The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.
L Z % . 3 % & ... I 1 IN D U S T R Y A N D S C IF N C E WAGE CALENDAR 1 9 7 3 BULLETIN 1766 U.S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS W AGE C A LEN D A R 1 9 7 3 Bulletin 1766 U.S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR Peter J. Brennan, Secretary Bureau of Labor Statistics Ben Burdetsky, Deputy Commissioner 1973 For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402. Price 75 cents domestic postpaid or 50 cents GPO Bookstore Microfiche edition availablelrom National Technical Information Service, Springfield, Va. 22151, at 95 cents a set. Make checks payable to NTIS. P re fa c e In this bulletin, the Bureau of Labor Statistics annually has assembled information on anticipated contract adjustments for the calendar year. This statistical information identi fies major situations by company and union in which during the year, contracts will terminate, deferred wage increases will become due, changes in the Consumers Price Index will be reviewed, and contracts will reopen. Because of the Federal Government’s regulation of wages and prices, these data take on added dimensions as timely indi cators of some of the important movements that might be expected in the economy. This bulletin combines the Bureau’s annual wage calendar article, which appeared in the January 1973 issue of the M onthly Labor Review , and the Bureau’s listing of major agreements which expire during the year. Each contract covers 1,000 workers or more. Virtually all of these agreements are on file in the Bureau’s Division of Industrial Relations and are open to public inspection. Information for a few situa tions was taken from published sources. Table 8 lists agreements scheduled to expire in 1973 by month and table 9 ar ranges them by industry. Users should refer to appendix A for a list of common abbreviations and to appendix B for codes used in identifying the entries by industry, State, union, and employer unit. Table 10 lists 1973 contract reopenings (for wages, benefits, and working conditions) by month for selected collective bargaining agreements each covering 1,000 workers or more. Expirations that were reported to the Bureau too late to be included in table 8 and 9 are listed in table 11. This bulletin was prepared jointly in the Division of Trends in Employee Compensa tion and the Division of Industrial Relations by David G. Larson and Lena W. Bolton. in Contents Page Collective bargaining activity............................................................................................................................. Deferred wage increases..................................................................................................................................... Cost-of-living escalator provisions..................................................................................................................... Provision in selected contracts........................................................................................................................... 1 4 4 7 Tables: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Scheduled negotiating activity in bargaining situations affecting 1,000 workers or more, by month and year................................................................................................................................. Contract expiration and wage reopening dates in bargaining situations affecting 1,000 workers or more, by industry ....................................................................................................................... Distribution of workers receiving deferred wage increases in 1973 in bargaining situations affecting 1,000 workers or more, by major industries....................................................................... Distribution of workers receiving deferred wage increases in 1973 in bargaining situations covering 1,000 workers or more, by month...................................................................................... Distribution of workers in bargaining situations affecting 5,000 workers or more in 1973, by d e fe r r e d w a g e a n d b e n e fit in cre a s e s 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. ......................................................................................................................................................................... Frequency of cost-of-living reviews in selected industries, 1958-72 ...................................................... Expiration, reopening, and wage-adjustment provisions of selected collective bargaining agreements, 1973 ............................................................................................................................. Collective bargaining agreements covering 1,000 workers or more expiring in 1973, by month of expiration ......................................................................................................................... Collective bargaining agreements covering 1,000 workers or more expiring in 1973, by industry........ Selected agreements reopening in 1973 covering 1,000 workers or more, by month............. Late listing of agreements expiring in 1973 covering 1,000 workers or more, by month...................... 2 3 5 6 6 7 8 15 26 38 39 Appendixes: A. B. Common abbreviations....................................................................................................................... Definition of codes............................................................................................................................... IV 40 41 W a g e C a le n d a r, Contracts covering the remaining 1.6 million work ers, for which the necessary information was not available, fall into the following four categories: In 1973, for the first time in two decades, negotiators in the transportation, automobile, and other key in dustries will come to the bargaining table in a setting of Government pay controls. Altogether, negotiations affecting at least 4.7 million workers are scheduled during the year; this approximates the peak years 1970 and 1971, when contracts covering 4.75 million workers expired. Traditionally, first-year increases in contracts have tended to be higher than those scheduled for subse quent years. However, in 1973 the size of wage and benefit increases going into effect may be influenced by actions of the Pay Board and the Construction Industry Stabilization Committee, if economic con trols remain in effect. Deferred wage increases due in 1973 will average 4.9 percent, more than 1 per centage point below the 1972 level. While the fewest workers since 1967 are scheduled to receive deferred wage increases this year, the number covered by costof-living escalator clauses will remain substantially at last year’s level, which was an all-time high. Data are presented in this article on wage increases scheduled to become effective in 1973, as well as in formation on contract expirations and reopenings. Deferred increases have been included in this article as they were negotiated by the parties, without regard to possible subsequent action by stabilization authori ties. At the time this article was completed, the Bureau of Labor Statistics had information on 1,727 con tracts covering 8.6 million of the 10.2 million work ers under all 2,237 major private-nonfarm-industry 1. A g re e m e n ts N ovem ber w h ic h 1972 (7 2 e x p ir e su bsequ en t co n tra cts, c o v e r in g to la te 2 1 6 ,0 0 0 w o rk e rs ). 2. C o n tra cts w h ere w h ic h e x p ir e d n e g o t ia t io n s w ere e a r lie r in th e y e a r , b u t c o n t in u in g (8 1 co n tra cts, c o v e r in g 2 4 7 ,0 0 0 w o r k e r s ). 3. but S itu a tio n s w h e r e a s e t t le m e n t h a d b e e n r e a c h e d , had not a g e n c ie s (3 2 2 yet been a p p roved by c o n tr a c ts , c o v e r in g th e s t a b iliz a t io n 9 9 0 ,0 0 0 w o rk e rs ); and 4. th e S itu a tio n s w h o s e sta tu s w a s u n k n o w n , o r w h e r e term s of th e agreem en t w ere not a v a ila b le (3 5 c o n tr a c ts , c o v e r in g 8 1 ,0 0 0 w o r k e r s ). Collective bargaining activity Collective bargaining will quicken markedly from last year’s pace, as contracts covering almost 2 mil lion more workers will be renegotiated. Several key industries may set the bargaining climate this year. Negotiations are scheduled in transportation (in cluding railroads and trucking), in construction, in the automobile and farm implement industries, in electrical machinery, apparel, rubber, and retail trade industries. (See tables 1 and 2.) Early in the year, bargaining will cover 250,000 workers in the apparel industry. Negotiations in the rubber industry are scheduled during April, May, and June for approxi mately 100,000 workers. Nearly 610,000 construc tion workers are under contracts up for negotiation during 1973, with the major portion of the expira tions occurring during the first 6 months. Midyear bargaining is scheduled for the majority of the 330,000 workers whose agreements expire in collective bargaining agreements (those covering 1,000 workers or more1). The data in this article are generally limited to these 8.6 million workers. 1 9 7 3 1 electrical manufacturing. Contracts expire in June for most workers in the general trucking and the railroad industries, where agreements cover approxi mately 500,000 and 525,000 employees, respectively. September marks the expiration for the auto in dustry agreements (covering 700,000 workers) as well as for contracts in auto parts. Contracts cover ing about 75,000 workers in meatpacking are up for negotiation in August and September. The bulk of the farm implement industry contracts expire in Sep tember and October. Some 60,000 workers whose agreements expire Table 1. on December 31, 1973, are not scheduled to receive any deferred wage increase during the year. About 110,000 workers are covered by contracts expiring after that date with no specific deferred wage in creases or unconditional wage reopening provisions during 1973. These workers may receive a wage change at some time during the year, however. For example, contracts covering a number of workers in the textile industry do not contain a specific date for a wage reopening, but characteristically are re opened after the nonunion sector of the industry grants general wage hikes. Scheduled negotiating activity in bargaining situations affecting 1,000 workers or more, by month and year [Workers in thousands] Contract expirations 1 Scheduled wage reopenings1 2 Year and month Principal industries affected Situations Workers Situations Workers All years______ _____ __________ 2,237 10,160 90 270 1973, total__________ ___________ ___ 864 4,600 62 170 January________________________ February___ ________________ ___ March_____ ___________________ April___________________ ______ May_________ ___ _____________ June__________________________ 33 37 86 139 128 129 165 99 366 400 509 1,460 7 4 6 8 8 7 13 23 15 17 12 22 July__________________________ August________________________ September______________________ October_______ ___ _____________ November_______ ____ _ _ .. ... December______________________ Month unknown___ . . 54 53 75 52 31 47 130 165 865 192 75 174 7 4 3 2 3 2 1 21 13 12 3 5 11 3 1974, total_________________________ 691 3,371 26 75 January________________________ February_______________________ March____________________ ___ April_______________ ... . __ May___________ ... . June__________________________ 37 41 67 75 67 98 118 122 199 197 273 390 4 3 4 11 11 19 3 7 4 20 July___________ . ___ August________________________ September______________________ October. November... December. Month unknown . . . . . . _ . . 94 68 57 45 23 19 1,195 278 215 178 138 69 3 1 5 2 1 3 1975, total_________________________ 168 617 2 26 January-June____________________ July-December . Month unknown .. 1976 . . . 1977 . . . . ____ 1978 Year unknown or in negotiation____ 143 25 474 143 2 26 4 36 510 1,535 Apparel; motion picture production. Apparel; food. Construction; trucking (Chicago); gas and electric utilities. Construction; rubber; real estate; stone, clay, and glass; food. Construction; electrical equipment; apparel; paper; food. Railroads; trucking (excluding Chicago); construction; food; gas and electric utilities; food stores. Apparel; construction; paper; fabricated metal products; department stores. Food; airlines (mechanics); trucking (automobile transportation). Autos; auto parts; farm implements. Farm implements; food stores. Food. Food stores; electrical equipment; transportation equipment. Food; transportation equipment; tobacco. Fabricated metal; transportation equipment; electrical equipment. Local and suburban transit; food; chemicals. Construction; leather; food stores. Apparel; primary metals; food stores; construction. Construction; motion picture production; primary metals; transportation equip ment; medical services. Communications; steel; electrical equipment; construction. Steel; communications; retail trade; machinery (except electrical). Longshoring; transportation equipment; food stores. Transportation equipment; steel. Mining; transportation equipment. Real estate; apparel. Lumber; maritime; transportation equipment. Apparel. Hotels; eating and drinking places. Airlines; apparel; food stores; local and suburban transit; construction. i 1 Three utility agreements covering 16,400 workers are excluded since they have no fixed expiriation or reopening date. 2 Excludes 300,000 workers, 270,000 in the ladies apparel industry, whose contracts provide for possible wage repoeners during the year based on increases in the Con sumer Price Index. NOTE: Only bargaining situations in the private, nonagricultural economy are considered in this table. Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. 2 Table 2. Contract expiration and wage reopening dates in bargaining situations affecting ly000 workers or more, by in dustry [Workers in thousands] Scheduled wage reopening in1 2 Year of contract termination 1 Total Industry 1973 1974 1975 Unknown, in negotiation, or pending action Later 1974 1973 Situa Work Situa Work Situa Work Situa Work Situa Work Situa Work Situa Work Situa Work tions ers tions tions ers tions ers ers ers ers tions tions tions tions ers ers All industries............................. ...... 2,237 10,160 864 4,600 691 3,371 168 617 4 36 510 1,535 62 170 26 75 Manufacturing......................... 1,176 4,733 429 2,198 442 1,694 115 418 1 1 189 422 30 63 10 30 Ordnance and accessories................... Food and kindred products................ Tobacco manufacturing..................... Textile mill products................ . ....... Apparel and other finished products__ 23 136 8 37 66 49 374 28 89 601 7 58 2 13 31 10 211 3 28 254 6 51 6 6 10 16 116 25 9 133 4 7 9 11 6 20 14 36 3 6 1 3 4 8 17 130 14 17 35 83 27 21 78 32 68 91 43 141 67 135 7 11 34 12 36 11 24 71 29 79 1 8 34 31 38 16 73 2 24 14 23 1 1 5 l 3 8 19 5 4 5 11 34 7 5 26 57 4 5 1 1 21 51 24 27 42 123 64 113 91 95 651 129 19 7 18 13 16 105 18 29 21 27 4 10 15 88 26 6 45 46 596 73 2 6 14 8 3 14 23 10 1 8 3 8 14 1 25 6 12 19 103 290 32 150 54 104 10 24 119 122 20 10 524 1,107 37 24 58 37 7 7 335 752 14 20 41 52 8 151 255 10 6 19 2 2 9 69 9 2 1,061 5,427 435 2,402 249 1,678 53 199 Lumber and wood products, except Furniture and fixtures........................ Paper and allied products.................. Printing, publishing, and allied products. Chemicals and allied products......... . Petroleum refining and related industries ____ Rubber and miscellaneous plastics products _ Leather and leather products............. Stone clay and glass products............ Primary metal industries............ ....... Fabricated metal products................. Machinery except electrical.............. Electric machinery, equipment, and supplies _ Transportation equipment Instruments and related products . Miscellaneous manufacturing industries. Nonmanufacturing ........... 1 12 1 3 1 35 4 5 1 5 6 12 1 4 1 1 1 2 1 2 2 2 3 4 2 2 4 4 1 1 8 1 6 11 5 7 14 14 3 1 29 32 4 2 2 2 1 1 12 10 1 321 1,113 32 107 16 44 1 4 Mining, crude petroleum, and natural gas production Transportation, except railroads and airlines ____ Railroads Airlines 13 137 1 2 9 128 2 6 1 1 87 18 39 875 548 154 30 15 10 594 525 51 29 146 6 53 82 23 95 4 8 22 3 25 1 4 1 1 Comm^mirations Utilities' gas and electric Wholesale trade . . Retail trade except restaurants Restaurants ......................... 46 74 28 135 33 761 207 77 532 116 12 37 10 59 7 57 117 18 258 20 29 15 9 42 14 656 44 14 154 43 3 3 5 4 8 6 18 12 5 19 6 29 7 48 38 40 103 32 1 10 1 5 3 5 27 1 15 13 1 1 4 2 3 2 14 10 Services except hotels Hotels __ Construction Finance insurance and reel estate 73 21 465 24 297 108 1,477 139 26 10 211 7 73 45 603 40 26 4 61 7 115 16 315 40 8 8 9 5 17 22 30 29 16 93 184 4 530 29 5 3 2 24 14 2 2 2 2 1 4 5 2 1 1 See table 1, footnote 1 for notes on data limitations. 2 See table 1, footnote 2 for notes on data limitations. 9 1 25 1 1 NOTE: Only bargaining situations in the private, nonagricultural economy are considered in this table. Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. Contract duration . Contracts with shorter durations began replacing the prevalent 3-year cycle of bar gaining in late 1971 and continued in 1972. This trend has been accentuated by a large jump in the number of 1-year contracts, primarily in the con struction industry. The last time contracts were con- Other workers may receive an unscheduled wage hike during the year. In some industries, a rise in the Consumer Price Index may trigger a reopening, although no deferred increases are scheduled. These provisions cover approximately 300,000 workers, chiefly in the women’s apparel industry. 1 3 eluded by bargainers scheduled to meet this year, the average duration was 33 months and the average annual rate of wage increase (including subsequent cost-of-living increases) was 9.1 percent.2 Bargain ers in manufacturing last agreed to contracts with an average 35-month duration and 7.4-percent annual wage increase. In nonmanufacturing, contracts called for an average duration of 32 months and annual increases of 10.8 percent. (Construction contracts averaged 30 months in length, with 11.0 percent annual wage increases.) Deferred wage increases Deferred wage increases are scheduled for ap proximately 4.9 million workers in 1973. (See table 3.) As the following tabulation indicates (though data for 1972 and 1973 are preliminary), this is the lowest number of workers receiving deferred increases since 1967: W orkers (in m illio n s ) 1973 ................................................................................................ 4 .9 1972 ................................................................................................ 6 .7 1971 ................................................................................................ 5 .8 1970 ................................................................................................ 5 .7 1969 ................................................................................................ 7 .6 1968 ................................................................................................ 5 .6 1967 ................................................................................................ 