ...............................................................................
Knit Mfrs of New J e rs e y ..........................................................................................................
Los Angeles Coat & Suit Mfrs Assn .....................................................................................
Magnavox Co Fort W ayne......................................................................................................
Maintenance Contrs Assn S e a ttle .........................................................................................
Mason Contrs Brick Agmt D etroit..........................................................................................

6,000
3,800
10,000
7,500
1,500
3,000
1,500
1,100
1,200
5,000

80
49
51
23
15
23
23
36
73
17

41
74
93
00
55
22
93
32
91
34

905
127
400
134
143
134
134
107
118
115

4
1
4
4
2
4
2
4
3
2

Master Bldrs Assn Pittsburgh.................................................................................................
Mech Contrs Assn Seattle ......................................................................................................
Mech Contrs of Western Pennsylvania ................................................................................
Metro Detroit Plumbing & Mech Contrs A s s n ......................................................................
National Skirt & Sportswear New Y o rk .................................................................................
NECA Grand Rapids ...............................................................................................................
NECA Indianapolis...................................................................................................................
NECA P ittsburgh.......................................................................................................................
NECA San D ie g o .....................................................................................................................
NECA San Francisco ..............................................................................................................

7,500
1,500
1,350
2,300
13,000
1,000
1,100
1,500
1,500
1,500

15
17
17
17
23
17
17
17
17
17

23
91
23
34
21
34
32
23
93
93

129
170
170
170
134
127
127
127
127
127

2
4
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

New England Clothing & Rainwear Mfrs Assn Boston ......................................................
New England Sportswear Mfrs Assn B oston.......................................................................
New Jersey Apparel Contrs Assn .........................................................................................
New York Coat & Suit Assn, Inc ............................................................................................
North Central Const Emplrs Cncl W atertow n......................................................................
Ohio Valley Const Emplrs, Inc West Virginia.......................................................................
Pennsylvania Power & Light Co .............................................................................................
Phelps Dodge Corp Copper P ro d ..........................................................................................
Philadelphia Apparel Producers A s s n ...................................................................................
Quad Cities Bldrs Assn Rock Isla n d .....................................................................................

2,000
1,500
3,000
42,000
2,550
2,000
3,900
1,350
10,000
1,200

23
23
23
23
15
16
49
33
23
15

14
14
22
00
21
55
23
00
20
33

134
134
134
134
119
129
124
100
134
119

2
2
2
2
2
2
1
4
2
2

R & M Kaufmann C o ................................................................................................................
Seafood Processing Plants G lou cester................................................................................
SMACCA Milwaukee ................................................................................................................
Tri-State Contrs A s s n ...............................................................................................................
United Knitwear Mfrs League New Y o rk ..............................................................................
Washington Gas Light Co D C ................................................................................................
Washington Restaurant & Bar Assn W ashington................................................................
Wisconsin Road Bldrs A s s n ...................................................................................................
Woodworkers Assn of Chicago .............................................................................................

1,200
1,000
1,300
2,000
10,000
2,050
2,100
2,000
1,600

23
20
17
17
23
49
58
16
24

40
14
35
00
21
53
91
35
33

134
155
187
119
134
600
145
143
119

4
3
2
2
2
1
2
2
2

June
Total: 42 situations .................................................................................................

181,200

AGC Alabama ..........................................................................................................................
AGC Reno .................................................................................................................................
Allied Building Metal Indus, In c ..............................................................................................
Assoc Garment Indus of St L o u is .........................................................................................
Boise Cascade Paper Group M a in e ......................................................................................
Bradlees M ercantile.................................................................................................................
Bradlees M ercantile.................................................................................................................
Brunswick Corp Mercury Marine Div Fond du Lac .............................................................
CELRA & Eastern New York Const E m plrs.........................................................................
Chain & indep Food Stores ...................................................................................................

18,000
1,200
1,000
2,000
1,100
2,600
1,400
3,200
2,000
2,000

16
15
34
23
26
53
53
35
15
54

63
88
20
43
11
10
10
35
21
00

600
143
116
138
231
364
364
218
129
364

2
2
2
2
1
4
4
4
2
3

Chain & Indep Food Stores New Y o rk .................................................................................
Eastern' New York Const Emplrs, Inc A lb a n y ......................................................................

15,000
1,800

53
15

21
21

364
119

3
2

See footnotes at end of table.




44

Table 10. Continued—Additional collective bargaining situations1expiring in 1982 covering 1,000
workers or more, by month
Codes2
Number of
workers

Month and agreement identification

Industry

State

Union

Employer
unit

June—Continued

Eastern New York Const Emplrs, inc A lb a n y ......................................................................
Food Wholesalers A s s n ..........................................................................................................
General Dynamics Corp Groton ............................................................................................
General Electric C o .................................................................................................................
General Electric C o .................................................................................................................
General Electric C o .................................................................................................................
General Electric C o .................................................................................................................
General Electric C o .................................................................................................................
General Electric Co C incinnati......................................................................................... ......
General Contrs & BTEA New Y o rk .......................................................................................

1,000
1,500
11,700
10,500
6,500
3,000
3,000
2,500
3,400
1,200

17
54
37
36
36
36
36
36
37
17

21
00
16
00
00
00
00
00
31
21

112
531
100
218
553
105
600
127
553
431

2
2
1
4
4
4
4
4
1
2

Highway Constructors, Inc Kentucky ....................................................................................
Jno H Swisher & Son, Inc F lo rid a .........................................................................................
Kansas City Garment Mfrs Assn ...........................................................................................
League of Voluntary Hosps New York .................................................................................
Lumber & Mill Emplrs Assn San Francisco .........................................................................
Mech Contrs Assn of Northwest O h io ..................................................................................
Metropolitan Lithographers New Y o rk .................................................................................
Millwork Mfrs Assn, Inc New York ........................................................................................
National Assn of Doll Mfrs New Y o rk ...................................................................................
NECA Phoenix..........................................................................................................................