4 .5 In the nonmanufacturing sector, deferred increases will be most prevalent in the transportation indus tries (mainly in railroads and trucking), where 1.1 million workers are scheduled to receive gains, and in communications, where some 650,000 workers will receive increases. In manufacturing, metalwork ing has the largest concentration of scheduled in creases, primarily reflecting gains for workers in the steel, aluminum, and can industries. About 2.6 million workers, or 55 percent of all those due increases in 1973, will receive gains in the first half of the year. (See table 4.) Nearly 140,000 of these workers will receive additional gains in the second half of the year. Also, because of contract expirations in the railroad and trucking industries, a quarter of those workers receiving de ferred increases in 1973 will have their agreements come up for renegotiation by the end of the year. Deferred increases scheduled for 1973 will aver age 4.9 percent, down from the average 6.1-percent gain in 1972. The decline is due to the drop in wage increases in the nonmanufacturing sector, where workers will receive an average 5.3-percent gain in 1973 compared with 8.1 percent in 1972. (Most workers in the railroad and trucking industries will receive only one deferred increase in 1973, com pared with two in 1972.) In the manufacturing industries, workers will receive an average increase of 4.4 percent in 1973, the same amount as last year. The metalworking industries, with 1.3 million workers receiving an average boost of 3.7 percent, tend to lower the overall average for manufacturing. Though down considerably from the 1972 average of 11.6 percent, the 7.3-percent average gain for 410.000 construction workers causes the nonmanu facturing average to be above that for all industries combined.3 Following the pattern of recent years, the average deferred increase is higher in contracts without costof-living escalator provisions than in those with such provisions. Contracts without escalator clauses cover 2.4 million workers; their deferred increases will average 6.1 percent in 1973. Contracts with escalators cover another 2.4 million workers. De ferred increases scheduled under these contracts average 3.8 percent; this will rise when cost-ofliving provisions go in effect. If a 3-percent rise in the Consumer Price Index is arbitrarily assumed for 1973, these workers would receive total hikes averaging 5.7 percent. On this assumption, the average gain for all workers receiving deferred in creases in 1973 would rise to 5.9 percent. The comparable figure for 1972 was 7.1 percent. The growing popularity of fringe benefits, which make up from 20 to 25 percent of total compensa tion, has led to the study of these benefits in addition to wage hikes. When the cost of deferred benefit improvements is added to the wage increases, the average gain for wages and benefits combined in 1973 will be 5.4 percent in agreements covering 5.000 workers or more. (See table 5.) The com parable average increase for 1972 was 6.5 percent. Cost-of-living escalator provisions Basically the same number of workers covered by cost-of-living escalator clauses in 1972 are again covered in 1973.4 Nearly 2.4 million of the workers scheduled to receive deferred increases in 1973 are covered by agreements containing escalator clause provisions. With the exception of some 115,000 4 Table 3. Distribution of workers receiving deferred wage increases in 1973 in bargaining situations affecting 1,000 workers or more, by major industries [Workers in thousands] All Food private and non Num Total ber of agri manu kindred situa cultural factur prod tions indus ing 1 ucts tries Average increase Ap parel Total____________________ 864 4,873 2,056 127 CENTS PER HOUR Under 10 cents_________________ 10 and under 11. . . . __ ... .. 11 and under 12__... ___________ 12 and under 13 _ ___ 13 and under 14__ ... ______ __ 14 and under 15 . .. .. 28 30 11 36 47 33 68 90 37 182 185 115 19 54 17 160 71 110 3 1 1 1 15 and under 17______ ________ 17 and under 19_______ _ _____ 19 and under 21___ ______ _______ 21 and under 23 .. .. 23 and under 25............................... . 157 35 73 48 36 1,490 101 648 125 68 852 37 232 84 56 23 3 15 6 5 30 2 125 25 and under 30 _ ............... 30 and under 35........................ ......... 35 and under 40................................ 40 and under 45 . ... 45 and under 50.................. ........... 127 57 28 25 13 915 170 109 100 57 213 79 37 8 2 24 12 25 4 6 50 and under 55 .. __ 55 and under 60............................ .... 60 and under 65 . . ............... 65 and under 70 70 and under 75. . 33 5 5 2 6 188 16 11 7 38 6 3 1 2 75 and under 80 60 and under 85 85 and over .... 5 1 12 23 10 96 Not specified or not computed 3.__ .. .. 11 ................ . Mean increase __ With escalators....... .......... .......... Without escalators.. ............. Median increase . ________ PERCENT5 Under 3 . _________ 3 and under 4__________________ 4 and under 5 ... .......... 5 and under 6.................................... 6 and under 7________________ . 7 and under 8 8 and under 9 9 and under 10 10 and under 11 11 (tnd under 12 ___ ... 12 and under 19 13 and undpr Id 14 and undpr 15 15and m/pf Not specified or not computed3 Mean increase ......................... With escalators........................... Without escalators......................... Median increase _ .......... 267 74 61 5 2 1 9 92 3 5 5 1 70 Total Metal- nonwork manufacturing ing1 2 24 9 2 18.5 16.9 20.9 15.6 25.7 30.2 24.5 25.0 16.8 9.2 16.9 16.9 87 201 111 158 132 255 1,589 1,062 676 465 152 933 240 238 341 2 2 20 32 15 5 95 14 139 70 42 22 10 7 266 239 167 34 60 102 15 4 7 6 40 6 2 2 1 4 3 2 4 14 6 4 11 2 6 2 Con tract con struc tion Com Ware muni hous Trans cations, ing, porta gas, whole and tion sale electric and utili retail ties trade 411 1,129 24 2 1,322 2,817 13 20 14 60 64 105 49 36 20 22 113 5 769 24 59 40 34 638 64 416 41 12 9 58 36 5 4 2 702 91 71 92 55 5 5 17 13 681 252 141 1 28 6 9 2 10 2 10 2 4 24 9 9 24 6 18 7 10 13 2 29 22 10 10 25 46 14 1 73 5 3 387 1 2 543 37 24 12 7 20 24 594 9 8 182 13 11 7 33 93 10 11 7 33 1 7 3 23 10 96 21 10 85 7 4 53 57 5 Serv ices 2 2 2 10 3 3 2 11 8 15 3 26.3 (4) 26.3 26.0 18.9 11.2 21.5 21.0 16.9 16.0 22.3 15.6 28.3 18.0 35.9 22.7 54.9 (4) 54.9 50.3 26.3 20.1 30.2 25.0 16.4 16.0 27.5 16.2 26.5 26.1 26.6 22.7 21.7 30.0 21.6 22.5 2 71 9 5 12 25 11 134 889 97 108 49 103 657 822 437 124 49 2 30 73 22 8 423 244 303 29 5 150 501 7 12 26 12 27 34 32 3 5 15 20 25 24 4 163 224 163 28 55 31 108 22 1 52 95 29 2 3 25 30 17 26 3 5 35 34 12 8 4 9 4 2 14 3 6 4 11 24 9 2 4.9 3.8 6.1 4.1 4.4 3.6 5.7 3.6 6.4 6.9 6.3 6.4 5.6 3.7 5.6 6.0 6.0 (4) 6.0 6.0 4.8 2.6 5.5 5.5 8 15 3 3.7 3.4 5.4 3.1 5.3 4.0 6.4 4.1 7.3 (4) 7.3 7.9 11 4.6 3.5 5.3 4.0 4.1 4.0 6.2 4.1 6.8 6.1 6.8 6.4 7.2 6.4 7.3 7.4 5 Percent of estimated straight-time average hourly earnings. 1 Includes workers in the following industry groups for which separate data are not shown: tobacco (26,000); textiles (18,000); furniture (18,000); paper and allied products (30,000); printing (31,000); chemicals (38,000); petroleum refining (1,000); rubber (5,000); leather (37,000). 2 Includes 134,000 workers in the mining industry and 69,000 in finance, insurance, and real estate for which separate data are not shown. 3 Insufficient information to compute amount of increase. 4 Industry contains no contracts with escalator clauses. 1 2 33 4 4 24.2 17.4 30.9 20.0 11 Lumber Stone, and clay, wood glass, prod and ucts con except crete furni prod ture ucts 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 escalator clauses. The number of workers affected in each industry is based on data available in late November, 1972, and thus may understate the number of workers receiving deferred wage increases. Only bar gaining situations in the private, nonagricultural economy are considered in this table. Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. 5 workers tied to various Bureau of Labor Statistics’ city indexes, workers are covered by clauses tied to the Bureau’s national Consumer Price Index. The number of workers affected by escalator clauses has more than doubled since the midsixties, as the following tabulation indicates (figures for 1972 and 1973 are preliminary): W orkers J a n u a ry 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965 .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... (in m illio n s) 4.1 4.3 3.0 2 .8 2 .6 6 2.46 2 .2 2 .0 Table 5. Distribution of workers in bargaining situations affecting 5,000 workers or more in 1973, by deferred wage and benefit increases [Numbers in thousands] Average deferred wage and benefit increase as a percent of existing wage and benefit expenditures All settlements providing deferred changes1........................... W orkers J a n u a ry 1964 1963 1962 1961 1960 1959 1958 1957 .......... .......... .......... .......... .......... .......... .......... .......... (in m illio n s ) 2 .0 1.85 2.5 2 .5-2.8 4.0 4.0 4.0 3.5 2 .0 Table 6 provides a record of the frequency of costof-living reviews in selected industries since 1958. While the number of workers covered by formal escalator provisions remains relatively unchanged from last year, the number actually to be covered by reviews in 1973 will drop to 3.2 million from nearly 3.8 million in 1972. This decline is mainly attributable to the trucking and electrical machinery industries, where reviews are not scheduled for 1973 as contracts expire during the year. Total1______ 4,873 January__________ February................. . 1,014 175 March____ ___ ___ April____________ May____________ June......... ............... July___ _________ 188 758 261 544 986 August....... . ......... September........ ....... October_____ ___ _ November................. December________ Month unknown____ 751 242 200 157 53 8 Mean increase (percent)........................ Median increase (percent)............................ 5.4 5.3 14 Some 2.1 million workers of the 4.1 million covered under cost-of-living clauses will be having annual reviews. More frequent reviews are specified for 1.9 million on a quarterly basis, for 38,000 semiannually, and for 11,000 monthly. In addition, 130,000 will have minimum guarantees and maxi mum limits on increases, 670,000 minimums only, and 1.1 million maximums only. In this article, guaranteed minimum escalator adjustments are gen erally treated as deferred increases— workers re ceiving a 10-cent deferred increase plus a 3-cent guaranteed cost-of-living minimum are considered to have received a 13-cent deferred wage increase. However, guaranteed minimum increases in the steel, can, and aluminum industries have been excluded from the deferred totals because they apply to a total of increases under several quarterly reviews, rather than to a minimum amount set for a single review, as in other industries. At least four major industries are scheduled for cost-of-living reviews in 1973. In the steel industry, reviews will be quarterly, with an allowance of at least 12 Vi cents by August 1 and no maximum limit.5 In the communications industry (mainly the Bell System operating companies), contracts provide for an annual review in July and no'minimum guar- Principal industries affected Trucking (excluding Chicago); railroads. Food; fabricated metals; transportation equip ment. Trucking (automobile transportation); chemicals. Railroads; transportation equipment. Construction; transportation equipment. Construction; lumber; primary metals; maritime. Communication; electrical equipment; construc tion. Steel; communication. Transportation equipment. Longshoring; transportation equipment. Mining. Transportation equipment. 1This total is smaller than individual items since 443,750 workers will receive two increases, and 10,600 will receive three increases. The total is based on data available in late November 1972 and thus may understate the number of workers receiving de ferred wage increases. NOTE: Only bargaining situations in the private, nonagricultural economy are considered in this table. 119 649 649 976 274 104 143 75 92 28 NOTE: Only bargaining situations in the private, nonagricultural economy are considered in this table. Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. [Workers in thousands] Workers 3,124 Under 3......._............................................... 3 and under 4 .......................................... 4 and under 5............................. 5 and under 6........ ............. . .. 6 and under 7............................... 7 and under 8...................................... 8 and under 9........... ................................. 9 and under 10........... ........ _.............. 10 and under 11___ 11 and under 12_____ ___ ____ 12 and under 13................................... 13 and under 14..... ............ .................. 14 and under 15_____ 15 and over................ ........ .............. . 1 The total excludes those workers covered by contracts expiring in 1973 receiving a deferred benefit change only. Table 4. Distribution of workers receiving deferred wage increases in 1973 in bargaining situations covering 1,000 workers or more, by month Effective month Workers 6 Table 6. Frequency of cost-of-living reviews in selected industries, 1958-72 NOTE: X 0 Indicates a cost-of-living escalator review took place during the year. Indicates a cost-of-living clause was in effect, but no review took place during the year. — Indicates no cost-of-living provision was in effect during the year. 1 Escalator reestablished during the year. 2 Escalator clauses discontinued during the year. 3 Escalator clauses established during the year. 4 Averages were based on increases in industries where escalation was in effect during the entire year (excludes minimum guarantees and escalator increases diverted oward the establishment or improvement of a fringe benefit). antee or maximum adjustment. In the auto industry, reviews will take place in March and June (before existing contracts expire in September) with no minimum or maximum provisions. In the aerospace industry, agreements covering about one-third of the workers provide for annual reviews; contracts for the remainder of the workers contain quarterly re views. Most aerospace contracts do not have mini mum guarantees or maximum limits in the escalator clauses. B o t h m e a n s a n d m e d ia n s a re s h o w n in th e ta b le s . 3 S o m e 7 5 ,0 0 0 o f th e s e c o n s t r u c t io n w o r k e r s w ill r e c e iv e d e fe r r e d in c r e a s e s under s e ttle m e n ts in w h ic h th e p a rtie s a g r e e d t o a t o ta l w a g e a n d b e n e fit p a c k a g e , w it h th e u ltim a te a llo c a t io n b e t w e e n w a g e s a n d b e n e fits s u b je c t t o d e t e r m in a t io n b y th e u n io n . S in c e th e fin a l d iv is io n w a s n o t k n o w n at the tim e this a r ticle w a s w r itt e n ,' th e e n tir e a m o u n t w a s tre a te d as a w a g e h ik e . F o r e x a m p le , a 5 0 -c e n t w a g e and b e n e fit p a c k a g e n e g o t ia t e d in 1971 a n d s c h e d u le d t o g o in t o e ff e c t in J u ly 1 9 7 3 w a s t re a te d as a 5 0 -c e n t d e fe r r e d w a g e in c r e a s e f o r J u ly . 4 T o th e se w o r k e r s s h o u ld b e a d d e d s o m e 6 0 0 ,0 0 0 p r o d u c t io n Provisions in selected contracts w orkers in n o n u n io n and s m a ll u n io n m a n u fa c t u r in g p la n ts . ( C o m p a r a b l e d a ta f o r w o r k e r s in n o n u n io n a n d s m a ll u n io n n o n m a n u fa c t u r in g e s t a b lis h m e n ts a re n o t a v a ila b le .) Table 7 (pp. 10-6) lists key provisions of selected agreements, each affecting 5,000 workers or more in a broad range of industries, excluding construc tion. These agreements were chosen as representa tive of deferred increases, contract expirations, wage reopenings, or cost-of-living reviews in 1973. □ T h e 4.1 m i ll i o n in c lu d e s w o r k e r s in t h o s e s itu a tio n s w h e r e a g r e e m e n ts h a d n o t b e e n c o n c l u d e d at th e tim e this a r ticle w a s w ritte n o r , i f a n a g r e e m e n t h a d b e e n r e a c h e d , it h a d n ot yet b een a p p rov ed by s t a lib iz a t io n a u th o rit ie s . It w a s a s s u m e d th a t e s c a la t o r c la u s e s w o u ld b e c o n t in u e d in th e se in d u s trie s . A n o t h e r im p o r t a n t u s e of th e C on su m er P r ic e I n d e x is t o a d ju st th e p e n s io n s o f n e a r ly 1 .8 5 m ill i o n r e tir e d m ilit a r y a n d F e d e r a l C i v il S e r v ic e e m p l o y e e s a n d s u r v iv o r s . ------------- F O O T N O T E S ------------- 5 T h e first a d ju s t m e n t u n d e r a g r e e m e n ts n e g o t ia t e d in 19 71 w a s in A u g u s t 1 9 7 2 , w it h q u a r t e r ly r e v ie w s t h e r e a ft e r . T h e 1 T h e s e a g r e e m e n ts in c lu d e m u lt ip la n t o r m u lt ifir m a g r e e m e n ts c o v e r i n g 1 ,0 0 0 w o r k e r s o r m o r e , e v e n a m o u n t w o r k e r s w ill r e c e iv e t h o u g h in d i v id u a l u n its m a y b e s m a lle r . v id e , w a s u n k n o w n at th e t im e th is a r t ic le w a s w r itte n a n d h e n c e is e x c lu d e d f r o m th e t a b u la tio n s . 2 T h e a v e r a g e s r e fe r r e d t o in th e te x t a re a r it h m e tic m e a n s . as a r e s u lt o f th e g u a ra n te e , o v e r a n d a b o v e w h a t th e c o s t - o f - l i v i n g f o r m u l a w o u ld p r o 7 Table 7. Expiration, reopening, and wage-adjustment provisions of selected collective bargaining agreements, 1973 [Provisions presented are as negotiated by the parties and may be subject to Pay Board approval. The 1973 expirations are shown in boldface.] Manufacturing 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Ordnance and accessories Food products Textiles Apparel Paper Printing Chemicals Petroleum Rubber Stone, clay, and glass 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. Nonmanufacturing Steel and aluminum Fabricated metal products Machinery, except electrical Electrical machinery Motor vehicles Aircraft Shipbuilding Instruments Miscellaneous manufacturing 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. Mining Railroads Local transit Trucking and warehousing Maritime Airlines Communications 27. Electric and gas utilities 28. Wholesale and retail trade 29. Finance, insurance, and real estate 30. Hotels 31. Amusement and recreation 32. Medical and other health services Provisions effective in 1973 for— Company or association 1 Union 2 Approximate number of employees covered 3 Contract term4 Wage reopening Automatic cost-of-living review5 Deferred wage increase (hourly rate unless other wise specified) 1. Ordnance and accessories Machinists_______ 6,100 Auto Workers (Ind.)_ 6,050 Apr. 3, 1972 to Apr. 6, 1975. Oct. 16, 1971 to Oct. 15, 1974. Machinists_______ 7,000 Dec. 13, 1971 to Oct. 1, 1974. __ ________ Meat Cutters_____ 7,500 California Processors, Inc. (Northern Cali fornia). Swift and Co., Master Agreement...... Teamsters (Ind.)__ 56,550 Meat Cutters_____ 8,300 .................... ___ do................... 9,350 General Dynamics Corp., Convair Aerospace Division. (California and Florida). Ling-Temco-Vought, Inc., Vought Aero nautic Co., and Vought Missiles and Space Co. (Texas). Lockheed Aircraft Corp., Lockheed Missiles and Space Co. (California, Florida, and Hawaii). Apr. 2......... Apr. 2: 3 percent. Jan. 15, thereafter quarterly (Apr., July, and Oct.). Feb. 1, thereafter quarterly (May, Aug., and Nov.). Oct. 15: 3 percent. July 28: 3 percent. 2. Food products Armour and Co__ Wilson and Co., Inc.. Teamsters (Ind.)__ 8,000 Longshoremen and Warehousemen (Ind.). Sugar Companies' Negotiating Committee ___ do......... ........ (Hawaii). 7,000 Frozen Food Employers Association (Cali fornia). Pineapple Companies, Plantation and Factory Agreement (Hawaii). 9,000 Apr. 18, 1970 to Aug. 31, 1973. Mar. 1, 1970 to June 29, 1973. Apr. 1, 1970 to Aug. 31, 1973. Apr. 6, 1970 to Aug. 31, 1973. August................... August. August. July 1, 1971 to Apr. 30, 1973. Feb. 1, 1972 to Jan. 31, 1974. Feb. 5:10 cents for San Angelo, Tex., plant only. Feb. 1: 9 to 11 cents; Aug. 1: 5 to 7 cents. Feb. 1: 10 cents; Aug. 1: 6 cents. Feb. 1, 1972 to Jan. 31, 1974. 3. Textiles Dan River, Inc., Danville Division (Danville, Va.). United Textile Workers. 9,200 Apr. 3, 1970 to Apr. 2, 1973. United Knitwear Manufacturers League, Inc. (New York and New Jersey). Ladies’ Garment Workers. 8,500 July 16, 1970 to July 15, 1973. 4. Clothing Manufacturers Association of the United States of America. Clothing Workers__ Industrial Association of Juvenile Apparel Manufacturers, Inc. (New York, N.Y.). Ladies' Garment Workers. 125,000 Apparel June 1, 1971 to May 31, 1974. 6,000 Feb. 16, 1970 to Feb. 14,1973. Infants’ and Children’s Coat Association, Inc., and Manufacturers of Snowsuits, Novelty Wear, and Infants’ Coats, Inc. do. 8,000 June 1, 1970 to May 30, 1973. National Skirt and Sportswear Association, Inc .do. 11,550 June 1,1970 to May 30, 1973. See footnotes at end of table. Either party, at any time may propose a general increase or decrease in wages by giving written notice of changes desired. 8 June 4: 20 cents for a 40-hour week; 22.2 cents for a 36-hour week. In event of national currency regulation or change, or in crease or decrease in cost of living. In event of national currency legisla tion or changes affecting the pur chasing power of the dollar, or an increase in cost of living. .......do.................... Table 7. Expiration , reopening, and wage-adjustment provisions of selected collective bargaining agreements, 1973— Continued [Provisions presented are as negotiated by the parties and may be subject to Pay Board approval. The 1973 expirations are shown in boldface.] Provisions effective in 1973 for— Company or association 1 Union 2 Approximate number of employees covered3 4. Contract term4 Wage reopening Automatic cost-of-living review5 Deferred wage increase (hourly rate unless other wise specified) Semiannually (Apr. and Oct.). May 1: $12 a week. Mar., thereafter quarterly (June, Sept., and Dec.). Mar. 5:15 cents. Feb. 1, thereafter quarterly (May, Aug. and Nov.). Feb. 16, June 1, thereafter quar terly (Sept, and Dec.). Oct. 25: 10 cents, (excludes Charles ton, W. Va.). Feb. 16:13 cents. Apparel—Continued New York Coat and Suit Association, Inc__ .......do.................... 40.000 Popular Priced Dress Manufacturing Group, .......do.................... Inc.; Popular Priced Dress Contractors Association, Inc.; United Better Dress Manufacturers Association, Inc.; National Dress Manufacturers Association, Inc.; and Affiliated Dress Manufacturers, Inc. New Jersey Apparel Contractors Association. .......do.................... 60.000 27,050 June 1, 1970 to May 30,1973. Feb. 1, 1970 to Jan. 30, 1973. In event of an in crease or decrease in the cost of living since Jan. 1972. Feb. 16, 1970 to Feb. 14, 1973. 5. Paper International Paper Co., Southern Kraft Division. United Paperworkers International Union, and Elec trical Workers (IBEW). 10,700 June 1, 1970 to May 31, 1973. 6. Printing Chicago Lithographers Association (Chicago, Graphic Arts Inter national Union. III.). Metropolitan Lithographers Association (New .......do____ ___ York and New Jersey). 5,500 8,800 May 1, 1971 to Apr. 30, 1974. May 1,1970 to Apr. 30, 1973. 7. Chemicals Dow Chemical Co. (Midland and Bay City, Mich.). Steelworkers (District 50). 5,100 Mar. 8, 1971 to Mar. 11, 1974. FMC Corp., American Viscose Division, Fiber Operations (Pennsylvania, Virginia, and West Virginia). Textile Workers....... 8,000 June 1,1971 to June 1, 1973. Atlantic Richfield Co., and ARCO Pipeline Co. Atlantic Independent Union (Ind.). 5,600 8. Petroleum July 1, 1971 to . June 29,1973. 9. Rubber Rubber Workers...... B. F. Goodrich Co ... ___ do_________ 19.000 ..do................... 23.000 ...................... ___ do.................... 17.000 Firestone Tire and Rubber Co........... . Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co Uniroyal, Inc . . 11,450 June 13, 1970 to Apr. 20,1973. Oct. 26, 1970 to Apr. 19,1973. June 7, 1970 to Apr. 20, 1973. June 22,1970 to Apr. 19,1973. 10. Stone, clay, and glass 8,400 Oct. 25, 1971 to Oct. 25, 1974. PPG Industries, Inc................................... ___ do............ ....... 5,500 Feb. 16, 1972 to Feb. 16,1975. Aluminum Workers.. 11,000 June 1, 1971 to May 31,1974. Steelworkers........... 10,000 .......do..... .............. •9,400 June 1,1971 to May 31,1974. June 1,1971 to May 31,1974. Libbey-Owens-Ford, Co. (California, Ohio, Illinois, and West Virginia). Glass and Ceramic Workers. 11. Steel and aluminum Aluminum Co. of America _. Aluminum Co. of America Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corp .. See footnotes at end of table. 9 Mar. 1, thereafter quarterly (June, Sept., and Dec.). ___ do................ . June 1:12.5 to 22.9 cents. June 1:12.5 to 22.9 cents. .......do.................... June 1:12.5 to 24.5 cents. Table 7. Exp iration , reopening, and wage-adjustment provisions of selected collective bargaining agreements, 1973— Continued [Provisions presented are as negotiated by the parties and may be subject to Pay Board approval. The 1973 expirations are shown in boldface.] Provisions effective in 1973 for— Company or association 1 Union2 Approximate number of employees covered3 11. Contract term4 Wage reopening do. 8,500 June 1, 1971 to May 31,1974. United States Steel Corp. (Salaried em ployees). do. 7,100 Aug. 1,1971 to Aug. 1, 1974. 9 major basic steel companies:................. Allegheny Ludlum Industries, Inc. Armco Steel Corp. Bethlehem Steel Corp. Inland Steel Co. Jones and Laughlin Steel Corp. National Steel Corp., Great Lakes Steel Division (Mich.). Republic Steel Corp. United States Steel Corp. Lykes-Youngstown Corp., Youngstown Sheet and Tube Co. National Steel Corp., Weirton Steel Division (Ohio and West Virginia). do. 281,450 Aug. 1,1971 to Aug. 1, 1974. 10,100 Deferred wage increase (hourly rate unless other wise specified) Steel—Continued Reynolds Metals Co Independent Steel workers Union (Ind.)._______ Automatic cost-of-living review5 do. June 1:12.5 to 22.9 cents (Troutdale, Oreg., to 18.1 cents). Aug. 1: $10 to $19.60 biweekly. Feb. 1, thereafter quarterly (May, Aug., and Nov.). __.„_do................... Aug. 1: 12.5 to 24.9 cents (Inland, to 25.7 cents; Armco, Ashland, to 26.9 cents, Republic, to 23.7 cents). Aug. 18,1971 to Aug. 1, 1974. .......do.................... Aug. 1:12.5 to 24.9 cents. 12. Fabricated metal products American Can Co. Continental Can Co., Inc Steelworkers. .do. 15,000 Feb. 15,1971 to Feb. 14, 1974. 15,000 Feb. 15, 1971 to Feb. 14, 1974. Feb. 15, thereafter quarterly (May, Aug., and Nov.). Feb. 15: 12.5 to 20.9 cents for hourly employees; $5 to $8.84 a week for salaried employees. .......do.................... Feb. 15:12.5 to 20.9 cents for hourly employees; $5 to $9.80 a week for salaried employees 13. Machinery, except electrical Allied Industrial Workers. Caterpillar Tractor Co., Towmotor Corp........ Auto Workers (Ind.). 17,000 Deere and Co........................................... ___do............ 21,000 International Harvester Co...... .................. ___do______ 34,950 Cummins Engine Co., Inc. (Columbus, Ind.).. Diesel Workers Union (Ind.). 5,750 Briggs and Stratton (Milwaukee, Wis.)____ Timken Co. (Canton, Columbus, and Wooster, Ohio). Steelworkers General Electric Co....... ......................... Electrical Workers (IUE). Electrical Workers (UE) (Ind.). Electricai Workers (IUE). Carpenters.......... 6,300 8,150 Aug. 1, 1971 to July 31, 1974. Dec. 11, 1970 to Sept. 30, 1973. Aug. 1: 7.5 percent. Mar. 1, thereafter quarterly (June and Sept.). Mar. 1 and June 1... Feb. 22, 1971 to Sept. 30,1973. Jan. 29, 1971 to Sept. 30, 1973. Apr. 27, 1972 to Apr. 27, 1975. .......do.................... Jan. 1, thereafter quarterly (Apr., July, Oct., and Dec.). Mar. 4, thereafter quarterly (June, Sept., and Dec.). Nov. 13, 1971 to Aug. 25,1974. Apr. 27: 23 cents. Aug. 26:12.5 to 21.7 cents. 14. Electrical machinery General Electric Co.................... ............ General Motors Corp., Delco Products, Pack ard Electric and Delco-Remy Divisions. Hughes Aircraft Co. (California).............. RCA Corp____________ ________ _ RCA Corp........................................ ....... Raytheon Co. (Massachusetts)................... Electrical Workers (IBEW). Electrical Workers (IUE). Electrical Workers (IBEW). 90,000 17,000 33,000 7,000 19,200 6,950 7,000 Jan. 26, 1970 to May 26, 1973. Jan. 20, 1970 to May 26, 1973. Nov. 20,1970 to Sept. 14, 1973. Dec. 7,1970 to Dec. 1,1973. May 21,1970 to Dec. 1, 1973. Aug. 10, 1970 to May 31, 1974. Sept. 1,1971 to Aug. 31, 1973. See footnotes at end of table. 10 Anytime after Oct. 1. June 4: 3 to 27 cents. June 1: 8 cents. Table 7. Exp iration , reopening, and wage-adjustment provisions of selected collective bargaining agreements, 1973— Contin ued [Provisions presented are as negotiated by the parties and may be subject to Pay Board approval. The 1973 expirations are shown in boldface.] Provisions effective in 1973 for— Company or association 1 Union2 Approximate number of employees covered3 14. Western Electric Co., Inc.: (Chicago, III.).......... (Kearny, N.Y.) Contract term4 Wage reopening do. 15,400 do. 10,600 July 18, 1971 to July 17, 1974. July 18,1971 to July 17, 1974. Auto Workers (Ind.). 9,600 Oct. 16, 1970 to Sept. 15, 1974. Budd Co., National Agreement................... ___do.................. 10,000 Chrysler Corp..... ............ ....... ................ ___do.................... 110,200 Dana Corp., Toledo Distribution Center...... . __ do.................... 9,000 Jan. 2, 1971 to Dec. 15,1973. Jan. 20, 1971 to Sept. 14,1973. Dec. 1, 1970 to Dec. 1, 1973. Ford Motor Co........................................ ___do__ 165,000 General Motors Corp................................ ___do__ 395,050 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Whirlpool Corp. (Evansville, Ind.) 8,300 15.000 7,500 July 15. ___do. July 15: 10 to 71 cents. July 15: 10 to 19 cents for hourly employees; $14 to $33 for monthly employees. Feb. 28, 1970 to June 10, 1973. Feb. 28, 1970 to June 10, 1973. Feb. 28, 1970 to June 10, 1973. 36.000 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Deferred wage increase (hourly rate unless other wise specified) Electrical—Continued Electrical Workers (IUE). Electrical Workers (UE) (Ind.). Federation of West inghouse Salaried Unions (Ind.). Electrical Workers (IUE). Westinghouse Electric Corp Automatic cost-of-living review5 Feb. 3, 1971 to Feb. 17, 1974. Jan. 1, thereafter quarterly (Apr., July, and Oct.). Oct. 15: minimum job rate (after 8 weeks) 10 cents. 15. Motor vehicles American Motors (Kenosha and Milwaukee, Wis.). Mack Truck, Inc., Master Shop Agreement.. ___do__ 7,000 Mack Truck, Inc., Office Agreement........... . ___do__ 6,900 Lockheed Aircraft Corp., Lockheed Division (California). Machinists. 17,050 Dec. 21, 1970 to Sept. 14,1973. Nov. 23, 1970 to Sept. 14, 1973. Apr. 6, 1971 to Oct. 20, 1973. Mar. 1, 1971 to Oct. 20, 1973. Dec. 13, 1971 to Oct. 1, 1974. Mar. 1, thereafter quarterly (June, Sept., and Dec.). ___ do. . Nov. 19: 3 percent. Apr. 30: 11 to 19.5 cents. Mar. 1 and June 1... Mar. 1, thereafter quarterly (June and Sept.). Mar. 1 and June 1... ___ do............... . .......do.................... __ do................. Feb. 1, thereafter quarterly (May, Aug., and Nov.). July 30: 3 percent. Mar. thereafter quarterly (June, Sept., and Dec.). Sept. 21................. Apr. 23: 8 to 18 cents. 16. Aircraft Bendix Corp., Master Agreement................ Auto Workers (Ind.). 10,200 Apr. 17, 1971 to Apr. 15, 1974. Boeing Co................................................ Machinists.............. 20,500 Auto Workers (Ind.). 16,000 Dec. 13, 1971 to Oct. 1, 1974. Dec. 5, 1971 to Oct. 1, 1974. McDonnell Douglas Corp. (California).......... .......do.................... 17,000 Dec. 6, 1971 to Sept. 15, 1974. North American Rockwell, Aerospace and Electronics Group. Jan. 21, thereafter quarterly (Apr., July, and Oct.). Jan. 15, thereafter quarterly (Apr., July, and Oct.). Oct. 2: 11.5 to 17.5 cents. Sept. 30: 12 to 17 cents. Sept. 17: 12 to 18 cents. 17. Shipbuilding Pacific Coast Shipbuilders’ Association Machinists.............. (Pacific Coast). Pacific Coast Shipbuilding and Repair Firms. Metal Trades Councils; Team sters (Ind.). 15,000 Teamsters (Ind.)__ 13,000 8,500 July 1, 1971 to June 30,1974. July 1, 1971 to June 29,1974. July 1.................... July 1: 20 cents. July 1.................... July 1: 20 cents. 18. Instruments Honeywell, Inc. (Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minn). Feb. 1, 1972 to Jan. 31, 1975. See footnotes at end of table. 11 Feb. 1: 15 to 32 cents. Table 7. Ex p iration , reopening, and wage-adjustment provisions of selected collective bargaining agreements, 1973— Continued Provisions presented are as negotiated by the parties and may be subject to Pay Board approval. The 1973 expirations are shown in boldface.] Provisions effective in 1973 for— Company or association1 Union2 Approximate number of employees covered3 Contract term4 Wage reopening Automatic cost-oMiving review5 Deferred wage increase (hourly rate unless other wise specifi ed) 19. Miscellaneous manufacturing Toy Workers........... 8,000 July 1, 1970 to June 30,1973. Independent Toy and Novelty Agreement__ ... .do................... 7,000 July 1,1970 to June 30, 1973. Bituminous Coal Operators Association........ United Mine Workers of America (Ind.). • 80,000 National Association of Doll Manufacturers, Inc. (New York and New Jersey). If after July 1, 1970, the revised CPI (National New Series—family only) is in excess of same index for July 1, 1970 by 3 percent or mere, Union has right to reopen within 20 days, do. 20. Mining | Nov. 12, 1971 to | Nov. 12, 1974. Nov. 12: $2.40 to $4.25 a day. 21. Railroads• Class 1 Railroads: Operating unions. Nonoperating unions:_ Shop craft and nonshop craft. Locomotive Engi neers (Ind.). 35,000 United Transporta tion Union. 135,000 Boilermakers; Car men; Electrical workers (IBEW); Firemen and Oilers; Hotel and_ Restaurant Em ployees; Machin ists; Maintenance of Way; Railroad Signalmen; Rail road Yardmasters; Railway Clerks; Sheet Metal Workers; Train Dispatchers; and United Transpor tation Union. 354,700 Jan. 1,1970 to OPEN END (Moratorium on wages and other issues through June 30, 1973. .......do................ do. 22. Local transit Greyhound Lines, Inc., Central, Northern, and Southern States. Amalgamated Transit Union. 12,000 Nov. 1,1971 to Oct. 31, 1974. Feb. 1, thereafter quarterly (May, Aug., and Nov.). Nov. 1:13 cents. 23. Trucking and warehousing National Master Freight Agreement and Supplements: Local cartage..................................... Teamsters (Ind.)__ .................................... ...... do................... Apr. 1, 1970 to June 30,1973. Over-the-road ...... do....................|1.............................. 100.000 350.000 24. Maritime Longshoremen and Warehousemen (Ind.). Steamship Trade Association of Baltimore, Longshoremen’s Association. Inc. (Port of Baltimore, Md.). New York Shipping Association (Port of ...... do.................... New York). Pacific Maritime Association (Washington, Oregon, and California). 15,000 Dec. 25,1971 to July 1, 1973. 5,000 Nov. 14, 1971 to Sept. 30, 1974. Nov. 14, 1971 to Sept. 30,1974, 21,000 See footnotes at end of table. 12 Jan. 1: 20 cents. .......Do. Table 7. Exp iration , reopening, and wage-adjustment provisions of selected collective bargaining agreements, 1973— C ontin ued [Provisions presented are as negotiated by the parties and may be subject to Pay Board approval. The 1973 expirations are shown in boldface.] Provisions effective in 1973 for— Company or association 1 Approximate number of employees covered3 Union2 Contract term4 Wage reopening Automatic cost-of-living review5 Deferred wage increase (hourly rate unless other wise specified) 25. Airlines• Transport Workers.. 13,000 Pan American World Airways, Inc., mechan ...... do................. ical. 3,000 American Airlines, Inc., ground service.. Apr. 1, 1970 to June 20, 1973. May 1, 1971 to Aug. 1,1973. 26. Communications American Telephone and Telegraph Co., Long Lines Dept. Communications Workers. General Telephone Co. of Florida. Electrical Workers (IBEW). Communications Workers. Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Co. (Washington, D.C., Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia). New York Telephone Co. and Empire City Subway Co. (Limited) (New York). Northwestern Bell Telephone Co________ 26,000 July 18, 1971 to July 17, 1974. 7,050 Aug. 15, 1971 to Aug. 18, 1973. July 18, 1971 to July 17, 1974. 31,150 .do. 38,600 .do.. 20,750 Ohio Bell Telephone Co (Ohio). -do. 20,450 Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Co. and Bell of Nevada. South Central Bell Telephone Co........ ....... _do. 47,700 .do.. 38.400 Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Co. .do.. 47,900 Southwestern Bell Telephone Co_______ .do.. 57.400 Western Electric Co., Installation Contract.. .do.. 30.400 Western Union Telegraph Co.. Telegraph Workers. Commonwealth Edison Co. (Illinois). Electrical Workers (IBEW). Utility Workers__ 16,000 July 18,1971 to July 17, 1974. July 18,1971 to July 17, 1974. July 18,1971 to July 17, 1974. July 18, 1971 to July 17, 1974. July 18, 1971 to July 17,1974. July 18,1971 to July 17, 1974. July 18,1971 to July 17, 1974. July 18,1971 to July 17, 1974. July 15................... July 15: $5.50 to $8 a week; $5 to $9 a week allowance for 29 specified "big cities" to compensate for higher cost of living. July 15.............. July 15: $2 to $8 a week. July 15................... July 15: $2.50 to $8 a week. July 15................. July 15: $2 to $8 a week. July 15................... July 15: $3 to $8 a week. July 15................... July 15: $2.50 to $8 a week. July 15: $1 to $8 July 15.............. . a week. July 15................... July 15: $1 to $8 a week. July 15................. July 15: $1.50 to $8 a week. July 15................... July 15: Based on approved Index, 11 to 20 cents. July 28,1971 to July 27,1973. 27. Electric and gas utilities Consolidated Edison Co. of New York, Inc. (New York). Pacific Gas and Electric Co. (California)___ 7,900 19,000 Electrical Workers (IBEW). 14,500 Apr. 1, 1971 to Mar. 30, 1973. Mar. 11, 1971 to Mar. 30,1973. July 1, 1970 to June 29, 1973. 28. Wholesale and retail trade Food Clerks Contract (Illinois and Indiana).. Retail Clerks.. • 23,000 Food Store Contract (Alameda County, ___do_____ Calif.). Gimbei Brothers, Inc. (New York, New Retail, Wholesale, Jersey, and Conn.). and Department Store. 40,000 5,000 Dec. 6, 1970 to June 2,1973. Jan. 1, 1971 to Dec. 31, 1973. June 1, 1971 to May 31, 1973. 29. Finance, insurance, and real estate Realty Advisory Board on Labor Relations, Inc. (New York, N.Y.). Apartment buildings Service Employees... Commercial buildings......................... .......do_________ • 25,000 13,000 Apr. 21, 1970 to Apr. 20,1973. Jan. 1, 1972 to Dec. 31, 1974. See footnotes at end of table. 13 Jan.1, in event the cost of living exceeds wage increase. Jan. 1: 30 cents. Table 7. Ex p ira tion , reopening, and wage-adjustment provisions of selected collective bargaining agreements, 1973— Contin ued [Provisions presented are as negotiated by the parties and may be subject to Pay Board approval. The 1973 expirations are shown in boldface.] Provisions effective in 1973 for— Company or association1 Union2 Approximate number of employees covered * Contract term4 Wage reopening Automatic cost-of-living review4 Deferred wage increase (hourly rate unless other wise specified) 30. Hotels Chicago Downtown Hotels (Chicago, III.)...... Hotel Association of New York City, Inc. (New York, N.Y.).« Nevada Resort Association, Resort Hotels (Las Vegas, Nev.). Hotel and Restau rant Employees. New York Hotel and Motel Trades Council. Hotel and Restau rant Employees. 11,000 25.000 13.000 Apr. 1,1970 to Mar. 31,1973. June 1,1972 to May 31, 1976. June 1: 9.8 percent. Mar. 10,1970 to Mar. 9, 1973. 31. Amusement and recreation Television and Radio Commercial Announce ment Agreement. Musicians............... League of Voluntary Hospitals and Homes of New York (New York, N.Y.). Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store. 8,000 | Feb. 1,1971 to 1 Apr. 30, 1973. 32. Medical and other health services 26,000 July 1,1972 to June 30,1974. 1 Interstate unless otherwise specified. 2 Unions affiliated with the AFL-CIO, except where noted as independent (Ind.). 