6,000
1,100
2,000
37,000
1,000
1,200
8,000
5,000
6,000
1,000

16
21
23
80
50
17
27
25
39
17

61
59
43
21
93
31
21
21
21
86

143
203
134
332
531
170
204
119
221
127

2
1
2
2
2
2
4
2
2
2

New Jersey Double Knit Assn ...............................................................................................
Northwest Airline Clerical .......................................................................................................
PDCA Boston ...........................................................................................................................
Plastics Products Mfrs Assn ..................................................................................................
Printing Indus of St Louis .......................................................................................................
Stuffed Toy Mfrs New Y o rk ....................................................................................................
Union Paint Contrs ..................................................................................................................
Wholesale Grocery Companies Minneapolis .......................................................................
Wisconsin Power & Light Co .................................................................................................
Womens Apparel Chain Store Assn New Y o rk ...................................................................

1,000
3,200
1,200
3,500
1,700
1,000
1,100
1,000
1,600
2,000

22
45
17
30
27
39
17
50
49
56

22
00
14
21
43
21
00
41
35
21

134
183
164
134
243
221
164
531
127
134

2
4
2
2
2
2
2
3
1
2

July
Total: 25 situations .................................................................................................

71,700

AGC S aginaw ...........................................................................................................................
Assn of Mechanical Contrs A tla n ta .......................................................................................
Assn of Motion Picture Producers.........................................................................................
Assoc Roofing Contrs California............................................................................................
Babcock & Wilcox Co .............................................................................................................
Brown Co Kalamazoo .............................................................................................................
Chicago Union Restaurant E m p lrs ........................................................................................
Draymen & Warehousemens Assn Oregon .........................................................................
East Bay Restaurant Assn San F rancisco...........................................................................
Great Northern Paper Co Maine ...........................................................................................

1,700
1,200
5,000
1,800
6,000
1,000
2,200
1,000
2,000
1,600

15
17
78
55
34
26
58
54
58
26

34
58
93
93
00
34
33
93
93
11

119
170
600
600
112
231
145
531
145
231

2
2
2
2
4
4
2
2
2
4

Hammermill Paper Co P a .......................................................................................................
Hollow Metal Door & Buckeye Assn, Inc New Y o rk ...........................................................
Hotels in San Francisco .........................................................................................................
Jewel, A & P, Dominicks Food Stores C h ica g o ..................................................................
Ladish Co Cudahy ...................................................................................................................
National R efractories...............................................................................................................
Restaurants in C hicago...........................................................................................................
Torrington Co Torrington ........................................................................................................
Two Guys Vornado, Inc ..........................................................................................................
Western Airlines C lerical.........................................................................................................
Westinghouse Electric C o rp ...................................................................................................

1,300
1,500
1,000
4,900
1,000
1,500
5,000
2,600
8,000
4,500
1,000

26
34
70
54
34
32
58
35
53
45
36

23
21
93
33
35
00
33
16
00
00
00

231
119
145
364
112
114
145
553
364
500
127

1
4
3
3
1
4
3
4
4
4
4

See footnotes at end of table.




45

Table 10. Continued—Additional collective bargaining situations1 expiring in 1982 covering 1,000
workers or more, by month
Codes2
Number of
workers

Month and agreement identification

Industry

State

Union

Employer
unit

36
36
35
35

00
52
41
93

127
127
335
218

4
1
1
1

July—Continued

Westinghouse
Westinghouse
Westinghouse
Westinghouse

Electric
Electric
Electric
Electric

C o rp ...................................................................................................
Corp Baltimore .................................................................................
Corp B loom ington............................................................................
Corp S unnyvale................................................................................

11,000
2,200
1,100
1,600

August
Total: 17 situations .................................................................................................

72,750

AGC Birmingham .....................................................................................................................
Alabama Power C o ..................................................................................................................
American Airlines Ground S ervice.........................................................................................
Bethlehem Steel C o rp .............................................................................................................
Brown Shoe C o ........................................................................................................................
Fafnir Bearing Co New Britain ...............................................................................................
George A Hormel & Co ..........................................................................................................
Independent Chicago Lighting Equip Mfrs ...........................................................................
Independent Neckwear Companies of New Y o rk ...............................................................
Kellwood Corp Little R o c k ......................................................................................................

20,000
3,800
12,450
1,900
9,000
3,200
7,000
1,500
1,500
1,000

15
49
45
37
31
35
20
36
23
23

63
63
00
74
00
16
00
33
21
71

600
127
341
100
100
553
364
127
305
134

2
1
4
1
4
4
4 .
3
2
4

National Neckwear Conference New York ..........................................................................
NECA
.............................................................................................................................
NECA Kansas C ity ...................................................................................................................
Plumbing & Mechanical Contrs H ono lulu.............................................................................
Rath Packing C o .......................................................................................................................
Roofing & Sheet Metal Contrs Assn Boston .......................................................................
San Diego County Rock P ro d ................................................................................................

1,500
3,000
1,300
1,500
2,000
1,100
1,000

23
17
17
17
20
17
42

21
00
43
95
00
14
93

305
127
127
170
364
187
531

2
2
2
2
4
2
2

September
Total: 13 situations .................................................................................................

85,400

Albert Einstein College of Medicine New Y ork....................................................................
Chrysler Corp Airtemp D a y to n ...............................................................................................
Design & Mfg Corp Connersville ...........................................................................................
General Motors Corp D ayto n.................................................................................................
General Motors Corp D ayto n.................................................................................................
General Motors Corp Delco D ayton......................................................................................
Interco & Florsheim Shoe Co ................................................................................................
NECA Miami .............................................................................................................................
San Joaquin Valley Hotel & Restaurant Owners Assn ......................................................
Shirt Pajama & other Cotton Garment M frs .........................................................................

1,300
1,350
1,450
1,000
4,500
6,000
3,000
1,000
1,000
30,000

80
35
36
36
36
36
31
17
58
23

21
31
32
31
31
31
00
59
93
00

332
553
553
347
347
347
100
127
145
305

1
1
1
1
1
1
4
2
2
3

Simplicity Pattern Co N ile s .....................................................................................................
Single Pants Mfrs & Outerwear M fr s ....................................................................................
Sperry Rand Corp Great Neck ..............................................................................................

1,000
30,000
3,800

27
23
38

34
00
21

243
305
347

4
3
1

54
78
78
54
54

56
93
93
50
33

364
163
600
155
700

4
2
2
4
4

O ctober
Total: 8 situations...................................................................................................