1 Employee coverage may not be current. 4 Contract term refers to the date the contract is to go into effect, not the date of signing. Where a contract has been amended or modified and the original termination date extended, the effective date of the 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 general, it isthe earliest date on which termination of the contract could be effective, except for special provisions for termination as in the case of dis 14 Second year of contract, a min imum of $12 a week. agreement arising out of wage reopening. Many agreements provide for automatic renewal at the expiration date unless notice of termination is given. The Labor Management Relations Act of 1947 requires that a party to an agreement desiring to terminate or modify it shall serve written notice upon the other party 60 days prior to the expiration date. 5 Date shown indicates the month in which adjustment is to be made, not the month of the Consumer Price Index on which adjustment is based. 6 Information is from the newspaper. SOURCE: Contracts on file with the Bureau of Labor Statistics, November 1, 1972, except where footnote indicates that information is from newspaper source. T a b le 8. C o lle c t iv e barg aining a g r e e m e n ts co v e rin g 1,000 w o r k e r s or m ore e x pirin g in 1973, by m o n th of e x p ira tio n AGREE MENT NO. EXP. DATE COMPANY AND LOCATION1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT January 7916 7911 6042 140C 376 1128 611 40 71 5718 41 51 2108 2603 827 37 48 830 862 1433 836 41 13 3641 1673 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 1,0 00 ASSN OF MOTION PICTURE PRODUCERS INC 2,2 0 0 ASSN CF MOTION PICTURE + TV PRODUCERS OFFICE BOSTON GAS CO LUS 12 00 3 + 12 118 1,1 00 1,3CC CHICAGO NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSN DELMARVA POULTRY PROCESSORS ASSN MD ♦ DEL 1,5 00 1,8 50 DESOTO INC MPI INDUSTRIES D JACKSON LU 3031 1 ,8 00 ERWIN MILLS INC 1 ,4 50 FAIRCHILD HILLER AIRCRAFT DIV HAGERSTOWN GENL TELEPHONE CO OF WISCONSIN 1,500 GREENVILLE STEEL CAR CO GREENVILLE 1,000 1 ,7 00 I - A MASS SHOE MFRS 1,9 00 INCO HUNTINGTON NATL DRESS MFRS ASSN *• POPULAR PRICED MFRS 5 ,0 0 0 NATL UNION ELEC CORP EUREKA WILLIAMS CO DIV 1,5 00 NEEDLE TRADES EMPLRS ASSN FALL RIVER 2 ,5 0 0 4 ,5 0 0 NEW ENG APPAREL MFRS ASSN RI MASS 4 LOCS PHOTO-ENGRAVERS BD OF TRADE OF NY INC 1 ,7 00 POPULAR PRICE CONTRS ASSN ♦ 1 OTH 55 ,000 4 ,2 5 C SUN SHIPBUILDING * DRY DOCK CO 3,0 0 0 SUNBEAM CORP GENL * SETUP MENS UNITS CHICAGO UNION CARBIDE CORP CHEMICALS + PLASTICS DIVS 1 ,4 00 Total: 21 agreements........ . . . . 9 7 150 February 78 78 49 27 20 25 22 37 48 37 31 33 23 36 23 23 27 23 37 36 28 93 93 14 33 50 64 56 52 35 23 14 55 00 33 14 10 21 00 23 33 55 531 163 335 500 60 0 119 337 553 346 553 33 4 335 134 218 134 134 243 134 112 218 218 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 l 4 1 3 1 2 1 2 2 2 2 1 4 1 813 8492 865 332 847 1123 1672 3615 1606 6506 67 42 311 7945 67 66 823 849 60 46 4600 2618 620 832 1613 8484 860 1681 60 77 21 13 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 02 ASSOCIATED GARMENT INDUSTRIES OF ST LOUIS BLDG TRADES EMPLRS ASSN MASS BOSTON APPAREL GUILD 6 LUS CAMPBELL SOUP CO NAPOLEON LU 146 CHILDRENS DRESS COT DR ♦ SPTSWR CONTRS GR NYC DESOTO INC WARD FURNITURE MFG DIV FT SMITH DUPONT El DE NEMOURS ♦ CO CLINTON EMERSON ELEC CO ST LOUIS ETHYL CORP BATON ROUGE LU 12 900 GIMBEL BROTHERS PITTSBURGH LU 1407 GREAT A+P TEA CO I - A BREWERIES ANHEUSER-BUSH ♦ FALSTAFF I - A MAINTENANCE CONTRS AGMT LU 399 I - A MILWAUKEE AREA RETAIL MEAT INDUSTRY INDUS ASSN HOUSEDRESS ROBE UNIFORM MFRS INC INDUS ASSN OF JUVENILE APPAREL MFRS INC IROQUOIS GAS CORP JEWELRY MFRS ASSN INC LU 1 LADISH CO CUDAHY MUNSINGWEAR INC N J APPAREL CONTRS ASSN INC LU 220 NATL LEAD CO TITANIUM DIV SAYREVILLE NEW ENG ROAD BLDGS ASSN MASS LU 4 PLEATERS STITCHERS AND EMBROIDERERS ASSN INC PROCTER * GAMBLE CO SAN DIEGO GAS + ELECTRIC CO LU 465 SLIPPER AND PLAYWEAR ASSN LU 54 Tota l: 27 agreements.......... March 3 ,0 0 0 4,1 00 1 ,0 00 1,5 50 5,0 00 1,0 00 1 ,0 00 1,6 00 1,2 50 1 ,0 00 2 ,5 0 0 1 ,6 00 6 ,6 00 1,2 00 1,5 00 6 ,0 0 0 1 ,5 50 2,6 00 2 ,0 0 0 1 ,4 00 2 7 ,050 1,250 4 ,5 00 5 ,0 00 2 ,8 5 0 2,1 00 3 ,0 0 0 23 16 23 20 23 25 28 36 28 53 54 20 73 54 23 23 49 39 33 22 23 28 16 23 28 49 31 00 14 14 31 21 71 42 43 72 23 35 43 93 35 21 21 21 00 35 00 22 22 14 21 31 93 21 134 129 134 155 134 31 2 500 34 7 335 184 184 304 118 155 134 134 127 146 218 337 134 357 129 134 500 127 33 4 2 2 2 1 2 1 l 1 1 2 1 3 3 3 2 2 1 2 l 4 2 l 2 2 4 1 2 8743 8562 8728 880C 8845 4097 5779 1434 1801 8613 8450 8632 8752 7927 8795 8851 8622 8517 2559 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 AGC FLORIDA WEST COAST CHPT 7 LUS AGC OF AM BATON ROUGE LU 1098 AGC OF AM INC BATON ROUGE CHAPTR 3 LUS AGC OF AM INC N MEX BLDG BRANCH 4 UNS AGC OF ILLINOIS HEAVY 4 HWY ALABAMA DRY DOCK 4 SHIPBUILDING CO MOBILE AM BROADCASTING CO INC MASTER AM GREETING CORP CLEVELAND AMERICAN OIL CO WHITING REF ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF AM INC BALT BLDRS CHAP ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF CONN INC LAB REL DIV ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF AM BALTIMORE BLORS CHAP ASSOC GENL CONTRS N MEX BLDG BR ASSOC HOSPITALS OF THE EAST BAY INC LU 250 ASSOC MECH CONTRS OF BATON ROUGE INC BLDG TRADES EMPLRS ASSN OF WESTERN MASS INC BLDRS ASSN OF KANSAS CITY BUILDERS ASSN OF KANSAS CITY DIST COUNCIL 3 CALIF METAL TRADES ASSN FOUNDRY DIV 2,9 0 0 2,1 5 0 1 ,0 00 4 ,9 0 C 2 ,1 0 0 4 ,0 00 1,3 00 1 ,0 00 2,0 0 0 2 ,6 0 0 4 ,0 00 3,0 00 3 ,7 0 0 2 ,6 0 0 1,8 00 1,0 00 5 ,5 50 1 ,8 00 2 ,5 00 15 17 15 15 16 37 48 27 29 15 15 15 15 80 17 17 15 17 33 59 72 72 85 33 63 00 31 32 52 16 52 85 93 72 14 40 40 93 119 119 129 60 0 119 320 352 500 500 119 143 143 119 118 170 143 119 164 161 2 2 2 2 2 1 4 1 l 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 See fo o t n o te s at end o f t a b l e . 15 T a b le 8. C o lle c t iv e bargain ing a g r e e m e n t s co v e rin g 1,000 w o rk e rs or m ore expirin g in 1973 by m o n th of e x p i r a t i o n — C o n tin u e d AGREE MENT NO. COMPANY AND LOCATION1 EXP. DATE NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES SIC STATE UNION UNIT March— Continued 8790 5221 5203 6055 6CC 8 6009 60 10 6058 1804 365 228 2C 8768 67 06 8844 8671 362 8508 7109 71 37 18C7 7513 260 5216 5219 5222 3363 6771 44 02 6749 6821 868C 857C 625 5414 5412 8839 4615 2111 5275 3291 461 ^ 832 i 8332 8510 5782 68 01 7515 7525 8846 8481 8486 1403 1404 41 34 7301 33 34 1296 85 19 1822 1407 1405 23 51 6053 6826 3265 6041 44 2 7 C3 03 03 03 03 C3 03 03 C3 03 03 03 03 03 03 33 03 03 C3 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 C3 C3 03 03 03 03 C3 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 C3 03 03 C3 C3 03 C3 03 03 C3 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 CATSKILL MOUNTAIN C0NTRS ASSN INC 1,600 CENTRAL MOTOR FREIGHT ASSN INC LOCAL 71 0 3 , COG CENTRAL MOTOR FREIGHT ASSN INC HWY DRIVERS 7 ,0 00 CIN GAS + ELEC CO + UN LIGHT-HEAT ♦ POWER CO 1,7 50 COMMONWEALTH E0IS0N CO P AND M 7 LUS 2 ,9 0 0 COMMONWEALTH EDISON CO P M IN OUT PLTS 4 LUS 2,4 00 COMMONWEALTH EDISON CO CLERICAL CHI LU 1427 1,3 50 1 6 ,850 CONSOL EDISON CO OF NEW YORK INC LU 1 - 2 CCNTL OIL CO REFINERY PONCA CITY LU 5 - 8 5 7 1,0 00 DAIRY INDUSTRY INDUS RELS ASSN MASTER OFFICE 7 , 50C DAIRY INDUSTRY IND REL ASSN SO CALIF MASTER 8,0 00 CCW CHEMICAL CO ROCKY FLATS DIV LU 15 440 1,9 50 EMPLOYERS NEGOTIATING CGMMITTEE EVANSVILLE 12,000 2,2 00 FIRST NATL STORES INC LU 371 4 , ICC FOUNDATION + MARINE CONTRS ASSN OF NEW ENG GENL CCNTRS ASSN OF BRIDGEPORT INC L 665 1,0 00 GENL FOODS CORP MAXWELL HOUSE DIV HOBOKEN 1,200 GULF COAST CONTRS ASSN AND 2 OTH ASSNS LU 195 2 ,1 00 1,3CC HARBOR 01 ST TAVERN + REST ASSN SAN PEDRO 1,0 50 HORN AND HARCART BAKING CO HUMBLE OIL REFINING CO BATON ROUGE REFINERY 3,1 00 11,000 I - A CHICAGO DOWNTOWN HOTELS 3 ,5 00 I - A DRIED FRUIT INDUSTRY FRESNO + MADERA 2,0 00 I -A HOUSEHOLD GOODS MOVING + STORAGE LA I - A JOINT AREA CARTAGE AGREEMENT 14,000 I - A LOCAL CARTAGE AGMT FOR HIRE + PRI CARRIES 12,000 I -A NATL CONCRETE + BLDG PRODUCTS AGMT 1,6 50 I - A PHILA FOOD STORES 3 ,9 0 0 1 ,2 50 KCLLSMAN INSTRUMENT CORP 1,200 KROGER CO DALLAS DIV 1,9 50 KROGER CO DETROIT BRANCH LU 876 MADISON EMPLOYERS COUNCIL BLDG + CONST LOCAL l , 3C0 2 , 100 MADISON EMPLRS COUNCIL BLDG ♦ CONST CONTRS D MAGEE CARPET CO BLOOMSBURG 1,1 50 MARINE TOWING + TRANSP EMPLRS ASSN NY ♦ VIC 2 , OOC MARINE TOWING 4 TRANSP EMPLRS ASSN 1 ,5 00 MASON CONTRS ASSN INC OF BALTIMORE 2,0 00 4 ,0 0 0 MATTEL INC MELVILLE SHOE CORP JF MCELWAIN DIV MANCHESTER 1,100 MERCHANTS FAST MOTOR LINES INC CHARTER 1028 70 1 ,3 00 3 ,2 50 MIDWEST MANUFACTURING CO GALESBURG 1,0 00 MILTON BRADLEY CO LU 224 1,550 MOBIL OIL CORP 1 ,5 50 MOBIL OIL CORP E*p D LA + TEX NATL AUTOMATIC SPRINKLER + FIRE CONTROL ASSN 6 ,1 5 0 NATL BROADCASTING CO INC MASTER 1,400 NATL TEA CO STANDARD GROCERY DIVISION 1 ,3 50 NEVADA RESORT ASSN RESORT HOTELS 13,000 NEVADA RESORT HOTELS CASINOS ♦ HOTELS 3 ,0 0 0 NEW ENG ROAD BLDRS ASSN INC CONN LAB RELS DIV 2 ,8 00 NEW ENGLAND ROAD BLDRS ASSN INC 9 ,5 0 0 NEW ENGLAND ROAD BLDRS ASSN CONN LAB RELS DIV 9 ,0 00 1,2 00 NEW YORK NEWS INC NEW YORK TIMES CO INTER 2 , 40C NORFOLK SHIPBUILDING AND DRYDOCK CORP 1 ,4 00 NY RETAIL DRUGGISTS NYC + NJ LU 1199 4 ,0 00 OUTBOARD MARINE CORP EVINRUDE MOTORS DIV 1 ,3 50 1,150 OWENS-ILLINOIS INC LILY-TULIP LU 453 PAINTING + DECORATING CONTRS ASSN 10,000 PHILLIPS PETROLEUM CO 9 PLTS PH ILL IPS + BORGER 1 ,0 00 PUBLISHERS ASSN NYC INTERSTATE 2 ,0 0 0 PUBLISHERS ASSN OF NY NEWSPAPER BRANCH LU 6 2 ,7 00 1,0 00 RAYBESTOS MANHATTAN INC MANHEIM DIV LU 25 90 UGI CORP PHILA GAS WORKS DIV 2,4 0 0 UNITED SUPER MARKET ASSN LU 876 11,500 USM CORP USM MACHINERY DIV BEVERLY 271 1,1 50 WISC ELECTRIC POWER CO MILWAUKEE LU 2 1,2 50 XEROX CGRP XEROGRAPHIC DIV ROCHESTER 4 ,0 0 0 Tota l: 87 agreements........... . . . 3 0 4200 88 64 1202 04 04 AGC OF AM INC ALASKA CHAP AMERICAN CAN CO GREEN BAY MILL 16 42 42 49 49 49 49 49 29 20 20 19 15 54 16 15 20 17 58 58 29 70 20 42 42 42 35 54 38 54 54 16 17 22 44 44 17 39 31 42 35 39 13 13 17 48 54 70 70 16 16 16 27 27 37 59 35 26 17 29 27 27 32 49 54 35 49 38 21 33 33 OG 33 33 33 21 73 93 93 84 32 16 14 16 22 74 93 23 72 33 93 93 30 33 00 00 21 74 34 00 35 23 20 00 52 93 12 74 33 14 00 70 00 CO 32 88 88 16 00 16 21 00 54 20 35 43 33 74 00 21 23 23 34 14 35 21 143 531 531 127 127 127 127 342 357 531 531 335 143 155 129 143 155 170 145 145 500 145 531 531 531 542 143 155 218 184 184 143 119 337 321 321 143 333 500 500 218 332 500 500 170 352 184 145 145 115 119 143 323 323 112 332 33 5 127 164 129 425 204 202 500 184 484 704 305 2 2 2 4 4 4 1 1 4 2 2 1 2 4 2 2 1 2 2 1 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 1 2 2 1 2 2 2 4 1 1 1 4 4 4 2 4 4 2 2 2 2 2 l 4 4 2 4 1 2 4 2 2 1 4 2 1 1 1 15 26 94 35 145 100 2 1 April 1 ,0 0 0 3 ,0 0 0 See fo o t n o te s at end o f t a b l e . 16 T a b le 8. C o lle c t iv e ba rgaining a g r e e m e n t s co v e rin g 1,000 w o r k e r s or m ore ex pirin g in 1973, by m o n th of e x p i r a t i o n — C o n tin u e d AGREE MENT NO. NUMBER OF WORKERS COMPANY AND LOCATION1 EXP. DATE CODES2 SIC STATE UNION 30 21 00 15 33 91 33 33 16 31 14 21 21 31 14 21 31 33 33 22 31 21 15 93 23 23 23 21 54 51 51 54 52 16 90 00 20 93 23 23 00 23 00 61 32 31 00 00 14 20 50 00 74 00 23 00 33 33 70 00 33 00 33 00 46 33 93 00 52 54 31 00 23 100 170 143 143 531 531 218 127 553 116 115 119 143 143 342 341 119 218 155 127 170 143 143 168 119 129 143 129 202 143 129 50 0 312 218 527 333 184 531 119 143 129 119 120 346 346 346 333 333 155 155 119 120 155 114 155 102 531 531 112 162 531 120 531 230 155 121 147 120 115 335 170 170 170 UNIT A p r i l — C o n tin u e d 1203 88 74 8770 86 45 226 246 3667 36 68 40 48 8798 8678 8568 8429 8634 60 06 6043 8436 52 05 202 37 75 8791 86 46 86 44 8855 8810 88 08 8813 86 82 602 85 39 8862 1634 1112 29 06 1283 1903 68 14 344 85 69 87 17 84 77 88 63 2354 5794 5717 57 20 1906 1908 261 6305 88 75 23 4 4 67 73 2 3 25 67 90 7972 371 387 84 99 79 19 342 23 22 63 28 1258 384 23 36 85 52 2353 8699 25 67 8722 87 38 87 39 04 04 04 C4 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 AMERICAN CAN CH WIS ♦ MICH ASSN OF PLUMB-HEATING COOLING CONTRS ROCHESTE ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF AM GA TENN ALA ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF AM RHODE ISLAND CHAPTER ASSOC MILK DEALERS INC CHICAGO ASSOC PRODUCERS + PACKERS INC 4 LUS AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC CO NORTHLAKE AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC CO NORTHLAKE AVCO CORP AVCO LYCOMING DIV STRATFORD PLANT BLDG TRADES EMPLOYERS ASSN + 1 OTHER CLEVE BLDG TRADES EMPLRS ASSN OF BOSTON + 2 OTHS BLDG TRADES EMPLRS ASSN WESTCHESTER + PUTNAM BLDG TRADES EMPLRS ASSN + 1 OTH NYC VIC BLOG TRADES EMPLRS ASSN BOSTON EDISON CO OFFICE + CLERICAL UNIT 6U387 BROOKLYN UNION GAS CO LU 101 CARPENTER CONTRS ASSN ♦ 1 OTHER OHIO CARTAGE EXCHANGE OF CHICAGO INC + 3 OTHERS CHICAGO MEAT PACKERS ♦ WHOLESALERS ASSN CIRCLE F INDUSTRIES INC LU 1273 CLEVE PLUMBING CONTRS ASSN CONSTR EMPLRS LAB RELS ASSN OF N Y STATE INC CONTRACTING PLASTERERS ASSN PROVIDENCE CONTRACTING PLASTERERS ASSN OF SO CALIF INC CONTRS ASSN OF E PA HVY-HWY CONSTR CONTRS ASSN OF E PA 5 COS 3 LUS CONTRS ASSN OF EASTERN PENN CONTRS ASSN OF WESTCHESTER CNTY INC DAN RIVER INC DANVILLE DIV DELAWARE CONTRACTORS ASSN INC ALLIED D DELAWARE CONTRS ASSN LUS-542+542A+542B DUPONT El DE NEMOURS CO WAYNESBORO EASTERN PRODUCTS CORP 3 PLANTS EMHART CORP BERLIN PLANT HARDWARE DIV FI8REBOARD CORP 8 MILLS 9 LOCALS FIRESTONE TIRE ♦ RUBBER CO AKRON PLANTS FOODTOWN-MAYFAIR MARKETS LU 1262 FROZEN FOOD EMPLOYERS ASSN GENL BLDG CONTRS ASSN INC OF PA GENL BLDG CONTRS ASSN INC GENL BLDG CONTRS OF AM LUS 5 4 2 - 5 4 2 A - 5 4 2 B GENL CONTRS ASSN OF THE LEHIGH VALLEY INC GENL PORTLAND CEMENT CO FLA TEX OHIO KANS TEN GENL TELE CO OF KENTUCKY GENL TELEPHONE CO OF IND INC GENL TELEPHONE CO OF OHIO GCODRICH BF CG GOODYEAR TIRE AND RUBBER CO GORTON CORP GLOUCESTER GREATER NY ASSN OF MEAT ♦ POULTRY DEALERS 174 I - A CARPENTERS GENL CONTRACTING AGMT I—A CEMENT COS CALIF + ARIZ 10 LUS I - A CHAIN AND IND GROCERY STORES HOUSTON I - A CLAY SEWER PIPE COS OHIO PENN ♦ INDIANA I - A INDEPENDENT MARKETS PHILA I - A INDUSTRIAL SHOWS BASIC AGREEMENT I - A SOFT DRINK DRIVERS ♦ HELPERS LU 74 4 I - A SOFT DRINK INSIDE WORKERS 36 COS LU 744 I -A SOUTH CENTRAL EMPLOYERS FIELD CONST I -A TELE ♦ RADIO COMMERCIAL ANNOUNCEMENTS ICE CREAM COUNCIL 13 COS ICEAL BASIC INDUSTRIES INC IDEAL CEMENT CO D ILLINOIS ASSN OF BREWERIES ♦ CHI BEER WHLSALE INLAND CONTAINER CORP 8 LUS IOWA BEEF PACKERS INC HIDE DIV DAKOTA CITY JOHNS MANVILLE PRODUCTS CORP WAUKEGAN LU 60 LATHING CONTRACTORS OF SO CALIF LOS ANGELES MARQUETTE CEMENT MFG CO 10 LUS MASON CONTRACTORS ASSN OF BALT MEAD CORP LYNCHBURG MECH CONTRS ASSN OF CLEVE LU 120 MECHANICAL CONTRS ASSN OF PHILA INC LU 690 MECHANICAL CONTRS ASSN OF PHILA INC LU 420 See fo o t n o te s at end o f t a b l e . 17 1,0 50 1 ,1 00 1,200 1,200 1,8 00 2 ,7 00 1,6 00 3 ,2 0 0 2 ,7 00 2,5 00 1,0 00 4 ,2 0 0 3 ,0 0 0 3 ,5 00 1,0 00 2 , ICC 6,0 00 3 ,0 00 2 ,8 00 1 ,4 00 1,7 00 1,6 00 1,0 00 2,8 0 0 1,5 00 5 ,0 00 4 ,0 0 0 1,7 00 9 ,2 0 0 1,5 00 6 ,0 0 0 1,9 00 1,7 00 1,8 00 2 ,9 0 0 19,000 2,3 50 8 ,0 00 8 , COO 10 ,000 5,0 00 1,0 00 1 ,4 00 1,2 50 1 , 90C 2 ,7 0 0 11,450 23 ,000 1,0 00 3 ,1 0 0 2 ,0 0 0 2 ,1 00 1,2 00 1,5 00 1,0 00 2 ,0 00 1 ,4 00 1 ,0 00 3 ,2 0 0 8,0 00 l , 40C 1 ,6 0 0 1,4 00 1,1 50 1,2 00 1,3 00 1,0 00 1 ,4 00 1,0 00 3 ,0 00 1 ,7 00 1,7 00 2,1 00 26 17 15 15 20 20 36 36 37 16 17 17 15 15 49 49 15 42 20 36 17 15 15 17 16 16 16 16 22 17 16 28 25 34 26 30 54 20 17 15 16 15 32 48 48 48 30 30 20 50 15 32 54 32 54 79 20 20 16 78 20 32 50 26 20 32 17 32 17 33 17 17 17 4 2 2 2 2 2 1 l 1 2 2 2 2 2 4 1 2 2 2 4 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 2 2 1 4 1 4 4 4 2 2 2 2 2 2 4 4 4 4 4 1 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 4 2 4 1 1 2 4 2 1 2 2 2 T a b le 8. C o lle c t iv e b a rg a ining a g r e e m e n t s co v e rin g 1,000 w o r k e r s or m ore e x pirin g in 1973, by m o n th o f e x p i r a t i o n — C o n tin u e d AGREE MENT NO* NUMBER OF WORKERS COMPANY AND LOCATION1 EXP. 0ATE CODES ^ SIC STATE UNION UNIT A pril— Continued 1644 1419 8690 8762 8485 8721 8618 8635 886C 2338 8521 1646 60 74 3675 6028 60 27 6076 6088 1022 74 09 3234 861 8725 8461 363 69 05 3269 1912 1450 32 66 85 99 5029 37 37 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 C4 04 04 04 C4 04 04 04 €4 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 2 ,9 50 MERCK ♦ CO INC MASTER ♦ LOCAL SUPPS 8 ,8 0 0 METRO LITHOGRAPHERS ASSN INC NATL ELEC CONTRS ASSN ST PAUL CHAPTER LU 110 1 ,2 00 1 ,6 50 NATL ELECTRICAL CONTRS ASSN GR CLEVE 38 NEW ENGLAND ROAD BUILDERS ASSN MASS LAB RELS 3 ,5 00 2 ,4 0 0 NC OHIO MASON CONTRS ASSN INC NORTH TEXAS CONTRS ASSN 3 LOCALS 4 ,7 00 3,2 00 NORTH TEXAS CONTRS ASSN LU 648 AND 859 NORTH TEXAS CONTRS ASSN LUS 100 ♦ 146 1,0 50 NORTON CO COATED ABRASIVE + TAPE DIV LU 17 1,6 50 PAINTING + DECORATING CONTRS OF WESTCHESTER 1,000 PARKE DAVIS ♦ CO DETROIT ALLEN PARK ROCHESTER 1 ,4 00 2 ,0 00 PEOPLES GAS LIGHT + COKE CO CHICAGO L 18007 PHILCO-FORD CCRP PHILA 2,0 00 1,6 00 PUBLIC SERVICE CO OF INDIANA INC 4 ,8 00 PUBLIC SERVICE ELEC AND GAS CO ELEC OPER DEPT 1,7 00 PUBLIC SERVICE ELEC + GAS CO COMMERCIAL OFF PUBLIC SERVICE FLE ♦ GAS CO LU 274 1,8 00 1,5 00 QUAKER CITY LUMBER PRODUCTS ASSN 12 ,000 REALTY ADVISORY BD ON LABOR RELS REX CHAINBELT INC MILWAUKEE COUNTY PLANTS 1,200 2,5 00 SCHIFFLI LACE ♦ EMBROIDERY MFRS ASSN NJ 1,100 SHEET METAL EMPLRS ASSN + OTHERS 2,0 00 SOUTHW MICH CONTRS ASSN STANOARD BRANDS FLEISCHMANN MFG DIV 1,050 3,0 5 0 STANDARD OIL CO OF CALIF STANDARD STATIONS 4,0 00 TEXTRON INC FAFNIR BEARING DIV NEW BRITAIN 17,000 UNIRCYAL INC NATIONWIDE P ♦ M 1,0 00 US PLAYING CARD CO LU 256 1,000 WHITIN MACHINE WORKS INC WHITINSVILLE 2 ,4 00 WISCONSIN ROAD BUILDERS ASSN 3 ,2 0 0 YELLOW CAB CO OF PHILADELPHIA 2 ,5 0 0 ZENITH RADIO CORP RAULAND OIV LU 1031 Total: 108 agreements...............34 0 7 5 0 8428 8606 8566 36 10 1623 23 45 60 02 36 43 8409 8665 84 14 8408 8607 8631 8745 75 01 7500 858 8545 8620 8431 8601 60 05 307 308 309 254 1119 60 57 252 8741 389 87 32 84 47 86 97 8843 317 05 05 05 05 05 C5 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 AGC BLDG HVY ♦ HWY WASHINGTON AGC OF AM WASH LU 6 1 2 ♦ 302 AGC OF OHIO CINN DIV OIST COUNCIL ALLIS LOUIS CO AM ENKA CORP LU 25 98 AMERICAN STANDARD INC ARKANSAS POWER ♦ LIGHT CO ARROW-HART INC HARTFORD ♦ DANIELSON ASSOC GENL CONTRS ♦ OTHERS ARIZ ASSOC GENL CONTRS H+RR ALABAMA CHAPTER ASSOC GENL CONTRS OREGON COLUMBIA CHAPTER ASSOC GENL CONTRS HVY HWY UTILITY BUILDING ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF AM WISC CHPTR ASSOC GENL CONTRS ORE COLUMBIA CHPT 2 OTHS ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF AM OREGON COLUMBIA CHPTR ASSOC HOTELS ♦ MOTELS INC MSTR RESIDENT AGMT ASSOC HOTELS ♦ MOTELS INC MSTR HOTEL AGMT ATLANTIC APPAREL CONTRACTORS ASSN INC BLDG CONTRS ♦ MASON BLDRS ASSN NYC AREA BLDG CONTRS ASSN OF INDIANAPOLIS INC BLDG TRADES EMPLRS ASSN OF WESTCH + PUTNAM BLDRS ASSN OF CHICAGO COOK + DUPAGE CNTY BOSTON EOISON CO PRODUCTION ♦ MAINTENANCE BREWERS BOARD OF TRADE INC BREWERY PROP CF MILW MILLER PABST SCHLITZ L 9 CALIF BREWERS ASSN CAMPBELL SOUP COMPANY LU 228 CHICAGO FURNITURE MFRS ASSN CCNN LIGHT + POWER CO 7 LUS DEL MONTE CORP PLTS 126 ♦ 127 LUS 670 ♦ 809 DETROIT MASON CONTRS ASSN INC 2 LCLS 334 1076 DIAMOND FRUIT GROWERS INC LU 883 EASTERN NY CONSTRUCTION EMPLRS INC EASTERN NY CONSTRUCTION EMPLRS INC EASTERN NY CONSTRUCTION EMPLOYERS INC EASTERN NY CONSTRUCTION EMPLOYERS INC ALBANY ESSEX BREWERS LABOR RELATIONS ASSOCIATION 28 27 17 17 16 17 15 15 17 32 17 28 49 36 49 49 49 49 24 65 35 23 15 15 20 55 35 30 27 35 16 41 36 20 20 41 31 14 31 74 74 74 21 CO 34 33 23 32 22 22 22 23 21 35 22 31 34 00 00 16 00 31 14 35 23 33 357 243 127 127 531 115 119 143 170 230 164 357 118 347 127 127 500 170 119 118 335 202 187 143 304 500 553 333 332 33 5 60 0 531 127 4 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 2 4 4 1 4 4 4 1 2 2 1 2 2 2 4 4 1 4 1 1 4 1 4 16 16 17 36 28 32 49 36 15 16 15 15 16 16 16 70 70 23 17 15 15 15 49 20 20 20 20 25 49 20 15 20 17 15 15 15 20 91 91 00 35 56 00 71 16 86 63 90 90 35 90 90 21 21 23 21 32 21 33 14 21 35 93 93 33 16 90 34 90 21 21 21 21 22 531 129 119 347 202 174 127 127 600 600 129 143 129 119 531 118 118 134 115 119 129 129 342 531 304 531 531 205 127 531 143 531 115 119 143 116 531 2 2 2 1 1 4 4 4 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 4 2 2 2 1 2 4 4 2 4 2 2 2 2 2 May See f o o t n o te s a t end o f t a b l e . 18 1 ,6 00 1,5 00 3 ,1 00 1 ,1 00 3,0 00 1,7 00 1 ,9 50 1,3 00 12,150 1,400 5 ,3 00 5 ,5 00 2 ,4 0 0 6 ,4 0 0 1,800 1 ,7 00 1,2 00 9 ,0 0 0 9 ,0 0 0 2,0 00 1 ,8 00 3 ,0 00 2 ,0 0 0 2 ,1 0 0 4 ,1 0 0 2 ,0 0 0 1 ,4 00 1 ,2 00 2 ,1 0 0 1,9 00 5 ,5 00 1 ,9 00 1,0 00 3 ,0 0 0 3 ,5 00 1 ,0 00 2,7 00 T a b le 8. C o lle c t iv e b a rg a ining a g r e e m e n t s co v e rin g 1,000 w o r k e r s or m o re ex p irin g in 1973 by m o n th o f e x p i r a t i o n — C o n tin u e d AGREE MENT NO. EXP. DATE COMPANY AND LOCATION1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE UNION 34 00 61 33 33 31 31 31 CO 00 00 00 00 21 90 21 21 21 93 93 93 00 00 00 23 22 14 11 15 91 93 31 92 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 74 21 21 43 74 93 00 21 35 00 31 00 31 71 32 93 91 11 93 88 34 41 14 22 22 93 16 16 33 74 00 43 127 119 143 218 187 553 127 218 48 4 347 33 3 332 134 134 119 100 119 143 531 531 480 134 100 100 116 337 184 230 218 527 134 333 143 115 129 119 168 531 119 143 170 100 134 127 127 127 127 134 134 100 134 119 35 7 500 343 335 531 527 100 112 119 119 127 347 357 357 186 218 553 531 230 184 347 UNIT May— Cont inued 5713 8608 8786 3762 37 16 A127 3764 4128 3618 3617 1905 6504 876 879 8816 75 09 8652 8782 6326 6331 631C 852 1214 1215 85 83 1688 65 29 1270 33 30 1226 819 1910 8702 8556 8594 88 49 8847 88 48 8455 8500 8822 1638 826 8776 8533 8531 85 32 828 829 1222 824 8765 60 86 4061 1003 33 58 6306 1284 1276 2972 8427 84 60 32 87 37 07 1645 1685 1815 2908 32 79 5271 1205 68 04 36 24 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 C5 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 €5 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 GENERAL TELEPHONE CO OF MICHIGAN GENL C0NTRS ASSN OF LOUISVILLE INDIANA AND KY GENL CONTRS ASSN OF LOUISVILLE INC AND 2 OTHS GENL ELEC CO BALLAST DEPT DANVILLE GENL ELECTRIC CO CHICAGO ♦ CICERO PLTS GENL ELECTRIC CO EVENDALE GENL ELECTRIC CO EUCLID LAMP PLT CLEVELAND GENL ELECTRIC CO EVENDALE GENL ELECTRIC CO NATL AGMT GENL ELECTRIC CO NATL AGMT GENL TIRE ♦ RUBBER CO OHIO + TEXAS GIMBEL BROTHERS INC LU 2 GREATER BLOUSE SKIRT ♦ UNDERGARMENT ASSN INC GREATER BLOUSE SKIRT ♦ UNDERGARMENT ASSN HCME BUILDERS ASSN OF METROPOLITAN PORTLAND HOTEL ASSN OF NY CITY INC HUDSON VALLEY CONSTRUCTION EMPLRS ASSN 1 OTH HUDSON VALLEY CONSTR EMPLRS ASSN INC I - A CALIF BEER DISTRIBUTORS LUS 896 + 888 INDUS EMPLRS ♦ DISTRIBUTORS ASSN INDUS EMPLRS AND DISTRIBUTORS ASSN CALIF INFANTS AND CHILDRENS COAT ASSN INC + OTH INTL PAPER CO NORTHERN DIV NY ME ♦ PA INTL PAPER CO SOUTHERN KRAFT DIV INTERSTATE IRONWORKER EMPLOYERS ASSN OF WESTERN PENN JOHNSON + JOHNSON + ETHICON INC JORDAN MARSH CO LU 1291 KEYES FIBRE CO LU 4 4 9 LEESONA CORP LODGE 1605 DIST 64 WARWICK LONGVIEW FIBRE CO LONGVIEW MILL LU 153 LOS ANGELES COAT + SUIT MFRS ASSN MANSFIELD TIRE ♦ RUBBER CO MANSFIELD MASON CONTRS ASSN OF OREGON AND OTHS MASON CONTRS ASSN OF ALLEGHENY CNTY MASTER BLDRS ASSN OF WESTERN PA MONROEVILLE MASTER BLDRS ASSN OF WESTERN PA INC 22 6 4 MASTER BLDRS ASSN OF WESTERN PA INC 526 MASTER BLDRS ASSN OF WESTERN PA INC COUNC 40 MASTER BUILDERS ASSN OF WESTERN PA INC MASTER BUILDERS ASSN WESTERN PA INC MECHANICAL CONTRS ASSN OF W PENN PITTS MONSANTO CO TEXAS NATL ASSN OF BLOUSE MFRS INC NATL ELEC CONTR ASSN WESTCHESTER-FAIRFIELD NATL ELEC CONTRS ASSN ST LOUIS CHAPTER LU 1 NATL ELEC CONTRS ASSN SOUTHEAST TEXAS CHAPTER NATL ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS ASSN LU 11 NATL SKIRT + SPORTSWEAR ASSN NATL WOMENS NECKWEAR + SCARF ASSN NEKCOSA EDWARDS PAPER CO INC 2 PLANTS NY COAT ♦ SUIT ASSN INC OHIO CONTRS ASSN ♦ ASSOC GENL CONTRS PANHANDLE EASTERN PIPE LINE CO PNEUMO DYNAMICS CORP CLEVE PNEUMATIC SUB POTLATCH FORESTS INC SOUTHERN BRADLEY DIV RELIANCE ELEC CO DODGE MFG DIV MISHAWAKA SAN FRANCISCC EMPLOYERS COUNCIL SCOTT PAPER CO EVERETT LUS 183 ♦ 644 SCOTT PAPER CC S D WARREN DIV WESTBROOK SO CALIF STEEL FABRICATORS LU 92 SC NEV GENL CONTRACTORS ASSN ♦ 2 OTHERS SCUTHW MICH CONTRS ASSN SPERRY RAND CORP UNIVAC DIV ST PAUL SPRAGUE ELECTRIC CO NORTH ADAMS SQUIBB ER + SONS INC P+M NEW BRUNSWICK SQUIBB ER + SONS NEW BRUNSWICK LAWRENCEVILLE STANDARD OIL CO OF CALIF WESTERN OPERATIONS STANLEY WORKS PLANT OR BLUE COLLAR TORRINGTON COMPANY STANDARD + BROAD ST PLANTS UNITED PARCEL SERVICE CHICAGO US PLYWOOD- CHAMPION PAPERS INC PASADENA VORNADO CORP WAGNER ELECTRIC CORP ST LOUIS See fo o t n o te s at end o f t a b l e . 19 2 ,5 0 0 1,8 00 1,2 00 1 ,4 00 2 ,8 50 4 ,9 0 0 1,0 00 1 ,4 00 17,000 9 0 ,000 3 ,0 00 5,0 00 2 ,8 50 1,000 1 ,0 00 3 0 ,000 1,2 00 1 ,6 00 2,0 0 0 1,5 00 4 ,0 0 0 8 , COO 3 ,0 00 10 ,700 2 ,2 00 1,5 00 1,5 00 1,1 00 1,3 50 1 ,3 50 2,5 0 0 1,500 1 ,0 00 1 ,9 50 7,0 0 0 1,0 00 1,1 00 1,5 00 7,0 00 5,0 0 0 1,1 00 1,0 00 4 ,0 0 0 1,2 00 2,2 0 0 1,5 00 5 ,6 00 11 ,550 1 ,0 00 1,8 00 40 ,000 1 , 25C 1 ,1 50 1,6 00 1 ,2 50 1 ,1 50 2 ,0 0 0 1,6 00 1 ,7 50 1 ,2 00 1 ,5 00 1,5 00 2 ,2 00 1 ,9 00 2 ,2 0 0 2 ,2 0 0 3,2 00 2 ,6 0 0 3 ,0 0 0 2 ,2 0 0 1,200 1 ,0 00 3,0 50 48 15 15 36 36 37 36 37 36 36 30 53 23 23 15 70 15 15 50 50 50 23 26 26 17 28 53 26 35 26 23 30 17 17 15 15 15 15 15 16 17 28 23 17 17 17 17 23 23 26 23 15 49 37 24 35 50 26 26 34 15 15 35 36 28 28 29 34 35 42 26 54 36 4 2 2 1 4 1 1 1 4 4 4 4 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 2 2 2 4 4 2 4 1 4 1 1 2 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 4 2 2 4 4 1 1 2 1 1 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 4 4 4 1 1 4 1 T a b le 8. C o lle c t iv e b a rg a ining a g r e e m e n t s co v e rin g 1,000 w o r k e r s or m ore ex p irin g in 1973, by m o n th o f e x p i r a t i o n — C o n tin u e d AGREE MENT NO. EXP. DATE COMPANY AND LOCATION1 NUMBER CODES2 OF WORKERS SIC STATE UNION UNIT May— Continued 60 54 3642 608C 1011 05 05 05 05 WASHINGTON GAS LIGHT CO WASH MD VA WHIRLPOOL CORP ST JOSEPH D1V PLTS WISCONSIN POWER ♦ LIGHT CO LU 965 WOODWORKERS ASSN OF CHICAGO MILL DIVISION Total: 114 ag r eem en ts .. .. , ___ 6700 8612 8467 3609 2921 1659 1601 68 25 4 1 54 8511 7950 306 8401 8402 86 14 8797 86 64 87 14 8814 1802 40 99 854 8567 8836 248 253 520C 1629 1627 1628 5248 1245 8476 3294 1933 60 44 258 1624 1930 41 04 3761 3655 60 15 68 22 1656 1684 238 52 12 5211 5213 5214 5262 46 04 5272 5273 5229 52 44 5276 52 24 5215 52 23 5225 5226 73 00 5235 52 34 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 C6 06 06 C6 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 C6 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 ACME MARKETS INC FORTY-FORT AGC OF AM ATLANTA ♦ 2 OTH AGC OF AM CALIF + 2 OTHS ALLEN-BRADLEY CO MILWAUKEE ALLIED BLDG METAL INDUS INC ALLIED CHEMICAL CORP SPEC CHEM D BUFFALO DYE ALLIED CHEMICAL CORP INDUSTRIAL CHEMICAL DIV ALMACS INC LU 328 AM MOTORS CORP GENL PRODS DIV JEEP UNIT ASSN OF CONTRG PLUMBERS OF THE CITY OF NY ASSN OF MOTICN PICTURE ♦ TV PRODUCERS INC ASSOC BREWERS INC BALTIMORE ASSOC GENL CONTRACTORS + 2 OTHERS SO CALIF ASSOC GENL CONTRACTORS 2 OTH SO CALIF ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF AM INC GA BRANCH 438 ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF OHIO AKRON D ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF NJ 3LUS ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF NJ NO NJ ASSOC SHEET METAL ROOF + INSULAT CONTRS LU 40 ATLANTIC RICHFIELD CO ♦ ARCO PIPELINE CO BATH IRON WORKS CORP BATH + BRUNSWICK BELT ASSN INC NY BLDG TRADE EMPLRS OF CENTRAL NY BLDG TRADES EMPLOYERS ASSN WESTCH + PUTNAM BLUE LAKE PACKERS INC SALEM 670 CALIF PROCESSORS INC CALIF TRUCKING ASSNS INC ♦ DRAYMENS ASSN SF CELANESE CORP AMCELLE PLANT LU 1874 CELANESE CORP CELCO PLANT NARROWS CELANESE CORP CELRIVER PLANT LU 1093 CENTRAL PENN MOTOR CARRIERS CONFERENCE INC CONTAINER CORPORATION OF AMERICA CONTRACTORS ASSN OF WESTCHESTER COUNTY INC CCPELAND REFRIGERATION CORP SIDNEY LU 725 DUNLOP TIRE ♦ RUBBER CORP BUFFALO EAST OHIO GAS CO LU 555 EUGENE FRUIT GROWERS ASSN FMC CORP AM VISCOSE DIV FIBER OPERS GENERAL TIRE ♦ RUBBER CO IND PRODS DIV WABASH GENL DYNAMICS CORP ELEC BOAT DIV BROTON GENL ELECTRIC CO BLOOMINGTON GENL ELECTRIC CO RADIO RECEIVER DEPT UTICA GEORGIA POWER CO LU 84 GRAND UNION CO LU 371 HERCULES INC ALLEGANY BALLISTICS LAB LU 261 HERCULES INC IMPERIAL COLOR GLEN FALLS 12 96 2 I - A ADDENDUM TO MASTER DAIRY AGMT ST LOUIS I - A CAROLINA FREIGHT COUNCIL O- T -R SUPP AGMT I -A CAROLINA FREIGHT COUNCIL CITY CARTAGE SUP I - A CENTRAL STATES AREA OVER-THE-ROAD I - A CENTRAL STATES AREA LOCAL CARTAGE I - A CENTRAL STATES IRON-STEEL SPEC COMMD AGMT I - A INDEP SHOP AGMT DOLLS + STUFFED TOYS N Y I - A MASTER CEMENT ALL DRY BULK COMMODITIES I - A MASTER RAIL-TRUCK FREIGHT AGREEMENT I - A MD-DC CITY PICKUP ♦ DELIVERY SUPP AGMT I - A MD-DC O -T -R SUPP AGMT I - A NATL MASTER FREIGHT AGMT EASTERN AREA I - A NEW ENGLAND FREIGHT SUPP AGMT I - A NJ NY AREA GENL TRUCKING SUPP AGMT I - A NO NEW ENGLAND GENL FREIGHT AGMT SUPP I - A NY STATE TEAMSTERS JOINT COUNCIL O -T -R I - A NY STATE TEAMSTERS JOINT COUNCIL FRGHT D I - A RETAIL DRUG STORE OPERATORS I - A SO CONF LOCAL FREIGHT FORWARDING GARAGE I - A SO CONF LOCAL FREIGHT FORWARDING OFF EES 1 ,5 00 1,7 00 1 ,4 00 2,5 00 4695 00 49 36 49 24 50 34 35 33 500 218 127 119 4 4 1 2 1 ,8 00 3 ,5 00 4 ,5 00 5 ,0 0 0 2,5 0 0 1 , 2C0 1,4 50 1,650 1 , 7CC 2,2 00 4,1 00 1,200 45 ,000 4 , COO 3,0 00 1,5 00 3,0 00 2 ,0 00 1,2 00 5 ,6 00 1,8 00 2,6 00 1 ,0 00 3,5 00 1,5 00 5 6 ,550 2 ,8 0 0 2 ,4 00 2,0 00 1 ,8 00 4 ,5 00 2 ,5 00 1 ,9 00 2 ,5 00 1,1 00 2,5 0 0 1 ,5 00 8 ,0 00 1,2 00 2,0 00 1 ,0 00 1,2 50 3 ,9 0 0 1,2 00 1,2 50 1,1 50 1 ,2 00 2 ,8 0 0 6,7 00 4 0 ,0 0 0 12 0,000 5,0 0 0 7 ,0 0 0 4 ,0 0 0 5 ,0 00 4 ,0 0 0 1,0 00 1,2 00 1,6 00 3 8 ,000 1,2 50 6,0 00 12 ,000 8 ,9 5 0 1 ,4 50 1 ,0 00 54 15 16 36 34 28 28 54 37 17 78 20 15 15 15 15 15 16 17 29 37 23 15 15 20 20 42 28 28 28 42 26 16 35 30 49 20 28 30 37 36 36 49 54 28 28 20 42 42 42 42 42 39 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 59 42 42 23 58 93 35 21 21 21 10 32 21 00 52 93 93 58 31 20 22 00 00 11 21 21 21 92 93 93 52 54 57 23 00 21 31 21 31 92 00 32 16 33 21 58 16 55 21 43 50 50 00 00 00 21 00 00 50 50 00 10 20 10 21 21 93 00 00 155 119 531 48 4 116 335 335 155 553 170 530 304 119 168 143 119 129 116 187 500 32 0 134 119 531 531 531 531 337 202 337 531 100 143 347 333 118 531 337 333 500 218 218 127 155 121 335 531 531 531 531 531 531 221 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 184 531 531 1 2 2 1 2 1 4 4 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 4 4 2 2 2 4 2 2 1 1 1 2 4 2 1 1 4 2 4 1 1 1 1 4 1 1 1 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 June See fo o t n o te s a t end o f t a b l e . 20 T a ble 8. C o lle c t iv e b a rg a ining a g r e e m e n t s c o v e rin g 1,000 w o r k e r s or m o re ex p irin g in 1973 by m o n th o f e x p i r a t i o n — C o n tin u e d AGREE MENT NO. EXP. DATE COMPANY AND LOCATION1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT June— Continued 5233 5232 5228 5227 5264 5265 5263 5266 5247 6063 67 02 41 42 1907 6751 46 16 6402 37 09 1014 8854 5251 46 07 8529 6792 831 1223 6070 84 58 614 60 72 6071 37 76 1926 84 59 1920 82 04 3606 26 24 46 09 511 8501 87 24 60 34 6036 60 35 5260 1105 3260 5238 52 43 5242 3630 3628 3741 36 26 3625 3629 3627 26 06 06 06 06 €6 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 18 ,200 I - A SO C0NF LOCAL FREIGHT FORWARDING PICKUP 8 ,6 00 I - A SO C0NF 0 - T - R MOTOR FREIGHT SUPP AGMT 1 ,4 00 I - A VA FREIGHT COUNCIL 0 - T - R SUPP AGMT 1,300 I - A VA FREIGHT COUNCIL CITY PICKUP + DELIVERY 18 ,000 I - A WESTERN STATES AREA LOCAL CARTAGE SUPP I - A WESTERN STATES AREA OFFICE SUPP 7 ,5 00 I - A WESTERN STATES AREA OVER THE ROAD SUPP 12 ,000 I - A WESTERN STATES AREA AUTOMOTIVE SHOP TRUCK 1,5 00 I - A WESTERN STATES TRUCKING MAINTENANCE 3 ,0 0 0 ILL POWER CO LO 51 1,1 00 ILLINOIS FOOD RETAILERS ASSN AND 2 OTHS 23 ,000 JACKSONVILLE SHIPYARDS INC 2 , GOO KELLY-SPRINGFIELD TIRE CO CUMBERLAND 2 , 00 2 , OCO LGBLAW INC UTICA CONFIDENTIAL LOUIS MARX + CO OF W VA GLEN DALE LU 149 1 ,3 50 LUMBER AND MILL EMPLOYERS ASSN 1,000 KAGNAVOX CO FORT WAYNE 2 ,1 00 MANUFACTURING WOODWORKERS ASSN OF GREATER NY 1 ,2 00 MECH CONTRS ASSN OF ST LOUIS MO INC LU 562 1,500 2 3 , OCO MOTOR TRANSPORT LAB RELS O -T -R LOCAL CARTAGE 8 ,0 00 NATL ASSN OF COLL MFRS INC NATL ELEC CONTRS ASSN DC CHAPTER 1,600 2 ,5 00 NATL TEA CO NATL WAREHOUSE DIV 4 , OCO NEW ENG SPORTSWEAR MFRS ASSN 6 LUS 1,6 00 NORTHWEST PAPER CO NY STATE ELEC ♦ GAS CORP 3 ,1 5 0 1 ,0 00 OHIO VALLEY BLDRS EXCHANGE INC 1,7 00 PACIFIC COLUMBIA MILLS INC LU 254 PACIFIC GAS ♦ ELEC CO OFF + CLERICAL LU 1245 3 ,7 0 0 PACIFIC GAS + ELEC CO OPER MAINT + CONSTR 14,500 1,9 00 PHILCO-FORD CORP AUDIO-VIDEO ♦ MICROELECTRON 3 ,5 00 PLASTIC 4 METAL PRODUCTS MFRS ASSN INC 132 QUAD-CITY BUILDERS ASSN 9 LUS 1,400 RAYBESTOS MANHATTAN INC MANHATTAN RUBBER DIV 1 ,0 00 SEAFOOD PRODUCERS ASSN OF NEW BEDFORD MASS 1,2 00 SQUARE D CO INDUSTRIAL CONTROL DIV 1 ,3 50 STCCKHAM VALVES 4 FITTINGS INC BIRMINGHAM 1,2 00 1,000 STUFFED TOY MFRS ASSN INC SWISHER JOHN H 4 SON INC JACKSONVILLE 1,0 00 1 ,5 00 UNDERGROUND CONTRACTORS ASSN LU 2 UNDERGROUND CONTRS ASSN 4 OTHS ILL LU 150 4,5 00 UNION ELECTRIC CO LU 309 649 4 1439 1 ,8 00 1 ,3 50 UNION ELECTRIC CO LU 148 UNION ELECTRIC CO LU 1455 1,050 UNITED PARCEL SERVICE INC NO CALIF 1,3 50 1,0 00 UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE MFRS ASSN OF CALIF 1,000 USM CORP FARREL CO DIV ANSONIA 4 DERBY 1,000 WEST VA FREIGHT COUNCIL LOCAL CARTAGE WESTERN PENN MOTOR CARRIES LOCAL CARTAGE SUP 4 ,7 0 0 2 ,0 0 0 WESTERN PENN MOTOR CARRIES 0 - T - R AGMT WESTINGHOUSE ELEC CORP SUNNYVALE 1,2 00 36 ,000 WESTINGHOUSE ELEC CORP WESTINGHOUSE ELEC CORP YOUNGWOOO 1,0 00 WESTINGHOUSE ELEC CORP BEAVER PLANT 2,2 50 WESTINGHOUSE ELEC CORP 1,0 00 WESTINGHOUSE ELEC CORP 15,000 WESTINGHOUSE ELEC CORP 8 ,3 00 2 ,0 0 0 WESTINGHOUSE ELEC CORP AEROSPACE DIV Tota l: 124 agreements........ . . . 75 27 00 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 49 54 37 30 54 39 52 36 24 17 42 39 17 54 23 26 49 15 22 49 49 36 30 15 30 09 36 33 39 21 16 16 49 49 49 42 25 35 42 42 42 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 19 00 00 54 54 GO CO 00 CO 00 33 30 59 52 21 55 93 32 21 43 00 20 50 00 14 41 21 00 57 93 93 23 21 00 22 14 35 63 00 59 33 33 43 00 00 93 93 16 55 23 00 93 00 23 23 00 00 CO 52 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 218 127 184 112 333 155 332 531 107 119 170 531 221 127 531 134 100 127 119 337 127 127 553 134 119 500 186 127 335 221 122 143 129 127 129 127 531 205 335 531 531 531 218 34 7 127 127 127 500 48 4 127 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 2 l 1 1 1 2 4 2 2 2 2 1 4 2 4 4 2 1 4 4 1 2 2 1 2 4 1 2 l 2 4 4 4 4 4 2 4 2 2 2 1 4 1 1 4 4 4 1 37 16 17 3C 22 23 34 26 26 37 26 59 92 86 00 21 20 31 62 34 47 91 531 116 116 333 134 134 112 100 230 218 527 1 2 2 4 2 2 1 l 1 4 1 July 4141 8867 8713 1900 618 871 2923 1257 1236 40 58 1282 07 07 07 07 C7 07 07 07 07 07 07 AERODEX INC LU 769 AGC OF AM INC ORE-COLUMBIA CHAPTR ARIZONA STEEL FIELD ERECTORS ASSN ARMSTRONG RUBBER CO MASTER AGMT ASSN OF KNITTED FABRICS MFRS INC NYC ASSN OF RAIN APPAREL CONTRS INC BABCOCK 4 WILCOCK CO BARBERTON WORKS LU 900 BOWATERS SOUTHERN PAPER CORP CALHOUN BROWN CO KALAMAZOO LU 1010 CESSNA AIRCRAFT CO COMMERCIAL 4 MILITARY DIV CROWN ZELLERBACH CORP CAMAS See fo o t n o te s at end o f t a b l e . 21 1 ,7 00 1 ,0 00 1 ,2 00 4 ,0 0 0 4 ,0 00 5 ,2 00 3,3 00 1 ,0 00 1,2 00 3 ,3 5 0 2 ,2 5 0 T a b le 8. C o lle c t iv e ba rg a ining a g r e e m e n t s co v e rin g 1,000 w o r k e r s or m ore e x pirin g in 1973 by m o n th of e x p i r a t i o n — C o n tin u e d AGREE MENT NO* EXP. DATE COMPANY AND LOCATION1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT July— Continued 1294 1247 1016 40 87 65 02 8590 67 67 69C2 1113 2930 338 69 12 84 97 63 03 1218 6762 6C47 79 60 87 26 77 14 880 71 02 5424 1293 86 76 52 39 4 1 60 621 57 78 57 77 1275 3301 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 CROWN ZELLERBACH CORP GAYLORD CONTAINER DIV I t 200 CROWN ZELLERBACH CORP BOGALUSA MILL i t 250 1,5 00 DETROIT LUMBERMENS ASSOCIATION FAIRCHILD HILLER CORP REPUBLIC AVIATION DIV 1 ,9 00 FEDERALS INC DETROIT 3 ,0 0 0 FLOOR COVERING ASSN OF SO CALIF ♦ 3 OTH 2,0 50 FRED SANDERS RETAIL STORE AGMT DETROIT LU 30 1,0 50 GREATER ST LOUIS AUTOMOTIVE ASSN ♦ 1 OTHER 1,6 00 HAMILTON MFG CO TWO RIVERS LU 1533 1 ,0 00 HCLLCW METAL DOOR ♦ BUCK ASSN INC 2 ,0 0 0 1,000 I - A DRIED FRUIT PROCESSORS CALIF LU 11 1,2 00 I - A MAJOR SHOE CHAIN STORES I - A MISSOURI RIVER BASIN AGMT 4 ,8 00 I - A WHOLESALE GROCERS CHAIN STORE + 1 OTH 1 ,0 00 KIMBERLY CLARK CORPORATION 1,2 00 1,9 00 KROGER COMPANY LACLEDE GAS CC ST LOUIS LU 5 - 6 1 ,3 50 LEAGUE OF NY THEATRES ♦ SHUBERT 1,200 NATL ELEC CONTRS ASSN INC WESTERN PENN CHPTR 1,0 50 NJ LAUNDRY + CLEANING INSTITUTE 2 ,0 0 0 NY RAINCOAT MFRS ASSN INC 5 ,2 0 0 OREGON FOOD + BEVERAGE PRESIDENTS COUNCIL 6,0 00 PACIFIC MARITIME ASSN 15 ,000 RIEGEL PAPER CORP PAPER D RIEGELWOOD 73 8 1 ,0 00 SO ILL CONTRS ASSN 5,0 00 TRUCK OWNERS ASSN OF SEATTLE INC 174 1,5 00 TRW INC HARRISBURG LU 1400 1 ,7 00 8,5 00 UNITED KNITWEAR MFRS LEAGUE INC WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO NATL 16,000 WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO 2,7 00 WEYERHAEUSER COMPANY PLYMOUTH 1 ,1 50 1,4 50 WHIRLPOOL CORP ST PAUL DIV T ota l: 43 agreements........... . . . 12 6650 26 26 24 37 53 17 54 55 25 34 20 56 16 50 26 54 49 79 17 72 23 58 44 26 16 42 37 22 48 48 26 35 72 72 34 21 34 93 34 43 35 20 93 21 00 41 62 00 43 21 23 22 21 92 90 56 33 91 23 20 00 21 56 41 230 230 531 218 305 164 332 218 119 119 48 0 332 112 531 100 184 357 192 127 236 134 145 48 0 230 143 531 500 134 201 34 6 100 531 4 1 2 1 1 2 4 2 1 2 3 3 3 3 1 4 4 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 2 2 1 2 4 4 1 1 20 15 17 42 35 2C 33 20 36 54 30 36 48 37 42 54 28 30 17 20 20 36 26 16 16 16 32 20 25 23 27 20 36 20 20 34 33 00 63 34 00 00 00 21 42 41 21 84 61 59 31 00 34 23 74 14 42 35 43 31 30 34 34 41 00 21 21 93 00 14 00 00 35 31 155 60 0 143 33 5 335 155 335 155 34 7 155 333 107 127 553 531 155 335 333 170 155 155 500 230 143 531 129 357 155 312 305 243 155 127 524 155 218 357 4 2 2 4 4 4 1 1 l 2 1 1 1 1 3 2 4 1 2 1 1 4 1 2 2 2 1 4 2 2 2 4 4 4 4 1 1 August 200 84 20 8831 52 70 3230 203 2572 205 37 63 6788 1919 37 06 57 16 4 0 76 5209 67 87 1654 1934 8783 210 211 3731 1221 86 68 84 79 87 77 23 3 7 217 1129 882 14 24 218 3695 22C 222 2920 25 47 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 €8 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 €8 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 ARMOUR ♦ CO MASTER AGMT ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF AM INC ASSOCIATED UNDERGROUND CONTRS INC PONTIAC BOWMAN TRANSPORTATION INC O -T -R ♦ PICK UP BUCYRUS—ERIE CO INTERS CUDAHY CO MASTER AGMT DRESSER INDUSTRIES TRANSPORTATION EQUIP DIV DUBUQUE PACKING CO LU 150 ELECTRIC MACHINERY MFG CO OF MINNEAPOLIS FOOD RET ASSN OF THE GREATER NY TRADING AREA GATES RUBBER CO DENVER 154 GENL ELEC CO TUBE DEPT OWENSBORO GENL TELEPHONE CO OF FLA GOOOYEAR AEROSPACE CORP AKRON I - A NATL MASTER AUTOMOBILE TRANSPORTERS AGMT I - A RETAIL MEAT MARKETS ICI AM INC REYNOLDS EXPER LAB 2 PLANTS KELLY-SPRINGFIELD TIRE CO TYLER MASTER PLUMBERS ASSN BOSTON LU 12 MAYER OSCAR ♦ CO DAVENPORT MAYER OSCAR + CO MADISON MCGRAW EDISON CO BUSSMAN DIV ST LOUIS MEAD CORP CHILLICOTHE MILL AREA ONE LU 731 MICH ROAD BLDRS ASSN LAB RELS DIV MICH ROAD BUILDERS ASSN 247 MICHIGAN ROAD BLDRS ASSN HVY-HWY CONSTR MINN MINING ♦ MFG CO ST PAUL MORRELL JOHN ♦ CO MASTER AGMT N Y BEDDING MFG ASSN NATL NECKWEAR CONFERENCE LUS 25 0 253 PRINTING INDUSTRIES ASSN LOS ANG LU 63 RATH PACKING CO IOWA TEX ILL GA NC RAYTHEON CO LU 1505 SWIFT + CO SWIFT + CO MASTER AGREEMENT TRANE COMPANY LA CROSSE UNION CARBIDE CORP FERROALLOYS D MARIETTA See fo o t n o te s at end o f t a b l e . 