11,800

A & P Tea C o ...........................................................................................................................
Assn of Motion Picture & TV Producers Los Angeles ........................................................
Assn of Motion Picture & TV Producers Los Angeles .......................................................
Colonial Stores, Inc .................................................................................................................
Eisner Food S to re s ...................................................................................................................

1,000
1,500
2,500
1,400
1,400

See footnotes at end of table.




46

Table 10. Continued—Additional collective bargaining situations1 expiring in 1982 covering 1,000
workers or more, by month
Codes1
2
Number of
workers

Month and agreement identification

Industry

State

Union

Employer
unit

32
72
20

00
22
93

174
236
364

2
3
2

42
54
20
50
70
16
20
49
54
23
33

00
93
21
93
43
42
00
61
35
00
35

531
155
531
531
129
129
108
342
364
305
553

3
2
3
4
2
2
4
1
3
2
1

45
49
59
22
36
25
45

00
00
21
56
00
00
00

104
357
126
337
147
119
104

4
4
4
4
4
1
4

October— Continued

Five Chinaware Com panies....................................................................................................
New Jersey Linen Supply Companies ..................................................................................
Pacific Coast Meat Assn San F rancisco..............................................................................

1,500
1,000
1,500

November
Total: 11 situations ................................................................................................

50,150

Eastern Area Tank H aule rs....................................................................................................
Food Employers Cncl, Inc C alifornia.....................................................................................
Greater New York Milk D eale rs.............................................................................................
Grocery Warehouse Distr San Francisco.............................................................................
Greater St Louis Hotel & Motel A s s n ...................................................................................
Hvy-Hwy Labor Relations Cncl Des M o in e s ........................................................................
Keebler C o .................................................................................................................................
Louisville Gas & Elec C o .........................................................................................................
Milwaukee Area Retail Meat Indus........................................................................................
Outerwear Mfrs .........................................................................................................................
Racine Steel C astings..............................................................................................................

3,000
10,000
1,900
2,500
2,500
1,200
3,250
2,700
2,000
20,000
1,100

December
Total: 7 situations....................................................................................................

27,300

Braniff Airways Flight Attendants ..........................................................................................
Columbia Gas Transmission C o rp .........................................................................................
Independent Liquor Stores New Y o rk ...................................................................................
J.P. Stevens & Co Roanoke ...................................................................................................
RCA C o rp ...................................................................................................................................
RCA C o rp ...................................................................................................................................
Republic Airlines Clerical ........................................................................................................

2,900
1,100
1,000
4,000
13,000
1,000
4,300

1 Additional collective bargaining situations
were those reported too late to be included in tables 8 and 9.
2 See appendix B for identification of codes.




NOTE: Geographical
specified.

47

coverage

of

contracts

is

interstate

unless

Table 11. Additional collective bargaining situations' expiring in 1982 covering 1,000
workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification

Grand total: 247 situations....................................................................................

Expira­
tion month

State

Union

Employer
unit

949,700

General building contractors
Total: 30 situations..................................................................................................

99,850

Akron ...............................................................................................................................
& others Arizona .............................................................................................................
A rizona.............................................................................................................................
Arkansas..........................................................................................................................
Baltimore .........................................................................................................................
Birmingham .....................................................................................................................
Chattanooga....................................................................................................................
Detroit ..............................................................................................................................
D e tro it..............................................................................................................................
Emplrs Negot Comm Terre H a u te ...............................................................................

1,000
1,000
6,000
1,500
2,500
20,000
1,400
2,300
2,000
9,000

5
5
5
4
3
8
4
5
5
3

31
86
86
71
52
63
62
34
34
32

143
168
143
143
119
600
119
531
129
143

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

AGC Lower Peninsula Michigan ............................................................................................
AGC New O rle ans...................................................................................................................
AGC Reno ................................................................................................................................
AGC S aginaw ...........................................................................................................................
AGC So Florida C h a p t............................................................................................................
Allied Const Emplrs Assn Milwaukee ...................................................................................
Allied Const Indus Cincinnati .................................................................................................
Assoc Bldg Contrs Terre H aute.............................................................................................
BTEA of Westchester & Putnam Cnty New York ...............................................................
CELRA & Eastern New York Const E m plrs.........................................................................

3,500
12,500
1,200
1,700
1,200
2,500
3,000
1,000
3,000
2,000

4
4
6
7
3
5
5
4
4
6

34
72
88
34
59
35
31
32
21
21

129
600
143
119
129
143
143
129
119
129

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

Const Emplrs of No Central West V irginia...........................................................................
Const Emplrs Labor Relations Assn S yracuse....................................................................
Des Moines Const Cncl, Inc ..................................................................................................
Eastern New York Const Emplrs, Inc A lb a n y......................................................................
General Contrs Independent Jacksonville............................................................................
Kanawha Valley Bldrs Assn Charleston ...............................................................................
Master Bldrs Assn Pittsburgh.................................................................................................
No Central Const Emplrs Cncl W atertow n...........................................................................
PDCA Cleveland ......................................................................................................................
Quad Cities Bldrs Assn Rock Is la n d .....................................................................................

1,000
1,000
1,200
1,800
2,300
1,500
7,500
2,550
1,500
1,200

5
5
4
6
4
5
5
5
4
5

55
21
42
21
59
55
23
21
31
33

119
143
119
119
143
143
129
119
164
119

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

6
4
11
6
4
1
4
4
5
4
5

63
62
42
61
61
32
81
81
55
35
35

600
143
129
143
119
143
129
143
129
129
143

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

4
5

72
34

116
116

2
2

AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC
AGC

Heavy construction contractors
Total: 11 situations...................................................................................................

44,150

AGC Alabama ..........................................................................................................................
AGC Chatanooga.....................................................................................................................
Hvy-Hwy Labor Relations Cncl Des M o in e s ........................................................................
Highway Constructors, Inc Kentucky ....................................................................................
Highway Constructors, Inc Louisville.....................................................................................
Indiana Highway Constructors Terre H a u te ...................... ...................................................
Montana Hvy-Hwy & Bldg C o n trs..........................................................................................
Montana Hvy-Hwy & Bldg C o n trs..........................................................................................
Ohio Valley Const Emplrs Cncl, Inc West Virginia..............................................................
Wisconsin Road Bldrs A s s n ...................................................................................................
Wisconsin Road Bldrs Assn Milwaukee ...............................................................................