22 7 ,5 0 0 4 ,9 00 5 ,4 00 1 ,4 00 2 ,5 0 0 1 ,5 00 1,0 50 2 ,6 0 0 1 ,0 00 6 ,0 0 0 3,5 00 2 ,8 0 0 7 ,0 5 0 2 ,1 0 0 20 ,0 0 0 5 ,0 0 0 1 ,1 00 1,1 50 1 ,2 00 1,7 50 3,0 00 2 ,0 0 0 1 ,5 00 5 ,0 0 0 1 ,4 00 3 ,0 0 0 2 ,3 5 0 2,4 00 1 ,0 00 11 ,100 1,1 00 3,0 00 7,0 00 2,8 00 8 ,3 0 0 1 ,3 00 1,2 00 T a b le 8. C o lle c t iv e barg aining a g r e e m e n t s c o v e rin g 1,000 w o r k e r s or m o re ex p irin g in 1973, by m o n th o f e x p i r a t i o n — C o n tin u e d AGREE MENT NO. NUMBER OF WORKERS COMPANY AND LOCATION1 EXP. DATE CODES2 SIC 1 STATE | UNION | UNIT August— Continued 37 44 223 08 08 36 20 71 00 347 155 4 4 1,1 00 3 ,2 00 1,4 00 1,0 50 1,8 00 1,1 00 4,0 00 3 ,0 00 17 ,000 1,0 50 4,5 00 3 ,0 0 0 1 1 0,20 0 4 ,5 00 1 ,2 00 21 ,0 0 0 1 ,0 00 3,5 00 3,0 00 2 ,5 00 16 5,00 0 39 5,05 0 33 ,0 0 0 4,8 00 1,8 00 2,0 00 1,6 50 1,5 50 2 ,1 0 0 3,0 00 1,1 00 1 ,4 50 3 ,5 0 0 4 ,5 00 2 ,2 0 0 34 ,950 2 ,2 0 0 1 ,4 50 2 ,2 0 0 2 ,0 0 0 1,0 00 1,1 00 1,0 50 1 ,1 00 1,8 00 2 ,0 0 0 1 ,5 00 1,2 00 1 ,0 50 35 23 28 36 17 35 65 65 35 37 37 37 37 37 34 35 30 35 50 20 37 37 36 30 54 26 36 20 50 54 72 72 54 73 23 35 35 50 54 54 35 28 19 20 26 59 31 35 34 31 93 31 42 34 35 33 21 00 00 00 00 00 00 33 00 00 32 93 93 00 00 00 31 00 20 31 00 21 43 91 22 43 93 93 00 00 00 00 20 32 32 31 52 23 91 93 46 22 35 4 134 33 7 218 129 218 118 118 553 461 553 553 553 553 335 553 333 335 531 155 553 553 347 333 155 230 127 155 531 184 533 23 6 184 500 134 553 553 553 155 155 218 335 335 155 230 184 33 4 107 116 1 2 1 1 2 1 2 2 4 4 4 1 4 1 1 4 4 4 2 2 4 4 4 1 1 2 1 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 4 2 3,2 00 2 ,2 0 0 1 ,0 00 3 ,0 00 4,8 00 2 ,4 00 1,5 50 3 ,9 5 0 1 ,1 00 1,0 50 1 ,0 0 0 1,9 00 1 ,2 00 2 ,0 0 0 1 ,7 00 3 ,7 00 28 35 35 35 35 49 37 49 37 37 54 54 54 50 50 16 62 23 15 21 31 31 31 59 00 00 56 20 85 30 20 00 202 500 218 187 347 342 35 4 127 46 1 461 155 18 4 184 531 155 112 4 4 4 1 1 1 1 4 4 4 1 4 3 3 3 3 WARWICK ELECTRONICS INC FORREST CITY L 1106 1,7 00 WILSON + CO INC + 1 OTHER CORP 9,3 50 Total: 39 agreements........... . . . 1 4 8 0 0 0 September 32 53 885 1687 3772 8715 3318 7406 7411 3348 4157 4C08 40 09 4C07 40 10 2915 3222 1923 32 74 6302 213 40 19 40 22 3295 1904 672C 1264 3747 208 63 23 67 33 7716 7720 68 12 79 47 868 32 26 32 25 63 18 67 47 67 99 3364 1667 39 219 1285 73 02 21 14 3351 29 35 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 €9 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 C9 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 ACME CLEVELAND CORP LU 19 AM APPAREL MFRS ASSN LUS 8 101 4 213 AM CYANAMID CO IRC FIBERS CO SUB PAINESVILLE AMANA REFRIGERATION INC ASSOC UNDERGROUND CONTRS INC BANGOR PUNTA OPERATIONS INC WAUKESHA MOTOR C BLDG MANAGERS ASSN JANITORS CHICAGO BRONX REALTY ADVISORY BOARD LU 32 -E CATERPILLAR TRACTOR CO TOWMOTOR CORP SUB CHRYSLER CORP CHRYSLER CORP OFF ♦ CLERICAL CHRYSLER CORP PARTS DEPOTS CHRYSLER CORP PRODUCTION MAINTENCE CHRYSLER CORPORATION ENGINEERING CRANE COMPANY LU 20 47 DEERE AND CO IOWA AND ILLINOIS ELEC HOSE ♦ RUBBER CO FMC CORP LINK BELT BEARING DIV 1 OTH L 1150 FOOD EMPLOYERS COUNCIL INC FOOD EMPLRS COUNCIL INC LU 563 FORD MOTOR CO GENL MOTORS CORP GENL MOTORS CORP GENL MOTORS CORP INLAND MFG DIV DAYTON LU87 GREAT A ♦ P TEA CO LU 590 GREATER NY FOLDING BOX ♦ DISPLAY MFRS ASSN GTE SYLVANIA LU 1654 OTTAWA HYGRADE FOODS PRODUCTS CORP 9 LUS I - A CORRUGATED BOX COMPANIES I - A IND SUPER MARKETS GROCERY DIV LU 655 I - A LAUNDRY WORKERS AGMT SEATTLE I - A LINEN SUPPLIERS LU 284 I - A RETAIL GROCERY STORES ST LOUIS LU 655 I - A SECURITY AGENCIES WATERFRONT AGMT CALIF I - A SPORTSWEAR AGMT INTL HARVESTER CO MAIN LABOR AGMT PROD-MAINT INTL HARVESTER CO CLERICAL ♦ TECHNICAL INTL HARVESTER CO DEPOT 4 TRANSFER CONTRACT KROGER CO PITTS STORES LU 590 LOBLAW INC NY 4 PENN MCCORD CORP WASHINGTON LOCAL 2041 MILES LABORATORIES INC ELKHART RAVENNA ARSENAL INC SCHULDERBERG KURDLE CO INC SCOTT PAPER CO CHESTER PLANT LU 44 8 SEATTLE-KING CNTY PHARMACEUTICAL 4 1 OTH SO CALIF SHOE MFRS ASSN LOS ANGELES 122 SPERRY RAND CORP VICKERS DIV OMAHA 171 STRUCT STEEL 4 ORNAMENTAL IRON ASSN NJ T ota l: 49 agreements........... 1663 32 92 3245 33 11 3293 60 60 40 18 60 14 40 23 4169 68 23 6723 68 17 6311 63 24 8498 10 1C 1C 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 AMERICAN ENKA CORP LOWLAND LU 815 BORG WARNER CORPORATION YORK DIV BROWN 4 SHARPE MFG CO LU 1088 4 1142 DIST 64 CARRIER CORP LU 527 CHRYSLER CORPORATION AIRTEMP DIVISION DAYTON POWER 4 LIGHT CO LU 175 EATON YALE AND TOWNE INC AXLE DIV FLORIDA POWER 4 LIGHT CO 11 LOCALS GENL MOTORS CORP GENL MOTORS CORP PLT PROTECTION EMPS GREAT A 4 P TEA CO INC LU 525 GREAT A4 P TEA CO SCRANTON UNIT PENN «* NY I - A CHAIN 4 INDEPENDENT FOOD STORES LU 1564 I - A OIL PETRO CHEM 4 LIQUID PROD DRVRS AGMT I - A PROVISION SALESMEN 4 DISTRIBUTORS LU 62 7 I - A SOUTHEASTERN STATES BOILERMAKER EMPLRS October See fo o t n o te s at end o f t a b l e . 23 T a b le 8. C o lle c t iv e barg aining a g r e e m e n t s c o v e rin g 1,000 w o r k e r s or m ore ex p irin g in 1973 by m o n th of e x p i r a t i o n — C o n tin u e d AGREE MENT NO. COMPANY AND LOCATION1 EXP. DATE NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT October— Continued 60 64 7962 6746 4028 41 70 381 3332 3604 386 6779 5231 7903 1420 1935 1103 40 92 40 42 1676 3608 6081 1C 10 1C 1C 1C 10 1C 10 1C 10 1C 1C 1C 1C 10 1C 1C 1C 1C 1C 2,8 0 0 JERSEY CENTRAL POWER ♦ LIGHT CO + 0TH 7 LUS 1,7 00 KAISER FOUNDATION HOSPITALS LU 25C 1,300 KROGER CO MACK TRUCK INC MASTER SHOP AGMT 7 ,0 0 0 MACK TRUCKS INC OFF AGMT NJ PA NY ♦ MD 4LUS 6,9 00 MARHGEFER PACKING COMPANY MUNCIE 1,0 00 MASSEY-FERGUSCN INC MASTER 4 LUS 1 ,8 50 MCGRAW-EDISON POWER SYSTEMS DIV CANONSBURG 2 ,2 5 0 MONFCRT PACKING CO LU 641 1,1 50 3 ,5 00 MOUNTAIN STATES EMPLRS COUNCIL RET GROC DENV OREGON DRAYMEN ♦ WAREHOUSEMENS ASSN 2 ,5 00 PITTSBURGH BUILDINGS ASSN 1 ,8 00 PRINTING INDUSTRIES OF METRO NY INC 3 ,5 0 0 RUBBERMAID INC WOOSTER LU 302 1 ,0 50 SIMMONS CO MASTER MULTI-PLANT AGMT 3 ,9 00 TRW INC TAPCG VALVES MAIN PLANT REPLACEMENT 5 ,0 0 0 1,100 TRW INC VAN DYKE WORKS WARREN UNION CARBIDE CORP CHEM-PLASTIC SO CHARL 1,500 1,1 00 WESTCN INSTRUMENTS INC WESTON INSTRUMENTS DIV WISC PUBLIC SERVICE CORP LU 310 1,1 00 Total: 36 agreements... ........... 87 750 November 49 80 54 37 37 20 35 36 20 54 42 73 27 30 25 37 37 28 36 49 22 93 00 20 00 32 00 23 84 84 00 23 21 31 00 31 34 55 22 35 127 751 155 553 553 155 553 335 155 184 531 118 204 333 205 500 553 218 500 129 4 4 4 4 4 1 4 1 1 2 2 2 2 1 4 4 1 1 1 4 3215 360C 32 16 329 2131 1647 41 59 4 0 17 2643 6765 820 75C4 240 83 09 7508 67 43 52 18 2328 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 ALLIS-CHALMERS MFG CO LU 248 ALL IS-CHALMERS MFG CO LU 1036 ALLIS-CHALMERS MFG CO LU 1027 SPRINGF CHICAGO BAKERY EMPLOYERS LABOR COUNCIL CHICAGO RAWHICE MFG CO ELGIN D LU 221 COLGATE PALMOLIVE CO JERSEY CITY PLT EATON CORP SAGINAW DIV LU 43 3 EATON YALE AND TOWNE INC ESCO CORP FOOD EMPLOYERS COUNCIL INC LU 421 GARMENT INDUSTRIES OF ILLINOIS CHICAGO GREATER BOSTON HOTEL AND MOTOR INN ASSN GREATER NY MILK DEALERS LABOR COMM GULF RESOURCES + CHEMICAL-BUNKER HILL SUB HOTEL ♦ MOTEL ASSN OF GREATER ST LOUIS I - A BUTCHERS ♦ RET FISH ♦ POULTRY AGMT LU 115 I - A CENTRAL STATES AREA TANK TRUCK AGMT I - A CHINAWARE MANUFACTURERS GROUP I - A EASTERN AREA TANK HAUL I -A IND STANDARD RESTAURANT CONTRACT I - A NEW YORK STOCK EXCHG ♦ STOCK CLEARG CORP I - A RETAIL DISTRIBUTION AGREEMENT LU 229 I - A RETAIL MEAT MARKETS FROZEN FOOD LOCKER IMPERIAL READING CORP LAFOLLETTE DIV KROGER CO LU 227 LITTON INDUSTRIES INC JEFFERSON ELECTRIC DIV MASONITE CORPORATION LAUREL MEAD CORP PKG D CONTAINER PLTS ATLANTA 527 MONTGOMERY WARD AND CO INC INTRA LU 876 NO NJ MILK IND LABOR COMMITTEE PROCTOR ♦ GAMBLE MFG CO RCA GLOBAL COMMUNICATIONS INC COMM TRADE DIV ST LOUIS REST OWNERS ASSN 5 LUS SYLVANIA ELECTRIC PRODUCTS INC SALEM U S POTTERS ASSN T ota l: 35 agr eements... 3 ,0 00 1,2 00 1 ,5 00 2 ,0 00 1,000 1,5 00 1,100 3,2 5 0 1 ,0 00 5,0 0 0 2,0 0 0 1,9 00 3 ,5 0 0 1,3 00 3,0 0 0 1,5 00 5 ,0 0 0 1,3 00 2 , 20C 2 ,5 0 0 2 ,2 00 1 ,2 00 1,8 00 1 ,0 0 0 2,6 00 1 ,0 00 1,5 00 1 ,2 00 1,6 50 1 ,3 00 1,0 00 1 ,7 00 1 ,5 00 1,0 50 4 ,0 00 35 36 35 20 31 28 37 37 33 54 23 70 20 10 70 54 42 32 42 58 62 54 54 23 54 36 26 26 53 20 28 48 58 36 32 35 23 33 33 33 22 34 00 00 93 33 14 21 82 43 93 00 00 00 43 21 93 93 62 61 33 64 58 34 22 20 00 43 14 00 553 553 553 531 155 500 107 553 500 155 134 145 531 500 145 155 531 174 531 145 163 155 155 335 155 127 343 175 184 531 500 531 145 347 174 1 1 l 2 1 1 1 4 4 2 2 2 2 1 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 1 1 1 1 4 4 2 4 4 2 1 2 1 ,7 00 1 ,2 00 1,7 00 1,0 00 1 ,3 50 1,0 00 4,5 00 2 ,0 0 0 1 0 ,000 1,2 00 1,0 00 2,5 0 0 80 80 33 26 73 49 23 53 37 20 16 16 93 93 63 23 00 22 00 34 00 74 23 23 118 751 161 23 0 32 3 127 134 305 553 155 531 129 2 2 4 4 4 1 4 1 4 1 2 2 5254 7141 74 17 6778 67 72 872 6819 37 32 1256 1292 65 26 334 1651 5776 7127 3756 23 30 December 7931 7926 26 51 1278 79 04 60 03 82 2 6537 4 0 06 369 8812 8809 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 AFFILIATED HOSPITALS OF SAN FRAN LU 250 AFFILIATED HOSPS OF SAN FRAN REG NURSES ALABAMA PIPE CO ♦ ANNISTON FOUNDRY CO LU 3 2 4 AMERICAN CAN COMPANY ASSOCIATED PRESS LU 222 ATLANTIC CITY ELECTRIC CO LU 210 BOBBIE BROOKS INC NATL AGMT BORMANS INC YANKEE DISTRIBUTORS INC DIV BUDD CO NATIONAL AGMT CAMPBELL SOUP CO PARIS LU 1229 CONTRACTORS ASSN OF E PA HVY ♦ HWY CONTRS ASSN OF E PA 29 COS HWY See i o tn o te s at end o f t a b l e . 24 T a b le 8. C o lle c t iv e ba rg a ining a g r e e m e n t s c o v e rin g 1,000 w o r k e r s or m ore e x pirin g in 1973 by m o n th of e x p i r a t i o n — C o n tin u e d AGREE MENT NO. EXP. DATE COMPANY AND LOCATION1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE 16 37 37 28 54 20 36 54 54 20 24 33 21 49 33 49 36 36 54 27 70 36 38 42 34 23 23 00 51 00 23 93 93 93 23 33 63 61 34 14 93 22 00 93 93 93 56 71 50 35 UNION UNIT December— Cont inued 8811 40 16 40 15 1633 6320 3C3 36 93 67 29 67 56 209 1012 2560 505 6048 2627 6073 3694 3660 6755 1408 75 24 3767 44 22 5255 29 44 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 CCNTRS ASSN OF E PA HVY-HWY + RR 29 COS 4 ,4 0 0 2,8 00 DANA C0RP EASTERN FRAME DIV READING L 3733 DANA C0RP TOLEDO DISTRIBUTION CENTER 9,0 0 0 OUPONT El DE NEMOURS ♦ CO SEAFORD PLT 2 ,4 0 0 FELR LUS 500 929 470 676 1,5 00 3 , 30C HERSHEY FOODS CORP LU 464 HUGHES AIRCRAFT CO LU 1553 7,0 00 I - A FOOD STORE CONTRACT ALAMEDA COUNTY 4 0 ,000 I - A GROCERY + DELICATESSEN 3 ,1 00 3 , COO I -A IND PACKING HOUSES LU 195 I - A PICTURE FRAME MFG COS 2 ,0 0 0 I - A SOIL PIPE COMPANIES 1,7 00 1,2 00 LOEWS CORP LORILLARD DIV LOUISVILLE LU 201 1,8 00 MICHIGAN CONSOLIDATED GAS CO LU 8C MOORE DROP FORGING CO INC LU 2280 4 1,1 00 PACIFIC GAS ♦ ELEC CO 1 ,8 50 RADIO CORP OF AM NEW JERSEY 3 ,6 5 0 19,200 RADIO CORP OF AM NATL AGMT RETAIL GROCERS ASSN SAN JOSE AREA 428 4 ,6 5 0 1,000 SAN FRAN NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSN LU 52 5,7 00 SAN MATEO COUNTY RESTAURANT HOTEL OWNERS l,2 C O SYLVANIA ELECTRIC PRODS INC SMITHFI ELD TIMEX CORP LITTLE ROCK LU 921 3 ,4 0 0 UNITED PARCEL SER INC ATLANTIC AREA 20 LuC 1 ,0 00 1,650 WEST BEND CO WEST BEND DIV LU 865 37 agreements............. . . 15675C Total: AGREEMENTS, t o t a l ........ 720; WORKERS, t o t a l . . . , 600 335 553 500 531 108 119 184 184 155 205 161 203 118 101 319 500 127 184 323 145 346 218 531 107 2 1 4 4 2 1 4 3 3 3 3 3 1 4 4 4 4 4 2 2 2 1 l 4 4 3,512,500 2 See appendix A fo r abbrev ia tio ns. See appendix B f o r d e f i n i t i o n s o f codes. NOTE: Data based on agreements on f i l e with the Bureau o f Labor S t a t i s t i c s , excluding r a ilr o a d s , a i r l i n e s , and government agreements. 25 T a b le 9. C o lle c t iv e b a rg a in in g a g r e e m e n t s co verin g 1,000 w o r k e r s or m ore expirin g in 1973, by in d u stry AGREE MENT NO. EXP. DATE NUMBER OF WORKERS COMPANY AND LOCATION1 CODES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT F ish eries 82 04 06 SEAFOOD PRODUCERS ASSN OF NEW BEDFORD MASS 1*200 Tota l: 1 agreement........... ......... 1200 09 14 186 2 8309 11 1,3 00 GULF RESOURCES + CHEMICAL-BUNKER HILL SUB Tota l: 1 agreement........... ......... 1300 Crude petroleum and natural gas 10 82 500 1 8327 8332 03 03 MOBIL OIL C0RP MOBIL OIL CORP E+P D LA + TEX Total: 1*550 1,5 50 2 agreements........ ......... 3100 13 13 00 70 500 500 4 4 8743 8728 8800 86 32 8450 8752 8613 8622 8768 8671 8864 8645 8770 8634 8429 8436 8646 8644 8717 8863 8875 8618 8635 8725 8461 8409 8414 8408 862C 8431 8601 8741 8447 8697 8843 86C8 8786 88 16 8782 8652 8848 8849 8594 88 47 84 55 87 65 8427 84 60 86 12 8402 8401 87 97 86 64 86 14 8567 8836 84 58 84 59 84 20 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 04 C4 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 C4 04 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 08 AGC FLORIDA WEST COAST CHPT 7 LUS AGC OF AM INC BATON ROUGE CHAPTR 3 LUS AGC OF AM INC N MEX BLDG BRANCH 4 UNS ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF AM BALTIMORE BLDRS CHAP ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF CONN INC LAB REL DIV ASSOC GENL CONTRS N MEX BLDG BR ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF AM INC BALT BLDRS CHAP BLDRS ASSN OF KANSAS CITY EMPLOYERS NEGOTIATING COMMITTEE EVANSVILLE GENL CONTRS ASSN OF BRIDGEPORT INC L 665 AGC OF AM INC ALASKA CHAP ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF AM RHODE ISLAND CHAPTER ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF AM GA TENN ALA BLDG TRADES EMPLRS ASSN BLDG TRADES EMPLRS ASSN ♦ 1 OTH NYC VIC CARPENTER CONTRS ASSN ♦ 1 OTHER OHIO CCNSTR EMPLRS LAB RELS ASSN OF N Y STATE INC CONTRACTING PLASTERERS ASSN PROVIOENCE GENL BLDG CONTRS ASSN INC GENL CONTRS ASSN OF THE LEHIGH VALLEY INC I - A CARPENTERS GENL CONTRACTING AGMT NORTH TEXAS CONTRS ASSN 3 LOCALS NORTH TEXAS CONTRS ASSN LU 648 AND 859 SHEET METAL EMPLRS ASSN ♦ OTHERS SCUTHW MICH CONTRS ASSN ASSOC GENL CONTRS + OTHERS ARIZ ASSOC GENL CONTRS OREGON COLUMBIA CHAPTER ASSOC GENL CONTRS HVY HWY UTILITY BUILDING BLDG CONTRS ASSN OF INDIANAPOLIS INC BLDG TRADES EMPLRS ASSN OF WESTCH ♦ PUTNAM BLDRS ASSN OF CHICAGO COOK ♦ DUPAGE CNTY OETROIT MASON CONTRS ASSN INC 2 LCLS 33 4 1076 EASTERN NY CONSTRUCTION EMPLRS INC EASTERN NY CONSTRUCTION EMPLOYERS INC EASTERN NY CONSTRUCTION EMPLOYERS INC AL8ANY GENL CONTRS ASSN OF LOUISVILLE INDIANA AND KY GENL CONTRS ASSN OF LOUISVILLE INC AND 2 OTHS HOME BUILDERS ASSN OF METROPOLITAN PORTLAND HUDSON VALLEY CONSTR EMPLRS ASSN INC HUDSON VALLEY CONSTRUCTION EMPLRS ASSN 1 OTH MASTER BLDRS ASSN OF WESTERN PA INC COUNC 40 MASTER BLDRS ASSN OF WESTERN PA INC 22 64 MASTER BLORS ASSN OF WESTERN PA MONROEVILLE MASTER BLDRS ASSN OF WESTERN PA INC 526 MASTER BUILDERS ASSN OF WESTERN PA INC OHIO CONTRS ASSN + ASSOC GENL CONTRS SO NEV GENL CONTRACTORS ASSN ♦ 2 OTHERS SCUTHW MICH CONTRS ASSN AGC OF AM ATLANTA ♦ 2 OTH ASSOC GENL CONTRACTORS + 2 OTH SO CALIF ASSOC GENL CONTRACTORS ♦ 2 OTHERS SO CALIF ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF OHIO AKRON D ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF NJ 3LUS ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF AM INC GA BRANCH 438 BLDG TRADE EMPLRS OF CENTRAL NY BLDG TRADES EMPLOYERS ASSN WESTCH + PUTNAM OHIO VALLEY BLDRS EXCHANGE INC QUAD-CITY BUILDERS ASSN 9 LUS ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF AM INC T ota l: 59 agreements............. . . 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 59 72 85 52 16 85 52 40 32 16 94 15 00 31 21 31 21 15 23 23 50 74 74 31 34 86 90 90 32 21 33 34 21 21 21 00 61 90 21 21 23 23 23 23 23 31 88 34 58 93 93 31 20 58 21 21 00 00 63 119 129 600 143 143 119 119 119 143 143 145 143 143 143 143 119 143 143 143 119 119 119 143 187 143 600 129 143 119 129 129 143 119 143 116 119 143 119 143 119 531 119 129 168 119 119 119 119 119 168 119 119 129 143 119 531 119 119 60 0 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 Metal mining Building c onst ructi on— general cont ra ct ors See fo o t n o te s a t end o f t a b l e . 26 2 ,9 00 1 ,0 00 4 ,9 0 0 3 ,0 00 4 ,0 0 0 3,7 00 2 ,6 00 5 ,5 50 12,000 1,000 1,0 00 1,2 00 1,200 3 ,5 0 0 3 ,0 00 6 ,0 0 0 1,6 00 1,000 10,000 1,0 00 2 ,0 0 0 4 ,7 0 0 3 ,2 00 1,1 00 2,0 00 12,150 5,3 00 5,5 00 2 ,0 00 1,800 3 ,0 00 5 ,5 00 3 ,0 0 0 3 ,5 00 1,0 00 1,800 1,2 00 1,0 00 1,6 00 1,2 00 1,5 00 1,000 7 ,0 0 0 1,1 00 7,0 00 1,2 50 1 ,5 00 1 ,5 00 3 ,5 0 0 4 ,0 00 45 ,0 0 0 1 ,5 00 3,0 00 3 ,0 0 0 1,0 00 3 ,5 0 0 1 ,0 00 1 ,4 00 4 ,9 00 2 2 6350 T a b le 9. C o lle c t iv e b a rg a in in g a g r e e m e n t s co v erin g 1,000 w o r k e r s or m o re expiring in 1973, by in d u s t r y — C o n tin u e d AGREE MENT NO. NUMBER OF WORKERS CGMPANY AND LOCATION1 EXP. DATE CODES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT Construction other than bu ilding co nst ruction — general contracto rs 8492 8484 8845 879C 8844 8680 8846 8486 8481 8798 8808 8810 8813 8682 8862 8477 8499 8485 8599 8428 8606 8607 8665 8745 8631 85C0 8467 8714 8476 8501 8724 88 67 8497 8676 8668 8479 8777 8498 8812 8811 8809 02 02 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 06 06 06 06 06 07 07 07 08 08 08 10 12 12 12 BLDG TRADES EMPLRS ASSN MASS NEW ENG ROAD BLDGS ASSN MASS LU 4 AGC OF ILLINOIS HEAVY + HWY CATSKILL MOUNTAIN CONTRS ASSN INC FCUNOATION ♦ MARINE CONTRS ASSN OF NEW ENG MADISON EMPLOYERS COUNCIL BLDG ♦ CONST LOCAL NEW ENG ROAD BLDRS ASSN INC CONN LAB RELS DIV NEW ENGLAND RCAD BLDRS ASSN CONN LAB RELS DIV NEW ENGLAND ROAD BLDRS ASSN INC BLDG TRADES EMPLOYERS ASSN + 1 OTHER CLEVE CGNTRS ASSN OF E PA 5 COS 3 LUS CONTRS ASSN OF E PA HVY-HWY CONSTR CONTRS ASSN OF EASTERN PENN CCNTRS ASSN OF WESTCHESTER CNTY INC DELAWARE CONTRS ASSN LU S-542+542A+542B GENL BLDG CONTRS OF AM LUS 5 4 2 - 5 4 2 A - 5 4 2 B I - A SOUTH CENTRAL EMPLOYERS FIELD CONST NEW ENGLAND ROAD BUILDERS ASSN MASS LAB RELS WISCONSIN ROAD BUILDERS ASSN AGC BLDG HVY ♦ HWY WASHINGTON AGC CF AM WASH LU 61 2 ♦ 302 ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF AM WISC CHPTR ASSOC GENL CONTRS H+RR ALABAMA CHAPTER ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF AM OREGON COLUMBIA CHPTR ASSOC GENL CONTRS ORE COLUMBIA CHPT 2 OTHS MASTER BUILDERS ASSN WESTERN PA INC AGC OF AM CALIF + 2 OTHS ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF NJ NO NJ CONTRACTORS ASSN OF WESTCHESTER COUNTY INC UNDERGROUND CONTRACTORS ASSN LU 2 UNDERGROUND CONTRS ASSN + OTHS ILL LU 150 AGC OF AM INC ORE-COLUMBIA CHAPTR I - A MISSOURI RIVER BASIN AGMT SC ILL CONTRS ASSN MICH ROAD BLDRS ASSN LAB RELS DIV MICH ROAD BUILDERS ASSN 247 MICHIGAN ROAD BLDRS ASSN HVY-HWY CONSTR I - A SOUTHEASTERN STATES BOILERMAKER EMPLRS CONTRACTORS ASSN OF E PA HVY ♦ HWY CONTRS ASSN OF E PA HVY-HWY ♦ RR 29 COS CONTRS ASSN OF E PA 29 COS HWY Tota l: 41 agreements........... 8562 8795 8851 8517 85 08 8570 8839 8510 8519 88 74 8678 8568 8791 8855 8539 8569 8552 8699 8722 8739 8738 8690 8762 8721 8860 8521 8566 8545 8732 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 03 04 04 04 04 04 C4 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 05 05 05 AGC OF AM BATON ROUGE LU 1098 ASSOC MECH CONTRS OF BATON ROUGE INC BLDG TRADES EMPLRS ASSN OF WESTERN MASS INC BUILDERS ASSN OF KANSAS CITY DIST COUNCIL 3 GULF COAST CONTRS ASSN AND 2 OTH ASSNS LU 195 MADISON EMPLRS COUNCIL BLDG + CONST CONTRS D MASON CONTRS ASSN INC OF BALTIMORE NATL AUTOMATIC SPRINKLER + FIRE CONTROL ASSN PAINTING ♦ DECORATING CONTRS ASSN ASSN OF PLUMB-HEATING COOLING CONTRS ROCHESTE BLDG TRADES EMPLRS ASSN OF BOSTON ♦ 2 OTHS BLDG TRADES EMPLRS ASSN WESTCHESTER ♦ PUTNAM CLEVE PLUMBING CONTRS ASSN CONTRACTING PLASTERERS ASSN OF SO CALIF INC DELAWARE CONTRACTORS ASSN INC ALLIED D GENL BLDG CONTRS ASSN INC OF PA LATHING CONTRACTORS OF SO CALIF LOS ANGELES MASON CONTRACTORS ASSN OF BALT MECH CONTRS ASSN OF CLEVE LU 120 MECHANICAL CONTRS ASSN OF PHILA INC LU 420 MECHANICAL CONTRS ASSN OF PHILA INC LU 690 NATL ELEC CONTRS ASSN ST PAUL CHAPTER LU 110 NATL ELECTRICAL CONTRS ASSN GR CLEVE 38 NC OHIO MASON CONTRS ASSN INC NORTH TEXAS CGNTRS ASSN LUS 100 ♦ 146 PAINTING + DECORATING CONTRS OF WESTCHESTER AGC OF OHIO CINN DIV DIST COUNCIL BLDG CONTRS + MASCN BLDRS ASSN NYC AREA EASTERN NY CONSTRUCTION EMPLRS INC 4,1 00 4 ,5 00 2,1 00 1,600 4 ,1 00 1 ,3 00 2,8 0 0 9,0 00 9 ,5 0 0 2,5 00 5,0 0 0 1,5 00 4 ,0 0 0 1,700 6 ,0 0 0 5 ,0 00 3 ,2 0 0 3 ,5 0 0 2,4 00 1 ,6 00 1,5 00 2 ,4 00 1,4 00 1,800 6 ,4 0 0 5,0 00 4 ,5 0 0 2 ,0 0 0 1,900 1,500 4,5 00 1,000 4 ,8 00 5,0 00 5 ,0 0 0 1 ,4 00 3 ,0 0 0 3 ,7 0 0 1 ,0 00 4,4 00 2 ,5 00 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 14 14 33 21 14 00 16 16 00 31 23 23 23 21 51 00 70 14 35 91 91 35 63 90 90 23 93 22 21 33 33 92 00 33 30 34 34 CO 23 23 23 129 129 119 143 129 143 115 143 119 116 129 119 143 129 129 129 112 531 60 0 531 129 129 600 531 119 143 531 116 143 143 129 116 112 143 143 531 129 112 531 60 0 129 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 2 4 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 4 2 3 2 2 2 2 3 2 2 2 2 ,1 50 1,8 00 1,0 00 1,8 00 2,1 00 2 ,1 00 2,0 0^ 6 ,1 5 0 10,000 1,1 00 1,000 4 ,2 0 0 1 ,7 00 2 ,8 0 0 1,500 8 ,0 00 1,000 1,0 00 1 ,7 00 2 , ICO 1,7 00 1,200 1,6 50 2 ,4 00 1,050 1,0 00 3 ,1 0 0 9 ,0 0 0 1,000 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 72 72 14 40 74 35 52 00 33 21 14 21 31 93 51 23 93 52 31 23 00 41 31 31 74 00 00 21 21 119 170 143 164 170 119 143 170 164 170 115 119 170 168 143 119 147 115 170 170 170 127 127 115 170 164 119 115 115 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 Construction— s p e c ia l trade contra ctors See fo o t n o te s at end o f t a b l e . 27 T a b le 9. C o lle c t iv e b a rg a in in g a g r e e m e n t s co v erin g 1,000 w o r k e r s or m ore expirin g in 1973 by i n d u s t r y — C o n tin u e d AGREE MENT NO. EXP. DATE COMPANY AND LOCATION1 NUMBER OF WORKERS COOES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT Construction— sp e c ia l trade c on t r a c t o r s - -Continued 8583 87C2 8556 8822 8776 8531 8533 8532 8511 8814 8854 8529 8713 859C 8726 8831 8783 8715 05 C5 05 05 05 G5 05 05 06 06 06 06 07 €7 07 08 ce 09 IRONWORKER EMPLOYERS ASSN OF WESTERN PENN 2 , 200 MASON CONTRS ASSN OF OREGON AND OTHS 1 ,0 00 MASON CONTRS ASSN OF ALLEGHENY CNTY 1,9 50 MECHANICAL CONTRS ASSN OF W PENN PITTS 1,1 00 NATL ELEC CONTR ASSN WESTCHESTER-FAIRFIELD 1,2 00 NATL ELEC CONTRS ASSN SOUTHEAST TEXAS CHAPTER 1,500 NATL ELEC CONTRS ASSN ST LOUIS CHAPTER LU 1 2 ,2 00 NATL ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS ASSN LU 11 5 ,6 00 ASSN OF CONTRG PLUMBERS OF THE CITY OF NY 2 ,2 00 ASSOC SHEET METAL ROOF + INSULAT CONTRS LU 4C 1,2 00 MECH CONTRS ASSN OF ST LOUIS MO INC LU 562 1,5 00 NATL ELEC CONTRS ASSN DC CHAPTER 1,600 ARIZONA STEEL FIELD ERECTORS ASSN 1,2 00 FLOOR COVERING ASSN OF SO CALIF + 3 OTH 2 ,0 5 0 NATL ELEC CONTRS ASSN INC WESTERN PENN CHPTR 1,0 50 ASSOCIATED UNDERGROUND CONTRS INC PONTIAC 5 ,4 0 0 MASTER PLUMBERS ASSN BOSTON LU 12 1,2 00 ASSOC UNDERGROUND CONTRS INC 1 ,8 00 T ota l: 47 agreements........... . . . 11 32 50 Ordnance and a c c e sso r ie s 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 23 92 23 23 21 74 43 93 21 00 43 50 86 93 23 34 14 34 116 143 115 170 127 127 127 127 170 187 170 127 116 164 127 143 170 129 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 20 26 39 C3 06 C9 DOW CHEMICAL CO ROCKY FLATS DIV LU 15 44 0 WESTINGHOUSE ELEC CORP AEROSPACE DIV RAVENNA ARSENAL INC Total: 3 agreements......... 1,950 2 ,0 00 1,0 50 19 19 19 84 52 31 335 127 335 1 1 1 1,5 00 1,5 50 1,6 00 8,0 00 7 ,5 00 1 ,2 00 3 ,5 0 0 1,8 00 2 ,7 00 2 ,8 0 0 8 ,0 00 1 ,0 00 1 ,4 00 1,0 00 1,4 00 1 ,2 00 1,0 50 2 ,1 0 0 4 ,1 00 2 ,0 0 0 1,4 00 1 ,9 00 1 , 90C 2 ,7 0 0 1,2 00 1,5 00 5 6 ,550 1 ,5 00 1,2 00 1 ,0 00 7,5 00 1 ,5 00 2 ,6 0 0 1 ,7 50 3 ,0 0 0 2 ,4 0 0 3 ,0 0 0 2 ,8 0 0 8,3 00 9 ,3 5 0 2 ,5 0 0 1,5 50 1 ,1 00 1,0 00 1 ,1 50 20 20 20 20 20 20 50 31 43 93 93 22 93 33 91 33 93 14 33 33 33 46 00 21 35 93 93 90 90 22 52 92 93 92 43 93 CO 00 42 42 35 00 00 00 00 00 93 00 52 32 84 600 155 30 4 531 531 155 531 531 531 155 531 155 531 531 531 155 304 531 304 531 531 531 531 531 304 531 531 531 531 480 155 155 155 155 155 155 155 524 155 155 155 155 155 155 155 2 1 3 2 2 1 3 2 2 2 2 1 3 3 2 1 4 2 2 2 1 4 4 2 2 4 2 2 3 3 4 4 1 1 1 4 4 4 4 4 2 4 1 1 i Food and kindred products 376 332 311 228 365 362 26C 226 246 202 344 261 371 387 342 384 363 307 308 309 254 252 389 317 306 248 253 258 238 338 200 203 205 210 211 217 218 220 222 223 213 208 219 381 386 01 02 02 03 03 03 03 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 06 06 06 06 06 07 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 09 09 09 1C 10 DELMARVA POULTRY PROCESSORS ASSN MD ♦ DEL CAMPBELL SOUP CO NAPOLEON LU 146 I - A BREWERIES ANHEUSER-BUSH + FALSTAFF DAIRY INDUSTRY INO REL ASSN SO CALIF MASTER CAIRY INOUSTRY INDUS RELS ASSN MASTER OFFICE GENL FOODS CORP MAXWELL HOUSE DIV HOBOKEN I - A DRIED FRUIT INDUSTRY FRESNO ♦ MADERA ASSOC MILK DEALERS INC CHICAGO ASSOC PRODUCERS + PACKERS INC 4 LUS CHICAGO MEAT PACKERS + WHOLESALERS ASSN FROZEN FOOD EMPLOYERS ASSN GCRTCN CORP GLOUCESTER I - A SOFT DRINK DRIVERS + HELPERS LU 74 4 I - A SOFT DRINK INSIDE WORKERS 36 COS LU 74 4 ICE CREAM COUNCIL 13 COS IOWA BEEF PACKERS INC HIDE DIV DAKOTA CITY STANDARD BRANDS FLEISCHMANN MFG DIV BREWERS BOARD OF TRADE INC BREWERY PROP OF MILW MILLER PABST SCHLITZ L 9 CALIF BREWERS ASSN CAMPBELL SOUP COMPANY LU 228 DEL MONTE CORP PLTS 126 + 127 LUS 67 0 + 809 DIAMOND FRUIT GROWERS INC LU 883 ESSEX BREWERS LABOR RELATIONS ASSOCIATION ASSOC BREWERS INC BALTIMORE BLUE LAKE PACKERS INC SALEM 67 0 CALIF PROCESSORS INC EUGENE FRUIT GROWERS ASSN I - A ADOENDUM TO MASTER DAIRY AGMT ST LOUIS I - A DRIED FRUIT PROCESSORS CALIF LU 11 ARMOUR + CO MASTEF AGMT CUDAHY CO MASTER AGMT DUBUQUE PACKING CO LU 150 MAYER OSCAR ♦ CO DAVENPORT MAYER OSCAR + CO MADISON MORRELL JOHN ♦ CO MASTER AGMT RATH PACKING CO IOWA TEX ILL GA NC SWIFT ♦ CO SWIFT ♦ CO MASTER AGREEMENT WILSON ♦ CO INC ♦ 1 OTHER CORP FOOD EMPLRS COUNCIL INC LU 563 HYGRADE FOODS PRODUCTS CORP 9 LUS SCHULDERBERG KURDLE CO INC MARHCEFER PACKING COMPANY MUNCIE MONFORT PACKING CO LU 641 See fo o t n o te s at end o f t a b l e . 28 20 20 20 20 2C 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 T a b le 9. C o lle c t iv e b a rg a in in g a g r e e m e n t s co verin g 1,000 w o r k e r s or m o re expirin g in 1973 by in d u s t r y — C o n tin u e d AGREEMENT NO. COMPANY AND LOCATION 1 EXP. DATE NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT Food and kindred products— Continued 20 20 20 20 20 20 33 21 22 74 23 23 531 531 531 155 108 155 2 2 2 1 1 3 1 ,0 00 1,200 21 21 59 61 122 203 1 1 01 02 03 04 06 07 07 ERWIN MILLS INC 1 ,8 00 MUNSINGWEAR INC 1,4 00 1,1 50 MAGEE CARPET CO BLOOMSBURG 9 ,2 0 0 DAN RIVER INC CANVILLE DIV PACIFIC COLUMBIA MILLS INC LU 254 1,7 00 ASSN OF KNITTED FABRICS MFRS INC NYC 4,0 00 8 ,5 00 UNITED KNITWEAR MFRS LEAGUE INC Tota l: 7 agreements............... . . 2775 0 22 22 22 22 22 22 22 56 00 23 54 57 21 20 337 337 337 202 337 134 134 1 4 1 1 1 2 2 827 830 862 836 813 865 847 823 849 832 860 861 858 879 876 852 819 826 828 829 824 854 831 871 880 882 885 868 820 872 822 Cl 01 01 01 02 02 02 C2 02 02 02 04 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 06 06 07 07 08 09 09 11 11 12 5 ,0 00 NATL DRESS MFRS ASSN + POPULAR PRICED MFRS NEEDLE TRADES EMPLRS ASSN FALL RIVER 2 ,5 00 4 ,5 0 0 NEW ENG APPAREL MFRS ASSN RI MASS 4 LOCS POPULAR PRICE CONTRS ASSN + 1 OTH 5 5 , COC ASSOCIATED GARMENT INDUSTRIES OF ST LOUIS 3 , CCO 1 ,0 00 BOSTON APPAREL GUILD 6 LUS 5,0 00 CHILDRENS DRESS COT DR ♦ SPTSWR CONTRS GR NYC 1,5 00 INDUS ASSN HOUSEDRESS ROBE UNIFORM MFRS INC INDUS ASSN OF JUVENILE APPAREL MFRS INC 6 , COC 27 ,050 N J APPAREL CONTRS ASSN INC LU 220 PLEATERS STITCHERS AND EMBROIDERERS ASSN INC 5 ,0 00 SCHIFFLI LACE ♦ EMBROIDERY MFRS ASSN NJ 2,5 00 ATLANTIC APPAREL CONTRACTORS ASSN INC 9 ,0 0 0 1,0 00 GREATER BLOUSE SKIRT ♦ UNDERGARMENT ASSN GREATER BLOUSE SKIRT ♦ UNDERGARMENT ASSN INC 2 ,8 50 8 ,0 00 INFANTS AND CHILDRENS COAT ASSN INC + OTH LOS ANGELES COAT ♦ SUIT MFRS ASSN 2 ,5 00 4,QGC NATL ASSN OF BLOUSE MFRS INC NATL SKIRT + SPORTSWEAR ASSN 11,550 NATL WOMENS NECKWEAR + SCARF ASSN 1,0 00 NY COAT + SUIT ASSN INC 4 0 ,000 BELT ASSN INC NY 2,6 00 NEW ENG SPORTSWEAR MFRS ASSN 6 LUS 4 ,0 0 0 5 ,2 00 ASSN OF RAIN APPAREL CONTRS INC NY RAINCOAT MFRS ASSN INC 5,2 00 NATL NECKWEAR CONFERENCE LUS 250 253 11,100 AM APPAREL MFRS ASSN LUS 8 101 ♦ 213 3 ,2 0 0 I - A SPORTSWEAR AGMT 2,2 0 0 GARMENT INDUSTRIES OF ILLINOIS CHICAGO 2 ,0 00 1,0 00 IMPERIAL READING CORP LAFOLLETTE DIV BOBBIE BROOKS INC NATL AGMT 4,5 00 T ota l: 31 agreements............... . 2 3 8 9 5 0 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 00 14 10 00 00 14 21 21 21 22 21 22 23 21 00 00 93 21 CO 21 00 21 14 20 21 21 93 93 33 62 00 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 202 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 134 305 134 134 134 335 134 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 2 1 4 1022 1003 1014 1016 1012 04 05 05 06 07 12 QUAKER CITY LUMBER PRODUCTS ASSN POTLATCH FORESTS INC SOUTHERN BRADLEY DIV WOODWORKERS ASSN OF CHICAGO HILL DIVISION MANUFACTURING WOODWORKERS ASSN OF GREATER NY DETROIT LUMBERMENS ASSOCIATION I - A PICTURE FRAME MFG COS Tota l: 6 agreements............ 1,5 00 1 ,2 50 2,5 0 0 1 ,2 00 1 ,5 00 2 ,0 0 0 24 24 24 24 24 24 23 71 33 21 34 33 119 343 119 119 531 205 2 1 2 2 2 3 1128 1123 1112 1119 1105 1113 01 02 04 05 06 €7 DESOTO INC MPI INDUSTRIES D JACKSON LU 3031 DESOTO INC WARD FURNITURE MFG DIV FT SMITH EASTERN PRODUCTS CORP 3 PLANTS CHICAGO FURNITURE MFRS ASSN UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE MFRS ASSN OF CALIF HAMILTON MFG CO TWO RIVERS LU 1533 1 ,8 50 1,0 00 1 ,7 0 0 1,2 00 1,0 00 1,0 00 25 25 25 25 25 25 64 71 52 33 93 35 119 312 312 205 205 119 1 1 4 2 2 1 329 240 334 369 303 209 11 11 11 12 12 12 2 , 000 CHICAGO BAKERY EMPLOYERS LABOR COUNCIL 3 v 50C GREATER NY MILK DEALERS LABOR COMM 1.300 NO NJ MILK INC LABOR COMMITTEE 1 ,2 0C CAMPBELL SOUP CO PARIS LU 1229 3.3 00 HERSHEY FOODS CORP LU 4 6 4 3 ,0 00 I —A IND PACKING HOUSES LU 195 Tota l: 51 agreements............... . 19 00 50 511 505 06 12 SWISHER JOHN H + SON INC JACKSONVILLE LOEWS CORP L0R1LLARD DIV LOUISVILLE LU 201 Tota l: 2 agreements............. 611 620 625 602 614 618 621 Tobacco manufactures T ex tile m ill products Apparel and other fin ished products made from fa b r ic s and sim ilar materials Lumber and wood product s, except fu rn itu re ion Furniture and fix t u r e s See fo o t n o te s at end o f t a b l e . 29 T a b le 9. C o lle c t iv e b a rg a in in g a g r e e m e n t s co v erin g 1,000 w o r k e r s or m ore expirin g in 1973, by in d u s t r y — C o n tin u e d AGREE MENT NO. EXP. DATE COMPANY AND LOCATION1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT Furniture and f i x t u r e s — Continued 1129 1103 08 1C N Y BEDDING MFG ASSN SIMMONS CC MASTER MULTI-PLANT AGMT Total: 8 agreements........... ___ 1,0 0 0 3,9 00 12650 25 25 21 00 312 205 2 4 1296 1202 1203 1283 1258 1214 1215 1270 1226 1222 1284 1276 1205 1245 1223 1257 1236 1247 1294 1282 1218 1293 1275 1221 1264 1285 1256 1292 1278 03 04 04 04 04 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 06 06 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 08 09 09 11 11 12 1,1 50 OWENS-ILLINOIS INC LILY-TULIP LU 453 AMERICAN CAN CO GREEN BAY MILL 3 , GOO AMERICAN CAN CO WIS + MICH 1,0 50 FIBREBOARD CORP 8 MILLS 9 LOCALS 2 ,9 00 INLAND CONTAINER CORP 8 LUS 1,1 50 INTL PAPER CO NORTHERN DIV NY ME ♦ PA 3,0 00 INTL PAPER CO SOUTHERN KRAFT DIV INTERSTATE 10 ,700 KEYES FIBRE CO LU 449 1,100 1,3 50 LONGVIEW FIBRE CO LONGVIEW MILL LU 153 NEKCOSA EDWARDS PAPER CO INC 2 PLANTS 1 ,8 00 SCOTT PAPER CC EVERETT LUS 183 ♦ 644 1,6 00 SCOTT PAPER CO S D WARREN DIV WESTBROOK 1 ,7 50 US PLYWOOD- CHAMPION PAPERS INC PASADENA 1,200 CONTAINER CORPORATION OF AMERICA 2,5 0 0 NORTHWEST PAPER CO 1,6 00 BOWATERS SOUTHERN PAPER CORP CALHOUN 1,0 00 BROWN CO KALAMAZOO LU 1010 1,2 00 CROWN ZELLERBACH CORP BOGALUSA MILL 1,2 50 CROWN ZELLERBACH CORP GAYLORD CONTAINER DIV 1 ,2 00 CROWN ZELLERBACH CORP CAMAS 2 ,2 50 KIMBERLY CLARK CORPORATION 1,200 RIEGEL PAPER CORP PAPER D RIEGELWOOD 738 1 ,0 00 WEYERHAEUSER COMPANY PLYMOUTH 1,1 50 MEAD CORP CHILLICOTHE MILL AREA ONE LU 731 1,5 00 GREATER NY FOLDING BOX + DISPLAY MFRS ASSN 2 ,0 00 SCOTT PAPER CO CHESTER PLANT LU 448 1 ,8 00 MASONITE CORPORATION LAUREL 1 ,5 00 MEAD CORP PKG D CONTAINER PLTS ATLANTA 527 1,2 00 AMERICAN CAN COMPANY 1 ,0 00 T ota l: 29 agreements......... . . . . 55 100 P rin tin g, publishing, and a l l i e d indus tr ies 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 43 35 30 90 00 00 00 11 91 35 91 11 74 00 41 62 34 72 72 91 62 56 56 31 20 23 64 58 23 127 100 100 527 230 100 100 230 527 100 527 100 230 100 100 100 230 230 230 527 100 230 100 230 230 230 343 175 230 1 1 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 4 1 1 1 4 4 1 1 l 4 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 4 4 1400 1433 1434 1403 1404 1407 1405 1419 1450 1424 1420 1408 01 01 03 03 03 03 03 04 04 08 10 12 CHICAGO NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSN PHOTO-ENGRAVERS BD OF TRADE OF NY INC AM GREETING CORP CLEVELAND NEW YORK NEWS INC NEW YORK TIMES CO INTER PUBLISHERS ASSN NYC INTERSTATE PUBLISHERS ASSN OF NY NEWSPAPER BRANCH LU 6 METRO LITHOGRAPHERS ASSN INC US PLAYING CARD CO LU 25 6 PRINTING INDUSTRIES ASSN LOS ANG LU 63 PRINTING INDUSTRIES OF METRO NY INC SAN FRAN NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSN LU 52 T ot al: 12 agreements......... 1,3 00 1,7 00 1,0 00 1,2 00 2 ,4 0 0 2,0CG 2 ,7 0 0 8 ,8 00 1 ,0 00 1,1 00 3 ,5 0 0 1 ,0 00 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 33 21 31 21 00 00 21 20 31 93 21 93 500 243 500 323 323 425 204 243 332 243 204 323 2 2 1 1 4 2 2 2 1 2 2 2 1673 1672 1606 1613 1681 1634 1644 1646 1623 1688 16 38 1645 1685 16 59 1601 16 29 1627 1628 16 24 1656 1684 01 02 02 02 02 04 04 04 05 05 05 05 05 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 UNION CARBIDE CORP CHEMICALS ♦ PLASTICS DIVS DUPONT El DE NEMOURS + CO CLINTON ETHYL CORP BATON ROUGE LU 12 90 0 NATL LEAD CO TITANIUM DIV SAYREVILLE PROCTER ♦ GAMBLE CO DUPONT El DE NEMOURS CO WAYNESBORO MERCK ♦ CO INC MASTER + LOCAL SUPPS PARKE DAVIS ♦ CO DETROIT ALLEN PARK ROCHESTER AM ENKA CORP LU 25 98 JOHNSON + JOHNSON ♦ ETHICON INC MONSANTO CO TEXAS SQUIBB ER + SONS INC P+M NEW BRUNSWICK SQUIBB ER + SONS NEW BRUNSWICK LAWRENCEVILLE ALLIED CHEMICAL CORP SPEC CHEM D BUFFALO DYE ALLIED CHEMICAL CORP INDUSTRIAL CHEMICAL DIV CELANESE CORP AMCELLE PLANT LU 1874 CELANESE CORP CELCO PLANT NARROWS CELANESE CORP CELRIVER PLANT LU 1093 FMC CORP AM VISCOSE DIV FIBER OPERS HERCULES INC ALLEGANY BALLISTICS LAB LU 261 HERCULES INC IMPERIAL COLOR GLEN FALLS 12 96 2 1,4 00 1 ,0 00 1,2 50 1,2 50 2,8 5 0 1,9 00 2,9 5 0 1 ,4 00 3,0 00 1 ,5 00 1 ,0 0 0 2 ,2 0 0 2 ,2 0 0 1 ,2 00 1 ,4 50 2,4 0 0 2 ,0 0 0 1 ,8 0 0 8 ,0 00 1,250 1 ,1 50 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 55 42 72 22 31 54 20 34 56 22 74 22 22 21 21 52 54 57 00 55 21 218 500 335 357 500 50 0 357 35 7 202 337 100 357 357 335 33 5 337 202 337 337 121 33 5 l 1 1 1 4 1 4 4 1 4 1 1 1 1 4 1 1 1 4 1 1 Paper and a l l i e d products Chemicals and a l l i e d products See fo o t n o te s at end o f t a b l e . 30 T a b le 9. C o lle c t iv e b a rg a in in g a g r e e m e n t s co verin g 1,000 w o r k e r s or m o re expiring in 1973, by in d u s t r y — C o n tin u e d AGREEMENT NO. EXP. DATE COMPANY AND LOCATION1 NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE UNION ! UNIT Chemicals and a l l i e d products— Continued 1654 1687 1667 1663 1676 1647 1651 1633 08 09 09 1C 10 11 11 12 ICI AM INC REYNOLDS EXPER LAB 2 PLANTS AM CYANAMID CO IRC FIBERS CO SUB PAINESVILLE MILES LABORATORIES INC ELKHART AMERICAN ENKA CCRP LOWLAND LU 815 UNION CARBIDE C0RP CHEM-PLASTIC SO CHARL COLGATE PALMOLIVE CO JERSEY CITY PLT PROCTOR + GAMBLE MFG CO DUPONT El DE NEMOURS + CO SEAFORD PLT Total: 29 agreements......... 1 ,1 00 1,4 00 1,1 00 3 ,2 0 0 1,5 00 1,5 00 1,0 00 2 ,4 00 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 23 31 32 62 55 22 20 51 335 33 7 335 202 218 50 0 500 500 4 1 1 4 1 1 4 4 1801 18C4 1807 1822 1815 1802 03 03 03 03 05 06 AMERICAN OIL CO WHITING REF 2,0 00 1,C0C CCNTL OIL CO REFINERY PONCA CITY LU 5 - 8 5 7 HUMBLE OIL REFINING CO BATON ROUGE REFINERY 3 , ICO PHILLIPS PETROLEUM CO 9 PLTS PHILLIPS+BORGER 1 ,0 00 3 ,2 00 STANDARO OIL CO OF CALIF WESTERN OPERATIONS ATLANTIC RICHFIELD CO + ARCO PIPELINE CO 5 ,6 00 Total: 6 agreements.......... ----- 15900 29 29 29 29 29 29 32 73 72 74 93 00 500 35 7 500 129 186 500 1 4 4 4 4 4 1903 1906 1908 1912 1905 1910 1933 1930 1907 1926 1920 19CC 1919 1934 1923 1904 1935 04 04 04 04 05 C5 06 06 06 06 06 07 08 08 €9 09 1C FIRESTONE TIRE + RUBBER CO AKRON PLANTS GOODRICH BF CO GOODYEAR TIRE AND RUBBER CO UNIROYAL INC NATIONWIDE P + M GENL TIRE + RUBBER CO OHIO + TEXAS MANSFIELD TIRE + RUBBER CO MANSFIELD DUNLOP TIRE ♦ RUBBER CORP BUFFALO GENERAL TIRE * RUBBER CO IND PRODS DIV WABASH KELLY-SPRINGFIELD TIRE CO CUMBERLAND PLASTIC ♦ METAL PRODUCTS MFRS ASSN INC 132 RAYBESTOS MANHATTAN INC MANHATTAN RUBBER DIV ARMSTRONG RUBBER CO MASTER AGMT GATES RUBBER CO DENVER 154 KELLY-SPRINGFIELO TIRE CO TYLER ELEC HOSE ♦ RUBBER CO GENL MOTORS CCRP INLAND MFG DIV DAYTON LU87 RUBBERMAID INC WOOSTER LU 302 Tota l: 17 ag reements .,.. ........ 19,000 11,450 2 3 ,000 17,000 3 ,0 0 0 1,500 1,100 1 ,2 00 2 ,0 00 3,5 00 1,0 00 4 ,0 0 0 3,5 00 1,150 1 ,0 00 4,8 00 1 ,0 50 9925C 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 3C 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 00 00 00 00 00 31 21 32 52 21 22 00 84 74 00 31 31 333 333 333 333 333 333 333 333 333 134 500 333 333 333 333 333 333 4 4 4 4 4 1 1 1 1 2 1 4 1 1 4 1 1 21 08 2113 2111 2114 2131 01 02 03 09 11 I - A MASS SHOE MFRS SLIPPER AND PLAYWEAR ASSN LU 54 MELVILLE SHOE CORP JF MCELWAIN DIV MANCHESTER SC CALIF SHOE MFRS ASSN LOS ANGELES 122 CHICAGO RAWHIDE MFG CO ELGIN D LU 221 Total: 5 a g r e e m e n ts .. .. . 1,7 00 3 ,0 00 1,100 1,5CC 1 ,0 00 31 31 31 31 31 14 21 12 93 33 334 334 500 334 155 3 2 1 2 1 2351 23 54 2344 2325 2322 2336 2353 2338 2345 2337 2328 23 30 03 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 05 08 11 11 1,0 00 RAYBESTOS MANHATTAN INC MANHEIM DIV LU 2590 1,400 GENL PORTLAND CEMENT CO FLA TEX OHIO KANS TEN I - A CEMENT COS CALIF + ARIZ 10 LUS 2 ,1 00 I - A CLAY SEWER PIPE COS OHIO PENN ♦ INDIANA 1,5 00 1,600 IDEAL BASIC INDUSTRIES INC IDEAL CEMENT CO D 1,300 JOHNS MANVILLE PRODUCTS CORP WAUKEGAN LU 6C MARQUETTE CEMENT MFG CO 10 LUS 1 ,4 00 NORTON CO COATED ABRASIVE + TAPE DIV LU 17 1,6 50 AMERICAN STANDARD INC 1 ,7 00 2 ,3 5 0 MINN MINING + MFG CO ST PAUL 1,3 00 I - A CHINAWARE MANUFACTURERS GROUP 4 ,0 00 U S POTTERS ASSN . . . . 21 300 Tota l: 12 agreements........ 32 32 32 32 32 32 32 32 32 32 32 32 23 00 00 00 00 33 00 21 00 41 00 00 202 120 120 114 120 121 120 230 174 357 174 174 1 2 3 3 4 1 4 l 4 1 3 2 33 33 33 33 33 33 33 33 33 55 35 93 54 63 21 31 00 63 335 218 161 335 335 335 357 500 161 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 4 4 Petroleum r e fin in g and relate d indus tries Rubber and miscellaneous p l a s t i c s products Leather and leather products Stone, c la y , g la s s , and concrete products Primary metal ind us tr ies 2603 2618 2559 2567 26 24 25 72 2547 2643 2651 01 02 03 04 06 08 08 11 12 INCO HUNTINGTON LADISH CO CUDAHY CALIF METAL TRADES ASSN FOUNDRY DIV MEAD CORP LYNCHBURG STOCKHAM VALVES ♦ FITTINGS INC BIRMINGHAM DRESSER INDUSTRIES TRANSPORTATION EQUIP DIV UNION CARBIDE CORP FERROALLOYS D MARIETTA ESCO CORP ALABAMA PIPE CO ♦ ANNISTON FOUNDRY CO LU 324 See fo o t n o te s at end o f t a b l e . 