18,000
1;200
1,200
6,000
1,750
7,000
2,000
1,000
2,000
2,000
2,000

Special trade contractors
Total: 29 situations..................................................................................................

50,850

AGC & BRICA Baton R oug e..................................................................................................
AGC & others D e tro it...............................................................................................................

1,500
2,300

See footnotes at end of table.




48

Table 11. Continued— Additional collective bargaining situations1 expiring in 1982 covering 1,000
workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification

Expira­
tion month

State

Union

Employer
unit

Special trade contractors—Continued
AGC So Florida Chpt Bldrs D iv .............................................................................................
Assn of Mechanical Contrs A tla n ta .......................................................................................
Assoc Roofing Contrs California............................................................................................
Eastern New York Const Emplrs, Inc A lb a n y ......................................................................
Electrical Contrs Assn Chicago .............................................................................................
General Contrs & BTEA New Y o rk .......................................................................................
Great Lakes Fabricators & Erectors Assn ...........................................................................
Mason Contrs Brick Agmt D etroit..........................................................................................
Mech Contrs Assn Seattle .....................................................................................................
Mech Contrs Assn of Northwest O h io ..................................................................................

1,400
1,200
1,800
1,000
7,000
1,200
1,000
5,000
1,500
1,200

3
7
7
6
5
6
5
5
5
6

59
58
93
21
33
21
34
34
91
31

115
170
185
112
127
431
129
115
170
170

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

Mech Contrs of Western Pennsylvania ................................................................................
Metro Detroit Plumbing & Mech Contrs A s s n ......................................................................
N E C A ....................................................... ..................................................................................
NECA Grand Rapids ...............................................................................................................
NECA Indianapolis....................................................................................................................
NECA Kansas C ity ....................................................................................................................
NECA Miami ..............................................................................................................................
NECA Phoenix..........................................................................................................................
NECA Pittsburgh ......................................................................................................................
NECA San D ie g o .....................................................................................................................

1,350
2,300
3,000
1,000
1,100
1,300
1,000
1,000
1,500
1,500

5
5
8
5
5
8
9
6
5
5

23
34
00
34
32
43
59
86
23
93

170
170
127
127
127
127
127
127
127
127

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

NECA San Francisco ...............................................................................................................
PDCA Boston ............................................................................................................................
Plumbing & Mech Contrs Honolulu .......................................................................................
Roofing & Sheet Metal Contrs Assn B o s to n .......................................................................
SMACCA Milwaukee ...............................................................................................................
Tri-State Contrs A s s n ...............................................................................................................
Union Paint Contrs ...................................................................................................................

1,500
1,200
1,500
1,100
1,300
2,000
1,100

5
6
8
8
5
5
6

93
14
95
14
35
00
00

127
164
170
187
187
119
164

2
2
2
2
2
2
2

2
4
3
8
11
11
4
10
8
5

00
33
93
00
21
00
34
93
00
14

531
155
531
364
531
108
208
364
364
155

4
2
3
4
2
4
1
2
4
3

6

59

203

1

12

56

337

4

Food and kindred products
Total: 10 situations...................................................................................................

33,800

Anheuser-Busch, Inc ...............................................................................................................
Chicago Midwest Meat A s s n ..................................................................................................
Dried Fruit Industry F resno.....................................................................................................
George A Hormel & Co ..........................................................................................................
Greater New York Milk D ealers.............................................................................................
Keebler C om pany....................................................................................................................
Kellogg Co Battle C re e k .........................................................................................................
Pacific Coast Meat Assn San Francisco..............................................................................
Rath Packing C o .......................................................................................................................
Seafood Processing Plants G lou cester................................................................................

8,000
3,750
2,000
7,000
1,900
3,250
3,400
1,500
2,000
1,000

Tobacco manufacturers
Total: 1 situ atio n .......................................................................................................

1,100

Jno H Swisher & Son, Inc F lo rid a .........................................................................................

1,100

Textile mill products
Total: 3 situations....................................................................................................

6,300

J P Stevens & Co R oan oke...................................................................................................

4,000

See footnotes at end of table.




49

Table 11. Continued— Additional collective bargaining situations1 expiring in 1982 covering 1,000
workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification

Expira­
tion month

State

Union

Employer
unit

6
4

22
57

134
337

2
1

Textile mill products—Continued
New Jersey Double Knit Assn ...............................................................................................
Rock Hill Printing & Finishing Co ..........................................................................................

1,000
1,300

Apparel and other textile products
Total: 22 situations..................................................................................................

196,200

Associated Garment Industries St L o u is ..............................................................................
Bobbie B roo ks...........................................................................................................................
Four Cotton Dress A s s n s .......................................................................................................
Independent Neckwear Companies of New Y o rk ...............................................................
Jonathan Logan, In c ................................................................................................................
Kansas City Garment Mfrs Assn ...........................................................................................
Kellwood Corp Little R o c k ......................................................................................................
Knit Mfrs of New J e rs e y .........................................................................................................
Los Angeles Coat & Suit Mfrs Assn .....................................................................................
National Neckwear Conference New York ..........................................................................

2,000
1,500
11,000
1,500
7,500
2,000
1,000
3,000
1,500
1,500

6
5
5
8
5
6
8
5
5
8

43
00
21
21
00
43
71
22
93
21

134
134
134
305
134
134
134
134
134
305

2
1
2
3
4
3
4
4
2
2

National Skirt & Sportswear Assn New Y o rk .......................................................................
New England Clothing & Rainwear Mfrs Assn Boston ......................................................
New England Sportswear Mfrs Assn B oston.......................................................................
New Jersey Apparel Contrs Assn .........................................................................................
New York Coat & Suit Assn, I n c ...........................................................................................
Outerwear Mfrs ........................................................................................................................
Philadelphia Apparel Producers A s s n ...................................................................................
R & M Kaufmann C o ...............................................................................................................
Shirt Pajama & other Cotton Garment M frs .........................................................................
Single Pants Mfrs & Outerwear M fr s ....................................................................................

13,000
2,000
1,500
3,000
42,000
20,000
10,000
1,200
30,000
30,000

5
5
5
5
5
11
5
5
9
9

21
14
14
22
00
00
20
40
00
00

134
134
134
134
134
305
134
134
305
305

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
4
3
3

Uniform Mfrs Exchange New Y o rk ........................................................................................
United Knitwear Mfrs League New Y o rk ..............................................................................

1,000
10,000

3
5

21
21

305
134

2
4

5

33

119

2

3
6
12
1

62
21
00
35

312
119
119
205

1
2
1
1

4
6
7

35
11
34

231
231
231

1
1
4

Lumber and wood products
Total: 1 situ atio n .......................................................................................................

1,600

Woodworkers Assn of Chicago .............................................................................................

1,600

Furniture and fixtures
Total: 4 situations.....................................................................................................

8,200

Memphis Furniture C o .............................................................................................................
Millwork Mfrs Assn, Inc New York ........................................................................................
RCA C o rp ..................................................................................................................................
Schweiger Industries Jefferson..............................................................................................

1,200
5,000
1,000
1,000

Paper and allied products
Total: 5 situations................................................................................. ...................

6,000

American Can Co Green Bay ................................................................................................
Boise Cascade Paper Group M a in e......................................................................................
Brown Co Kalamazoo .............................................................................................................

1,000
1,100
1,000

See footnotes at end of table.




50

Table 11. Continued— Additional collective bargaining situations1 expiring in 1982 covering 1,000
workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification

Expira­
tion month

State

Union

Employer
unit

7
7

11
23

231
231

4
1

6
6
9

21
43
34

204
243
243

4
2
2

4

74

100

1

1
1
1
1
4.
1
1

32
00
93
23
93
23
74

357
357
357
357
357
357
357

1
4
1
1
1
1
1

6

21

134

2

8
9

00
00

100
100

4
4

10
7

00
00

174
114

3
3

Paper and allied products—Continued
Great Northern Paper Co Maine ...........................................................................................
Hammermill Paper Co Pennsylvania.....................................................................................

1,600
1,300

Printing and publishing
Total: 3 situations.....................................................................................................

10,700

Metropolitan Lithographers New York ..................................................................................
Printing Industry of St L o u is ....................................................................................................
Simplicity Pattern Co N ile s ......................................................................................................

8,000
1,700
1,000

Chemicals and allied products
Total: 1 s itu atio n .......................................................................................................

1,700

Union Carbide Corp T e x a s ......................................................................................................

1,700

Petroleum and coal products
Total: 7 situations.....................................................................................................

16,050

American Oil Co W hiting..........................................................................................................
Atlantic Richfield C o .................................................................................................................
Atlantic Richfield Co Long Beach ..........................................................................................
Shell Oil Co Illinois ...................................................................................................................
Shell Oil Co Martinez ...............................................................................................................
Sun Oil Co Marcus H o o k .........................................................................................................
Texaco, Inc Port A rth u r............................................................................................................

1,250
2,200
1,100
1,200
1,200
1,700
7,400

Rubber and misc. plastic products
Total: 1 situation.......................................................................................................

3,500

Plastics Products Mfrs Assn New Y o rk ................................................................................

3,500

Leather and leather products
Total: 2 situation s.....................................................................................................

12,000

Brown Shoe C o .........................................................................................................................
Interco & Florsheim Shoe Co ................................................................................................

9,000
3,000

Stone, clay, and glass products
Total: 2 situations.....................................................................................................

3,000

Five Chinaware Com panies....................................................................................................
National Refractories................................................................................................................

1,500
1,500

See footnotes at end of table.




51

Table 11. Continued— Additional collective bargaining situations' expiring in 1982 covering 1,000
workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification

Expira­
tion month

State

Union

Employer
unit

4
3
5
11

33
93
00
35

161
161
100
553

4
3
4
1

6
7
7
7
4

20
00
21
35
93

116
112
119
112
553

2
4
2
1
1

6
9
8
3
4
7
7
7

35
31
16
21
35
16
41
93

218
553
553
247
334
553
335
218

4
1
4
1
1
4
1
1

Prim ary metal industries
Total: 4 s itu a tio n s .....................................................................................................

5,450

Chicago Area Foundries .........................................................................................................
Northern California Foundries................................................................................................
Phelps Dodge Corp Copper Products...................................................................................
Racine Steel Castings Racine ...............................................................................................

2,000
1,000
1,350
1,100

Fabricated metal products
Total: 5 s itu a tio n s .....................................................................................................

10,900

Allied Building Metal Indus, In c ...............................................................................................
Babcock & Wilcox ....................................................................................................................
Hollow Metal Door & Buck Assn, Inc New Y o rk .................................................................
Ladish Co Cudahy ....................................................................................................................
Norris Industries V e rn o n ..........................................................................................................

1,000
6,000
1,500
1,000
1,400

N onelectrical m achinery
Total: 8 s itu a tio n s .....................................................................................................

16,350

Brunswick Corp Mercury Marine Div Fond du Lac .............................................................
Chrysler Corp Airtemp D a y to n ................................................................................................
Fafnir Bearing Co New Britain ................................................................................................
Ingersoll-Rand Co New York ..................................................................................................
Rexnord, Inc Milwaukee...........................................................................................................
Torrington Co Torrington .........................................................................................................
Westinghouse Electric Corp B loom ington............................................................................
Westinghouse Electric Corp S unnyvale................................................................................

3,200
1,350
3,200
1,800
1,500
2,600
1,100
1,600

E lectrical and electronic equipm ent
Total: 16 s itu a tio n s ...................................................................................................

69,300

Design & Mfg Corp Connersville ............................................................................................
General Electric Co ..................................................................................................................
General Electric C o ........ .........................................................................................................
General Electric C o ........ .........................................................................................................
General Electric C o ..................................................................................................................
General Electric C o ..................................................................................................................
General Motors Corp D a yto n .................................................................................................
General Motors Corp D ayto n.................................................................................................
General Motors Corp Delco D ayton......................................................................................
Independent Chicago Lighting Equip Mfrs ...........................................................................

1,450
10,500
6,500
3,000
3,000
2,500
1,000
4,500
6,000
1,500

9
6
6
6
6
6
9
9
9
8

32
00
00
00
00
00
31
31
31
33

553
218
553
105
600
127
347
347
347
127

1
4
4
4
4
4
1
4
1
3

Magnavox Co Fort W ayne......................................................................................................
RCA C o rp ...................................................................................................................................
Sunbeam Corp C hicago..........................................................................................................
Westinghouse Electric C o rp ...................................................................................................
Westinghouse Electric C o rp ...................................................................................................
Westinghouse Electric Corp B a ltim ore.................................................................................

1,100
13,000
1,050
1,000
11,000
2,200

5
12
1
7
7
7

32
00
33
00
00
52

107
147
218
127
127
127

4
4
1
4
4
1

See footnotes at end of table.




52

Table 11. Continued— Additional collective bargaining situations1 expiring in 1982 covering 1,000
workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification

Expira­
tion month

State

Union

Employer
unit

8
6
6
4

74
16
31
52

100
100
553
320

1
1
1
1

1
9

41
21

531
342

4
1

6
6

21
21

341
221

2
2

3

21

341

2

4
3
5
7
11
8

33
33
21
92
00
93

218
400
134
531
531
531

2
2
2
3
3
2

8
12
3
6
12
3
7

00
00
00
00
00
00
00

341
104
341
183
104
104
500

4
4
4
4
4
4
4

Transportation equipment
Total: 4 situations....................................................................................................

18,700

Bethlehem Steel Corp T e x a s .................................................................................................
General Dynamics Corp Groton ............................................................................................
General Electric Co C incinnati...............................................................................................
Maryland Shipbuilding & Drydock Co B altim ore..................................................................

1,900
11,700
3,400
1,700

Instruments and related products
Total: 2 situations.....................................................................................................

12,300

Honeywell, Inc M inneapolis....................................................................................................
Sperry Rand Corp Great Neck ...............................................................................................

8,500
3,800

Miscellaneous manufacturing industries
Total: 2 situations.....................................................................................................

7,000

National Assn of Doll Mfrs New Y o rk ....................................................................................
Stuffed Toy Mfrs New Y o rk ....................................................................................................

6,000
1,000

Local and interurban passenger transit
Total: 1 situ atio n .......................................................................................................

1,200

Queens Transit & 3 others New York ...................................................................................

1,200

Trucking and warehousing
Total: 6 situations.....................................................................................................

48,000

Cartage Exchange of C h icag o...............................................................................................
Cartage Exchange of C h icag o...............................................................................................
Cloak Suit & Dress Trucking Assn New Y o rk ......................................................................
Draymen & Warehousemens Assn Oregon .........................................................................
Eastern Area Tank H aule rs.....................................................................................................
San Diego County Rock P ro d ................................................................................................

3,100
35,000
4,900
1,000
3,000
1,000

Transportation by air
Total: 7 situation s.....................................................................................................

42,450

American Airlines Ground S ervice.........................................................................................
Braniff Airlines Flight A tte n d a n ts ...........................................................................................
Eastern Air Lines Flight Attendants ......................................................................................
Northwest Airlines C lerical......................................................................................................
Republic Airlines C le ric a l.........................................................................................................
United Airlines Flight A tte n d a n ts...........................................................................................
Western Airlines C lerical.........................................................................................................

12,450
2,900
6,000
3,200
4,300
9,100
4,500

See footnotes at end of table.




53

Table 11. Continued— Additional collective bargaining situations1 expiring in 1982 covering 1,000
workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification

Expira­
tion month

State

Union

Employer
unit

8
3
12
5
11
1
5
4
3
1
5
6

63
31
00
74
61
41
23
22
93
80
53
35

127
500
357
127
342
127
124
500
342
127
118
127

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

5
4
11
6
4
6
5

21
33
93
93
91
41
93

332
531
531
531
531
531
400

4
4
4
2
3
4
4

6
6
5
2
7

10
10
21
22
00

364
364
332
184
364

4
4
4
3
4

Electric, gas, and sanitary services
Total: 12 situations...................................................................................................

32,150

Alabama Power C o ...................................................................................................................
Cincinnati Gas & E le c tric .........................................................................................................
Columbia Gas Transmission C o rp .........................................................................................
Houston Lighting & P o w e r.................. ....................................................................................
Louisville Gas & Electric C o ..................... .V ..........................................................................
Northern States Power Co M innesota....... ...........................................................................
Pennsylvania Power & Light Co ............................................................................................
Public Service Electric & Gas New Jersey ..........................................................................
Southern California Gas & Electric C o .................................................................................
Utah Power & Light C o ............................................................................................................
Washington Gas Light Co D C .................................................................................................
Wisconsin Power & Light Co .................................................................................................

3,800
1,000
1,100
3,800
2,700
3,500
3,900
1,600
4,900
2,200
2,050
1,600

Wholesale trade
Total: 7 situations.....................................................................................................

19,450

Assn of Uptown Converters New Y o rk ..................................................................................
Chicago Beer W holesalers......................................................................................................
Grocery Warehouse Distributors San Francisco ..................................................................
Lumber & Mill Emplrs Assn San Francisco ..........................................................................
Seattle Warehouse Distributors ..............................................................................................
Wholesale Grocery Companies M inn esota..........................................................................
Industrial Emplrs & Distr C alifornia........................................................................................

1,150
1,300
2,500
1,000
2,500
1,000
10,000

General merchandise stores
Total: 5 situation s.....................................................................................................

19,000

Bradlees M ercantile..................................................................................................................
Bradlees M ercantile..................................................................................................................
Gimbel Brothers, Inc New Y o rk ..............................................................................................
Kaufmanns & Gimbels Pittsburgh...........................................................................................
Two Guys Vornado, I n c ...........................................................................................................

2,600
1,400
5,000
2,000
8,000

Food stores
Total: 14 situations...................................................................................................

61,000

A & P Tea Co North C aro lina.................................................................................................
Allied Emplrs, Inc Seattle ........................................................................................................
Chain & Independent Food S tore s.........................................................................................
Chain & Independent Food Stores New Y o rk ......................................................................
Chain & Independent Food Stores St L o u is.........................................................................
Colonial Stores, I n c ..................................................................................................................
Denver Retail Grocers ............................................................................................................
Eisner Food Stores Illinois .....................................................................................................
Food Employers Cncl, Inc C a lif............................................................................................
Food Wholeslaers A s s n ...........................................................................................................

1,000
1,700
2,000
15,000
8,500
1,400
9,000
1,400
10,000
1,500

10
5
6
6
5
10
5
10
11
6

56
91
00
21
43
50
84
33
93
00

364
155
364
364
184
155
184
700
155
531

4
2
3
3
3
4
3
4
2
2

Jewel, A & P, Dominicks Food Stores Chicago..................................................................
Kroger, Schnucks, Thor Food Stores St Lo uis.....................................................................
Milwaukee Area Meat Industry................................................................................................
Southern California Emplrs C n c l.............................................................................................

4,900
1,400
2,000
1,200

7
1
11
1

33
43
35
93

364
364
364
118

3
3
3
3

See footnotes at end of table.




54

Table 11. Continued— Additional collective bargaining situations1 expiring in 1982 covering 1,000
workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification

Expira­
tion month

State

Union

Employer
unit

3
4
6

21
22
21

332
184
134

2
3
2

7
7
7
9
5

33
93
33
93
91

145
145
145
145
145

2
2
3
2
2

12

21

126

3

3

33

118

3

11

7

43
93

145
145

2
2

10

22

236

3

5

91

118

2

Apparel and accessory stores
Total: 3 situations.....................................................................................................

4,500

Assoc Mens Wear Retailers of New York, In c ....................................................................
New Jersey Mens & Boys Clothing S to re s ..........................................................................
Womens Apparel Chain Store Assn New Y o rk ...................................................................

1,500
1,000
2,000

Eating and drinking places
Total: 5 situation s.....................................................................................................

12,300

Chicago Union Restaurant Emplrs Assn ..............................................................................
East Bay Restaurant Assn San F rancisco...........................................................................
Restaurants in C hicago............................................................................................................
San Joaquin Valley Hotel & Restaurant Owners Assn ......................................................
Washington Restaurant & Bar Assn ...................................................................................

2,200
2,000
5,000
1,000
2,100

Miscellaneous retail
Total: 1 situ atio n .......................................................................................................

1,000

Independent Liquor Stores New Y o rk ....................................................................................

1,000

Real estate
Total: 1 situ atio n .......................................................................................................

12,500

Building Mgrs Assn of C hicago..............................................................................................

12,500

Hotels and other lodging places
Total: 2 situations.....................................................................................................

3,500

Greater St Louis Hotel & Motel A s s n ....................................................................................
Hotels in San Francisco ..........................................................................................................

2,500
1,000

Personal service
Total: 1 situ atio n .......................................................................................................

1,000

New Jersey Linen Supply Companies ..................................................................................

1,000

Business services
Total: 1 situ atio n .......................................................................................................

1,200

Maintenance Contrs Assn S e a ttle .........................................................................................

1,200

See footnotes at end of table.




55

Table 11. Continued— Additional collective bargaining situations' expiring in 1982 covering 1,000
workers or more, by industry
Codes2
Number of
workers

Industry and agreement identification

Expira­
tion month

State

Union

Employer
unit

7
10
10

93
93
93

600
163
600

2
2
2

9
1
5
2
6

21
93
41
93
21

332
332
905
163
332

1
2
4
1
2

Amusement and recreation services
Total: 3 situation s.....................................................................................................

9,000

Assn of Motion Picture Producers Hollywood .....................................................................
Assn of Motion Picture & TV Producers Los Angeles .......................................................
Assn of Motion Picture & TV Producers Los Angeles .......................................................

5,000
1,500
2,500

Health services
Total: 5 situations.....................................................................................................

46,450

Albert Einstein College of Medicine New Y o rk ....................................................................
Assn of Hosps of Santa Clara C n ty .......................................................................................
Health Manpower Mgmt, Inc St Paul-M inneapolis............ ..................................................
Kaiser Foundation Hosp Richmond ......................................................................................
League of Voluntary Hosps New York .................................................................................

1,300
1,000
6,000
1,150
37,000

1 Additional collective bargaining situations were those reported too
late to be included in
tables 8 and 9.




2 See appendix B for identification of codes,
NOTE: Geographical coverage of contracts
specified.

56

is

interstate

unless

Table 12. Selected agreements reopening in 1982 covering 1,000 workers or more, by month1
Number of
workers

Month of reopening and
agreement identification

Codes2
Industry

Union

1,000
1,500
2,400

75
24
49

531
343
127

1,600
2,000

15
15

119
143

1,000

15

119

4,500

54

364

8,500

17

116

2,300

49

127

1,400

54

364

1,100

30

332

6,200

36

347

January
Garage & Parking Lot Agmt San Francisco C a lifo rn ia ...............................................................................
Masonite Corp Laurel M ississippi...................................................................................................................
Salt River Power District A rizona....................................................................................................................

March
Associated General Contractors Bldg Branch New M e xico.........................................................................
Associated General Contractors Bldg Branch New M e xico.........................................................................

April
Associated General Contractors San Antonio Texas ..................................................................................

May
Kroger Co Inte rsta te .........................................................................................................................................

July
Associated General Contractors Iron Workers Employers Intersta te.......................................................

August
Memphis Gas & Light Co Tennessee............................................................................................................

October
Great A & P Tea Co, Inc Interstate................................................................................................................

November
Foster Grant, Inc M assachusetts....................................................................................................................

December
RCA Corp Interstate...........................................................................................................................................
1 Newspaper source.




2 See appendix B for identification of codes.

57

/^pp@
[n)(Q K ©©mm®BTi Abbreviations
lox

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



-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

Mgr(s)
Misc
Natl
NECA

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

War eh
Whsale

-Warehouse
-Wholesale

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

58

Appendix i . 0d@
infDfieati©n]
of Codes

Industry eodes
9

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

24
25
26
27
28
29
30

Tobacco manufacturers
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

31

Leather and leather products

32
33
34

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

10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
20
21
22
23

35
36
37
38

39
40
41
42
44

53
54
55
56
57

63
64
65
66
67
70
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

59

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
Nonprofit membership organizations
Private households
Miscellaneous services

!dl<§ntifs(g®ti®m of 0@dss=C@otiny®d
State codes1
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 o f Columbia
Virginia
West Virginia
North Carolina
South Carolina

OTHER' INTERSTATE
00

1 Agreements 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,

60

Sd®otifieafi©in ©f C®des=C©ntisiy®d
Union ©odes2
100
101
102
104
105
106
107
108
109
112

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

158
161
162
163
164
166
168
169
170
174

Metal Polishers
Molders
Musicians
Office Employees
Painters
Pattern Makers
Plasterers and Cement Masons
Plate Printers
Plumbers
Potters

114
115
116
118
119
120
121
124
126
127

Brick and Clay Workers4
Bricklayers
Iron Workers
Service Employees
Carpenters
Cement Workers
Chemical Workers
Coopers
Distillery Workers
Electrical Workers (IBEW)

178
180
181
183
184
185
186
187
189
192

Railroad Signalmen
Railroad Yardmasters
Railway Carmen
Railway Clerks
Retail Clerks9
Roofers
Seafarers
Sheet Metal Workers
Siderographers
Theatrical Stage Employees

128
129
132
133
134
135
137
140
141
142

Elevator Constructors
Engineers; Operating
Firemen and Oilers
Garment Workers; United
Garment Workers; Ladies’
Glass Bottle Blowers
Glass Workers; Flint
Granite Cutters5
Leather Goods, Plastic, and Novelty Workers
Hatters

196
197
201
202
204
205
208
215
218
220

Stove Workers
Transit Union; Amalgamated
Telegraph Workers
Textile Workers; United
Typographical Union
Upholsterers
Grain Millers
Flight Engineers
Machinists
Aluminum Workers1
0

143
144
145
146
147
150
152
153
154
155

Laborers
Horseshoers
Hotel and Restaurant Employees
Jewelry Workers6
Lathers7
Letter Carriers
Maintenance o f Way Employees
Tile, Marble and Terrazzo Finishers
Masters, Mates and Pilots
Meat Cutters8

221
231
232
233
236
238
239
241
243
244

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
Printing and Graphic

305
312
314

Clothing and Textile Workers
Furniture Workers
Glass and Ceramic Workers

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 combin­
ed in 1980 to form the Aluminum, Brick and Clay Workers Interna­
tional Union.
5 Merged with the Tile, Marble and Terrazzo Finishers in 1980.
6 Merged with the Service Employees in 1980.
7 Merged with the Carpenters in 1979.
8 The Meat Cutters and the Retail Clerks combined in 1979 to form
the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union.




61

9 See footnote 8.
1 See footnote 4.
0
1 Merged with the Railway Clerks in 1980.
1

identification of Codes—Continued
Union codes2—Continued
319
320
321
323
332
333
334
335
341
342
343
345
346
347
352
354
356
357
358
360
362
363
364
400
404
412
414
415
417
419
423
425
442
449
454
459
461
465
469
470
471
480
484
490
494
500

516
517
518
519
520
521
524
527
528
529
530
531
533
534
535
536
538
539
540
541
542
543
551
553
557
558
559
561
562
600

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
Radio Association
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
Air Traffic Controllers
Food and Commercial Workers; United1
3
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
Mine Workers
Allied Pilots Association
Guard Workers; Plant
Christian Labor Association
Utility Workers o f 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

Employer unit codes
1
2
3

4

1 Merged with the Clothing and Textile Workers in 1979.
2
1 See footnote 8.
3
1 Merged with the Typographical Union in 1979.
4
1 Merged with the Auto Workers in 1979.
5



Telephone unions; Independent
Baseball Players
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
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
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
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

Single company
Association agreement
Industry area agreement (group of com­
panies signing same agreement; no
formal association)
Single company (multiplant) agreement

1 Reaffiliated with the AFL-CIO in 1981.
6

62

Appendix C. Explanatory Note

Data shown in tables 8 and 9 o f this bulletin, listing
individual collective bargaining agreements on file with
the Bureau o f Labor Statistics, differ from the totals
presented earlier in tables 1 and 2 for a variety of
reasons. Data in tables 1 and 2 include, in addition to
those agreements on file, information on collective
bargaining agreements from other sources, such as press
accounts and direct communication with union and
management. Additionally, a collective bargaining
situation included in tables 1 and 2 is defined as a
bargaining unit covering a total o f 1,000 workers or
more. The results of bargaining in such a unit, when for
example multi-employer or multi-union groups are in­
volved, may be two or more separate collective bargain­
ing agreements each affecting fewer than 1,000 workers.
In such cases, the agreements are jointly negotiated and
have uniform terms including a common expiration
date.
Differences may also exist in employment coverage,




as tables 8 and 9 reflect employment data obtained at
the time the contract is received by the Bureau while
tables 1 and 2 reflect the most recent employment data
available at the time this bulletin was prepared. Changes
in worker coverage totals, in turn, may result in changes
in the number o f situations classified as “ major,” that
is, those applying to 1,000 workers or more. Finally,
contracts covering the railroad and airline industries are
not included in the Bureau’s agreement file, but are in­
cluded in tables 1 and 2.
To reconcile the differences between data presented in
tables 8 and 9 and in 1 and 2, supplemental tables 10
and 11 have been prepared. They list situations included
in tables 1 and 2, but not in 8 and 9, and are based upon
the concepts used in preparing the former tables.
Because o f the reasons listed earlier regarding employ­
ment differences, absolute comparability is not possi­
ble. However, the supplemental tables do aid in recon­
ciling differences between the two series o f data.

63
☆

U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE : 1 9 8 2

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(4 9 0 8 )

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Bureau of Labor Statistics
Regional Offices

Region !V
1371 Peachtree Street, N.E.
Atlanta, Ga. 30367
Phone: (404) 881-4418

Regions VII and V S
SS
911 Walnut Street
Kansas City, Mo. 64106
Phone: (816) 374-2481

Region S
I
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 11
1
3535 Market Street
P.O. Box 13309
Philadelphia, Pa. 19101
Phone: (215) 596-1154

Region V
S
Second Floor
555 Griffin Square Building
Dallas, Tex. 75202
Phone: (214) 767-6971

Region I
1603 JFK Federal Building
Government Center
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Phone: (617) 223-6761