31 1,9 00 2,0 00 2 ,5 0 0 3 ,0 00 1,200 1,0 50 1,2 00 1 ,0 00 1,7 00 T a b le 9. C o lle c t iv e b a rg a in in g a g r e e m e n t s co v erin g 1,000 w o r k e r s or m ore expirin g in 1973 by in d u s t r y — C o n tin u e d AGREE MENT NO. COMPANY AND LOCATION 1 EXP. DATE NUMBER OF WORKERS CODES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT Primary metal in d u s tr ies— Continued 256C 2627 12 12 I - A SOIL PIPE COMPANIES 1 ,7 00 MOORE DROP FORGING CO INC LU 22 80 4 1,1 C 0 Total: 11 ag r eem en ts .. .. ,........ 18350 2906 2972 29 08 2921 2923 2930 2920 2915 2935 2944 04 05 05 06 07 07 08 09 09 12 EMHART C0RP BERLIN PLANT HARDWARE DIV 1,8 0 0 1 ,2 00 SO CALIF STEEL FABRICATORS LU 92 2,6 00 STANLEY WORKS PLANT OR BLUE COLLAR ALLIED BLDG METAL INCUS INC 2 ,5 00 BABCOCK + WILCOCK CO BARBERTON WORKS LU 900 3,3 0 0 HGLLOW METAL DOOR + BUCK ASSN INC 2,0 0 0 TRANE COMPANY LA CROSSE 1,3 00 CRANE COMPANY LU 2047 1,2 00 STRUCT STEEL ♦ ORNAMENTAL IRON ASSN NJ 1 ,0 50 WEST BEND CO WEST BEND DIV LU 865 1,6 50 Tota l: 10 ag r ee m en ts .... ......... 18600 3363 3291 3334 3265 3234 3269 32 66 333C 3358 3287 32 79 32 94 326C 3301 3230 3253 33 18 3348 32 22 3274 32 26 32 25 3364 3351 3292 3245 3311 32 93 33 32 3215 32 16 03 03 03 03 04 04 04 05 05 05 05 06 06 C7 08 09 09 09 09 G9 09 09 09 09 10 10 10 1C 10 11 11 I - A NATL CONCRETE ♦ BLDG PRODUCTS AGMT 1 ,6 50 3 ,2 5 0 MIDWEST MANUFACTURING CO GALESBURG OUTBOARD MARINE CORP EVINRUDE MOTORS DIV 1,3 50 USM CORP USM MACHINERY DIV BEVERLY 271 1,1 50 REX CHAINBELT INC MILWAUKEE COUNTY PLANTS 1 , 2CC 4 ,0 00 TEXTRON INC FAFNIR BEARING DIV NEW BRITAIN WHITIN MACHINE WORKS INC WHITINSVILLE 1 ,0 00 1,3 50 LEESONA CORP LODGE 1605 DIST 64 WARWICK RELIANCE ELEC CO DODGE MFG DIV MISHAWAKA 1 ,1 50 SPERRY RANO CORP UNIVAC DIV ST PAUL 2 ,2 00 TORRINGTON COMPANY STANDARD + BROAO ST PLANTS 3 ,0 00 COPELAND REFRIGERATION CORP SIDNEY LU 725 2 ,5 00 USM CORP FARREL CO DIV ANSONIA + DERBY 1,0 00 WHIRLPOOL CORP ST PAUL DIV 1 ,4 5 0 BUCYRUS-ERIE CO INTERS 2 ,5 00 ACME CLEVELAND CORP LU 19 1 ,1 00 BANGOR PUNTA OPERATIONS INC WAUKESHA MOTOR D 1,1 00 CATERPILLAR TRACTOR CO TOWMOTOR CORP SUB 17,000 DEERE AND CO IOWA AND ILLINOIS 21 ,000 FMC CORP LINK BELT BEARING DIV 1 OTH L 1150 3,5 0 0 INTL HARVESTER CO MAIN LABOR AGMT PROD-MAINT 34 ,9 5 0 INTL HARVESTER CO CLERICAL + TECHNICAL 2,2 0 0 MCCORD CORP WASHINGTON LOCAL 2041 1,000 SPERRY RAND CORP VICKERS DIV OMAHA 171 1 ,2 00 BORG WARNER CORPORATION YORK DIV 2 ,2 0 0 BROWN + SHARPE MFG CO LU 10 88 ♦ 1142 DIST 64 1 ,0 0 0 3,0 0 0 CARRIER CORP LU 527 4 ,8 00 CHRYSLER CORPORATION AIRTEMP DIVISION MASSEY-FERGUSON INC MASTER 4 LUS 1 ,8 50 ALLIS-CHALMERS MFG CO LU 248 3 ,0 0 0 ALLIS-CHALMERS MFG CO LU 1027 SPRINGF 1,500 T o t a l : 31 agreements........ ___ 1291 50 3748 3641 3615 36 68 36 67 37 75 3675 3737 36 10 3643 3762 37 16 37 64 36 17 36 18 37 07 3624 36 42 36 09 3761 36 55 01 01 02 04 04 04 04 04 05 C5 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 06 06 06 NATL UNION ELEC CORP EUREKA WILLIAMS CO DIV SUNBEAM CORP GENL + SETUP MENS UNITS CHICAGO EMERSON ELEC CO ST LOUIS AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC CO NORTHLAKE AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC CO NORTHLAKE CIRCLE F INDUSTRIES INC LU 1273 PHILCO-FORD CORP PHILA ZENITH RADIO CORP RAULAND DIV LU 1031 ALLIS LOUIS CO ARROW-HART INC HARTFORD ♦ DANIELSON GENL ELEC CO BALLAST DEPT DANVILLE GENL ELECTRIC CO CHICAGO ♦ CICERO PLTS GENL ELECTRIC CO EUCLID LAMP PLT CLEVELAND GENL ELECTRIC CO NATL AGMT GENL ELECTRIC CO NATL AGMT SPRAGUE ELECTRIC CO NORTH ADAMS WAGNER ELECTRIC CORP ST LOUIS WHIRLPOOL CORP ST JOSEPH DIV PLTS ALLEN-BRADLEY CO MILWAUKEE GENL ELECTRIC CO BLOOMINGTON GENL ELECTRIC CO RADIO RECEIVER DEPT UTICA 33 33 63 14 161 101 3 4 Fabricated metal products, except ordnance, machinery, and transportation equipment 34 34 34 34 34 34 34 34 34 34 16 93 16 21 31 20 35 33 22 35 218 112 218 116 112 119 218 335 116 107 1 2 4 2 1 2 1 1 2 4 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 CO 33 35 14 35 16 14 15 32 41 16 31 16 41 00 31 35 00 00 32 00 00 32 46 23 15 21 31 00 35 33 143 218 335 48 4 335 553 335 218 335 127 553 347 335 531 335 35 4 218 553 553 335 553 553 218 107 500 218 187 34 7 553 553 553 3 1 4 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 4 1 4 1 4 1 1 4 4 4 4 4 1 4 4 4 1 1 4 1 1 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 33 33 43 33 33 22 23 33 35 16 33 33 31 00 00 14 43 34 35 33 21 218 218 34 7 127 218 127 347 127 347 127 218 187 127 347 484 347 347 218 484 218 218 1 4 1 1 1 4 1 4 1 4 1 4 1 4 4 1 1 4 1 1 1 Machinery, except e l e c t r i c a l E l e c t r i c a l machinery, equipment, and supplies See fo o t n o te s at end o f t a b l e . 32 1 ,5 00 3 ,0 00 1 ,6 00 3 ,2 0 0 1 ,6 00 1,400 2 ,0 00 2 ,5 0 0 1 ,1 00 1,3 00 1 ,4 00 2,8 50 1 ,0 00 90 ,0 0 0 1 7 ,000 1,9 00 3 ,0 5 0 1,7 00 5 ,0 0 0 1 ,0 00 1,2 50 T a b l e 9 . C o l l e c t i v e b a r g a i n i n g a g r e e m e n t s c o v e r i n g 1 , 0 0 0 w o r k e r s o r m o r e e x p i r i n g in 1 9 7 3 , by in d u s try — C o n tin u e d AGREE MENT NO. COMPANY EXP. DATE NUMBER OF WORKERS AND LOCATION1 . E l e c t r i c a l machinery, equipment, CODES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT and s u p p l i e s — Continued 3709 3776 3606 3630 3629 3627 3741 3625 3626 3628 3763 3706 3731 3695 3744 3772 3295 3747 3604 3608 3600 3732 3756 3693 3694 3660 3767 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 08 €8 08 08 08 09 09 09 10 10 11 11 11 12 12 12 12 MAGNAV0X CO FORT WAYNtl PHILCO-FORD CCRP AU D IO- VID EO ♦ MICROELECTRON SQUARE D CO INDUSTRIAL CONTROL DIV WESTINGHOUSE ELEC C0RP SUNNYVALE WESTINGHOUSE ELEC C0RP WESTINGHOUSE ELEC CORP WESTINGHOUSE ELEC CORP YOUNGWOOD WESTINGHOUSE ELEC CORP WESTINGHOUSE ELEC CORP BEAVER PLANT WESTINGHOUSE ELEC CORP ELECTRIC MACHINERY MFG CO OF MINNEAPOLIS GENL ELEC CO TUBE DEPT OWENSBORO MCGRAW EDISON CO BUSSMAN DIV ST LOUIS RAYTHEON CO LU 1 5 0 5 WARWICK ELECTRONICS INC FORREST C IT Y L 1 1 0 6 AMANA REFRIGERATION INC GENL MOTORS CORP GTE SYLVANIA LU 1 6 5 4 OTTAWA MCGRAW-EDISON POWER SYSTEMS DIV CANONSBURG WESTON INSTRUMENTS INC WESTON INSTRUMENTS DIV ALLIS-CHALMERS MFG CO LU 1 0 3 6 LITTON INDUSTRIES INC JEFFERSON ELECTRIC DIV SYLVANIA ELECTRIC PRODUCTS INC SALEM HUGHES AIRCRAFT CO LU 1 5 5 3 RADIO CORP GF AM NEW JERSEY RADIO CORP OF AM NATL AGMT SYLVANIA ELECTRIC PRODS INC SMITHFIELD Total: 48 agreements............. . . . 2 ,1 0 0 1 ,9 0 0 1 ,3 5 0 1 ,2 0 0 1 5 ,0 0 0 8 ,3 0 0 1 ,0 0 0 1 ,0 0 0 2 ,2 5 0 3 6 ,0 0 0 1 ,0 0 0 2 ,8 0 0 2 ,0 0 0 7 ,0 0 0 1 ,7 0 0 1 ,0 5 0 3 3 ,0 0 0 1 ,6 5 0 2 ,2 5 0 1 ,1 0 0 1 ,2 0 0 1 ,0 0 0 1 ,0 5 0 7 ,0 0 0 3 ,6 5 0 1 9 ,2 0 0 1 , 2CC 303300 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 32 23 35 93 00 00 23 00 23 00 41 61 43 14 T1 42 00 31 23 22 23 33 14 93 22 00 56 107 553 127 218 500 484 127 127 127 347 347 107 500 127 347 218 347 127 335 500 553 127 347 119 500 127 346 4 1 4 1 4 4 1 4 1 4 1 1 4 4 4 1 4 1 1 1 1 1 1 4 4 4 1 4071 4151 4113 4097 4134 4048 4127 4128 4061 4154 4099 41C4 4142 4141 4058 4087 4160 4076 4157 4008 4009 4007 4010 4019 4022 4018 4023 4169 4028 4170 4092 4042 4159 4017 4006 4016 4015 01 Cl 01 03 03 04 05 05 05 06 06 06 06 07 07 07 07 08 09 09 09 09 09 09 09 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 11 11 12 12 12 FAIRCHILD HILLER AIRCRAFT DIV HAGERSTOWN 1 ,4 5 0 1 ,0 0 0 GREENVILLE STEEL CAR CO GREENVILLE 4 ,2 5 0 SUN SH IPB UILDING ♦ DRY DOCK CO ALABAMA DRY DCCK ♦ SHIPBUILDING CO MOBILE 4 , COO NORFOLK SHIPB UIL DING AND DRYDOCK CORP 1 ,4 0 0 2 ,7 0 0 AVCO CORP AVCO LYCOMING DIV STRATFORD PLANT 4 , 9CC GENL ELECTRIC CO EVENDALE 1 ,4 0 0 GENL ELECTRIC CO EVENDALE PNEUMO DYNAMICS CORP CLEVE PNEUMATIC SUB 1 ,6 0 0 1 ,7 0 0 AM MOTORS CORP GENL PRODS DIV JEEP UNIT 1 , 80C BATH IRON WORKS CORP BATH ♦ BRUNSWICK 2 , CCO GENL DYNAMICS CORP ELEC BOAT DIV BROTON 2 ,0 0 0 JACKSONVILLE SHIPYARDS INC 1 ,700 AEROOEX INC LU 7 6 9 3 ,3 5 0 CESSNA AIRCRAFT CO COMMERCIAL + MILITARY DIV FAIRCHILD HILLER CORP REPUBLIC AV IAT ION DIV 1 ,9 0 0 1 ,7 0 0 TRW INC HARRISBURG LU 1 4 0 0 GOODYEAR AEROSPACE CORP AKRON 2 ,1 0 0 1 ,050 CHRYSLER CORP CHRYSLER CORP OFF ♦ CLERICAL 4 ,5 0 0 3 ,0 0 0 CHRYSLER CORP PARTS DEPOTS 1 1 0 ,2 0 0 CHRYSLER CORP PRODUCTION MAINTENCE 4 ,5 0 0 CHRYSLER CORPORATION ENGINEERING FORD MOTOR CO 1 6 5 ,0 0 0 395 ,0 5 0 GENL MOTORS CORP 1 ,550 EATON YALE AND TOWNE INC AXLE DIV 1 ,1 0 0 GENL MOTORS CORP 1 ,0 5 0 GENL MOTORS CORP PLT PROTECTION EMPS MACK TRUCK INC MASTER SHOP AGMT 7 ,0 0 0 6 ,9 0 0 MACK TRUCKS INC OFF AGMT NJ PA NY + MD 4LUS TRW INC TAPCO VALVES MAIN PLANT REPLACEMENT 5,0QC TRW INC VAN DYKE WORKS WARREN 1 ,1 0 0 1 ,1 0 0 EATON CORP SAGINAW DIV LU 4 3 3 EATON YALE AND TOWNE INC 3 ,2 5 0 BUDD CO NATIONAL AGMT 1 0 ,0 0 0 DANA CORP EASTERN FRAME DIV READING L 3 7 3 3 2 ,8 0 0 9 ,0 0 0 DANA CORP TOLEDO DISTR IBU TIO N CENTER Total: 37 agreements............... . . . 7 7 4 1 0 0 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 52 23 23 63 54 16 31 31 31 32 11 16 59 59 47 21 23 31 OC 00 00 00 00 00 00 31 00 GO 20 00 31 34 34 00 00 23 00 553 553 112 320 112 553 553 218 500 553 320 500 112 531 218 218 500 553 461 553 553 553 553 553 553 354 461 461 553 553 500 553 107 553 553 335 553 1 1 1 1 4 l 1 1 4 1 4 1 1 1 4 1 1 1 4 4 1 4 1 4 4 1 4 4 4 4 4 1 1 4 4 1 4 T ra ns po rt ati on equipment P rofessional, 4402 4427 4422 C3 03 12 scien tific , and c o n t r o l l i n g ins tr um en ts ; photographic and o p t i c a l goods; watches and cl o c k s KOLLSMAN INSTRUMENT CORP XEROX CORP XEROGRAPHIC DIV ROCHESTER TIMEX CORP LIT TL E ROCK LU 9 2 1 Total: 3 agreements. . . . . See fo o t n o te s at end o f t a b l e . 3 3 1 ,2 5 0 4 ,0 0 0 3 ,4 0 0 38 38 38 21 21 71 218 305 218 4 1 1 T a b l e b y 9 . C o l l e c t i v e b a r g a i n i n g a g r e e m e n t s c o v e r i n g 1 , 0 0 0 w o r k e r s o r m o r e e x p i r i n g in 1 9 7 3 , i n d u s t r y — C o n t i n u e d AGREE MENT NO. NUMBER OF WORKERS COMPANY AND LOCATION1 EXP. 0ATE CODES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT M i s ce lla n eo u s manufacturing 4600 4615 4617 4604 4616 46C7 4609 02 03 03 06 06 06 06 JEWELRY MFRS ASSN INC LU 1 2»600 MATTEL INC 4 , COO MILTON BRADLEY CO LU 2 2 4 1*000 7*000 I —A INDEP SHOP AGMT DOLLS ♦ STUFFED TOYS N Y LOUIS MARX ♦ CC OF W VA GLEN DALE LU 1 4 9 1*350 8 , COC NATL ASSN OF COLL MFRS INC 1 ,0 0 0 STUFFED TOY MFRS ASSN INC Total: 7 agr eements .......... .......... 2 U 0 5 0 5029 04 YELLOW CAB CC OF PHILADELPHIA Total: 39 39 39 39 39 39 39 00 93 14 21 55 20 00 146 333 332 221 332 221 221 2 4 4 3 1 2 2 41 23 531 1 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 33 33 93 30 33 74 33 33 93 23 50 50 OC 00 00 00 00 50 50 00 10 20 10 21 21 00 00 00 00 54 54 00 00 00 00 00 00 93 55 23 00 91 00 00 00 00 00 50 531 531 531 531 542 500 218 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 218 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 531 335 531 531 531 531 531 2 2 3 3 3 1 2 1 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 4 2 2 2 2 4 3 2 3 3 4 44 44 44 20 00 90 321 321 480 2 2 2 48 48 35 00 346 352 4 4 Local and suburban t r a n s i t and interu rba n passenger t r a n s p o r t a t i o n 1 agreement.......... .......... 3*200 3200 Motor f r e i g h t t r a n s p o r t a t i o n and warehousing 5203 5221 5216 5219 5222 5275 5205 5271 5200 5248 5212 5211 5262 5214 5213 5272 5273 5229 5244 5276 5224 5215 5223 5226 5225 5233 5234 5235 5232 5227 5228 5264 5265 5247 5266 5263 5251 5260 5238 5243 5242 5239 5270 5209 5231 5218 5254 5255 03 03 03 03 03 03 04 05 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 07 08 08 1C 11 11 12 7*000 CENTRAL MOTOR FREIGHT ASSN INC HWY DRIVERS CENTRAL MOTOR FREIGHT ASSN INC LOCAL 7 1 0 3*000 2 ,0 0 0 I —A HOUSEHOLD GOODS MOVING ♦ STORAGE LA I —A JOINT AREA CARTAGE AGREEMENT 1 4 ,0 0 0 1 2 ,0 0 0 I - A LOCAL CARTAGE AGMT FOR HIRE ♦ PRI CARRIES MERCHANTS FAST MOTOR LIN ES INC CHARTER 1 0 2 8 7 0 1 ,3 0 0 3 ,0 0 0 CARTAGE EXCHANGE OF CHICAGO INC ♦ 3 OTHERS 2 ,2 0 0 UNITED PARCEL SERVICE CHICAGO 2*800 C ALI F TRUCKING ASSNS INC ♦ DRAYMENS ASSN SF 4 ,5 0 0 CENTRAL PENN MOTOR CARRIERS CONFERENCE INC I - A CAROLINA FREIGHT COUNCIL O - T - R SUPP AGMT 2 ,8 0 0 I - A CAROLINA FREIGHT COUNCIL C IT Y CARTAGE SUP 6 ,7 0 0 5 ,0 0 0 I - A CENTRAL STATES IRO N-S TE EL SPEC COMMD AGMT 1 2 0 ,0 0 0 I - A CENTRAL STATES AREA LOCAL CARTAGE I - A CENTRAL STATES AREA OVER-THE-ROAD 4 0 ,0 0 0 4 ,0 0 0 I - A MASTER CEMENT ALL DRY BULK COMMODITIES I - A MASTER RAIL-TRUCK FREIGHT AGREEMENT 5 ,0 0 0 I - A MD-DC C I T Y PICKUP ♦ DELIVERY SUPP AGMT 4 ,0 0 0 1 ,0 0 0 I - A MD-DC O - T - R SUPP AGMT 1 ,2 0 0 I - A NATL MASTER FREIGHT AGMT EASTERN AREA I - A NEW ENGLAND FREIGHT SUPP AGMT 1 ,6 0 0 I - A NJ NY AREA GENL TRUCKING SUPP AGMT 3 8 ,0 0 0 I - A NO NEW ENGLAND GENL FREIGHT AGMT SUPP 1 ,2 5 0 1 2 ,0 0 0 I - A NY STATE TEAMSTERS JOINT COUNCIL FRGHT D 6 ,0 0 0 I - A NY STATE TEAMSTERS JOINT COUNCIL O - T - R 1 8 ,2 0 0 I - A SO CONF LOCAL FREIGHT FORWARDING PICKUP I - A SO CONF LOCAL FREIGHT FORWARDING OFF EES 1 ,0 0 0 1 ,4 5 0 I - A SO CONF LOCAL FREIGHT FORWARDING GARAGE 8 ,6 0 0 I - A SO CONF O - T - R MOTOR FREIGHT SUPP AGMT I - A VA FREIGHT COUNCIL C IT Y PICKUP ♦ DELIVERY 1 ,3 0 0 I - A VA FREIGHT COUNCIL O - T - R SUPP AGMT 1 ,4 0 0 1 8 ,0 0 0 I - A WESTERN STATES AREA LOCAL CARTAGE SUPP I - A WESTERN STATES AREA OFFICE SUPP 7 ,5 0 0 I - A WESTERN STATES TRUCKING MAINTENANCE 3 , COO I - A WESTERN STATES AREA AUTOMOTIVE SHOP TRUCK 1 ,5 0 0 1 2 ,0 0 0 I - A WESTERN STATES AREA OVER THE ROAD SUPP 2 3 ,0 0 0 MOTOR TRANSPORT LAB RELS O - T - R LOCAL CARTAGE UNITED PARCEL SERVICE INC NO CALIF 1 ,350 1 ,0 0 0 WEST VA FREIGHT COUNCIL LOCAL CARTAGE 4 ,7 0 0 WESTERN PENN MOTOR CARRIES LOCAL CARTAGE SUP WESTERN PENN MOTOR CARRIES O - T - R AGMT 2 ,0 0 0 TRUCK OWNERS ASSN OF SEATTLE INC 1 7 4 1 ,5 0 0 1 ,4 0 0 BOWMAN TRANSPORTATION INC O - T - R ♦ PICK UP 2 0 ,0 0 0 I - A NATL MASTER AUTOMOBILE TRANSPORTERS AGMT OREGON DRAYMEN ♦ WAREHOUSEMENS ASSN 2 ,5 0 0 I - A CENTRAL STATES AREA TANK TRUCK AGMT 5 ,0 0 0 2 ,2 0 0 I - A EASTERN AREA TANK HAUL 1 ,0 0 0 UNITED PARCEL SER INC ATLANTIC AREA 2 0 LOC Total: 48 agre ements.......... . . . . 4 3 9 9 5 0 5414 5412 5424 03 03 07 MARINE TOWING 4 TRANSP EMPLRS ASSN NY 4 VIC 2 ,0 0 0 MARINE TOWING 4 TRANSP EMPLRS ASSN 1 ,5 0 0 1 5 ,0 0 0 P A C I F I C MARITIME ASSN T otal: 3 agreements.......... .......... 1 8 5 0 0 5718 5779 01 03 GENL TELEPHONE CO OF WISCONSIN AM BROADCASTING CO INC MASTER Water t r a n s p o r t a t i o n Communication 1 ,5 0 0 1 ,300 See fo o t n o t e s a t end o f t a b l e . 3 4 T a b l e b y 9 . C o l l e c t i v e b a r g a i n i n g a g r e e m e n t s c o v e r i n g 1 , 0 0 0 w o r k e r s o r m o r e e x p i r i n g in 1 9 7 3 i n d u s t r y — C o n t i n u e d AGREE MENT NO. EXP. DATE COMPANY NUMBER OF WORKERS AND LOCATION1 CODES 2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT Communication— Continued 1 , 4CC 1 ,250 2 ,7 0 0 1 ,9 0 0 2 ,5 0 C 1 6 , OCO 2 ,7 0 0 7 ,0 5 0 1 ,7 0 0 4G000 48 48 48 48 48 48 48 48 48 00 61 31 32 34 00 21 59 00 352 346 346 346 127 201 346 127 531 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 4 1 ,1 0 0 1 ,5 5 0 2 ,1 0 0 1 ,7 5 0 2 ,9 0 0 1 ,3 5 0 49 49 49 49 49 49 14 21 93 00 33 33 335 127 127 127 127 127 2 1 1 4 4 1 2 ,4 0 0 1 6 ,8 5 0 2 ,4 0 0 1 ,2 5 0 1 ,0 0 0 2 ,1 0 0 2 ,0 0 0 1 ,6 0 0 4 ,8 0 0 1 ,7 0 0 1 , 8C0 1 , 95C 2 ,0 0 0 2 , 100 1 ,1 5 0 1 ,5 0 0 1 ,4 0 0 2 ,5 0 0 3 ,9 0 0 1 ,1 0 0 3 ,1 5 0 1 4 ,5 0 0 3 ,7 0 0 1 ,0 5 0 1 ,3 5 0 1 ,8 0 0 1 ,3 5 0 2 ,4 0 0 3 ,9 5 0 2 ,8 0 0 1 ,1 0 0 1 ,0 0 0 1 ,8 0 0 1 ,850 1C8050 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 33 21 23 35 14 21 33 32 22 22 22 71 14 16 00 50 35 31 58 33 21 93 93 00 00 43 43 31 59 22 35 22 34 93 127 342 500 704 342 341 118 127 127 500 170 127 342 127 357 500 127 118 127 127 127 127 127 127 129 127 357 342 127 127 129 127 118 319 4 1 4 l 4 1 4 4 4 4 1 4 4 4 4 4 1 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 4 4 4 1 4 4 GREATER NY ASSN OF MEAT 4 POULTRY DEALERS 1 7 4 3 ,1 0 0 I L L I N O I S ASSN OF BREWERIES 4 CHI BEER WHLSALE 1 ,4 0 0 I - A C ALI F BEER DISTRIBUTORS LUS 8 9 6 4 8 8 8 2 ,0 0 0 INDUS EMPLRS 4 DISTRIBUTORS ASSN 1 ,5 0 0 INDUS EMPLRS AND DISTRIBUTORS ASSN CALIF 4 ,0 0 0 SAN FRANCISCO EMPLOYERS COUNCIL 2 ,0 0 0 I - A WHOLESALE GROCERS CHAIN STORE 4 1 OTH 1 ,0 0 0 FOOD EMPLOYERS COUNCIL INC 3 ,0 0 0 I - A CORRUGATED BOX COMPANIES 2 ,1 0 0 INTL HARVESTER CO DEPOT 4 TRANSFER CONTRACT 1 ,4 5 0 I - A GIL PETRO CHEM 4 LIQUID PROD DRVRS AGMT 2 ,0 0 0 I - A PROVISION SALESMEN 4 DISTRIBUTORS LU 6 2 7 1 ,700 Total: 12 agreements .................... 2 5 2 5 0 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 20 33 93 93 93 93 41 93 21 00 30 20 155 531 531 531 480 531 531 531 531 553 531 155 2 2 3 2 2 2 3 2 3 4 3 3 93 531 2 5782 5794 5720 5717 5713 5778 5777 5716 5776 03 04 04 04 05 07 07 08 11 NATL BROADCASTING CO INC MASTER GENL TELE CO GF KENTUCKY GENL TELEPHONE CO OF OHIO GENL TELEPHONE CO OF IND INC GENERAL TELEPHONE CC OF MICHIGAN WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO NATL WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO GENL TELEPHONE CO OF FLA RCA GLOBAL COMMUNICATIONS INC COMM TRADE DIV Total: 11 agreements.......... . . . . 6042 6046 6077 6055 6008 601C 6009 6058 6053 6041 6C06 6043 6074 6028 6027 6076 6088 6C02 6005 6057 6086 6054 6080 6C44 6015 6063 6070 6C71 6072 6C 3 5 6036 6034 6047 6060 6014 6064 6081 6003 6048 6073 01 02 02 03 03 03 BOSTON GAS CO LUS 1 2 0 0 3 ♦ 1 2 1 1 8 IROQUOIS GAS CORP SAN DIEGO GAS + ELECTRIC CO LU 4 6 5 CIN GAS + ELEC CO + UN LIGHT-HEAT ♦ POWER CC COMMONWEALTH EDISON CO P AND M 7 LUS COMMONWEALTH EDISON CO CLERICAL CHI LU 1 4 2 7 03 03 03 C3 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 €5 05 05 C5 C5 05 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 07 10 1C 1C 10 12 12 12 COMMONWEALTH EDISON CO P M IN OUT PLTS 4 LUS CONSOL EDISON CO OF NEW YORK INC LU 1 - 2 UGI CORP PHILA GAS WORKS DIV WISC ELECTRIC POWER CO MILWAUKEE LU 2 BOSTON EDISON CC OFFICE ♦ CLERICAL UNIT 6 U 3 8 7 BROOKLYN UNION GAS CO LU 1 01 PEOPLES GAS LIGHT + COKE CO CHICAGO L 1 8 0 0 7 PUBLIC SERVICE CO OF INDIANA INC PUBLIC SERVICE ELEC AND GAS CO ELEC OPER DEPT PUBLIC SERVICE ELEC * GAS CO COMMERCIAL OFF PUBLIC SERVICE ELE + GAS CO LU 2 7 4 ARKANSAS POWER + LIGHT CO BOSTON EDISON CO PRODUCTION ♦ MAINTENANCE CONN LIGHT + POWER CO 7 LUS PANHANDLE EASTERN PIPE LINE CO WASHINGTON GAS LIGHT CO WASH MD VA WISCONSIN POWER + LIGHT CO LU 9 6 5 EAST OHIO GAS CO LU 5 5 5 GEORGIA POWER CO LU 8 4 ILL POWER CO LC 51 NY STATE ELEC ♦ GAS CORP PA C I F I C GAS + ELEC CO OPER MAINT + CONSTR PA C I F I C GAS ♦ ELEC CO OFF + CLERICAL LU 1 2 4 5 UNION ELECTRIC CO LU 1 4 5 5 UNION ELECTRIC CO LU 1 4 8 UNION ELECTRIC CO LU 3 0 9 6 4 9 ♦ 1 4 3 9 LACLEDE GAS CC ST LOUIS LU 5 - 6 CAYTCN POWER 4 LIGHT CO LU 1 7 5 FLORIDA POWER 4 LIGHT CO 11 LOCALS JERSEY CENTRAL POWER 4 LIGHT CO 4 OTH 7 LUS WISC PUBLIC SERVICE CORP LU 3 1 0 ATLANTIC C IT Y ELECTRIC CO LU 2 1 0 MICHIGAN CONSOLIDATED GAS CO LU 8 0 PA C I F I C GAS 4 ELEC CO Total: 40 a g r e e m e n t s . . . . . . . . . 6305 6328 6326 6331 6310 6306 6303 6302 6323 6318 6311 6324 04 04 05 €5 05 05 07 09 09 09 1C 10 E lectric, gas, and s a n it a r y s e r v i c e s Wholesale trade R e t a i l t ra d e— b u i l d i n g m a t e r i a l s , 6402 06 LUMBER AND MILL EMPLOYERS ASSN Total: hardware, and farm equipment <dea le rs 1 agreement............. . . . . . 3 5 1 ,0 0 0 1000 52 T a b l e b y 9 . C o l l e c t i v e b a r g a i n i n g a g r e e m e n t s c o v e r i n g 1 , 0 0 0 w o r k e r s o r m o r e e x p i r i n g in 1 9 7 3 , i n d u s t r y — C o n t i n u e d AGREE MENT NO. EXP. DATE COMPANY NUMBER OF WORKERS AND LOCATION1 CODES2 SIC STATE UNION UNIT R e t a i l tr ad e— ge n era l merchandise 6506 6504 6529 6502 6526 6537 02 05 05 07 11 12 GIMBEL BROTHERS PITTSBURGH LU 1 4 0 7 1»000 5 ,0 0 0 GIMBEL 8RCTHERS INC LU 2 1 ,5 0 0 JORDAN MARSH CO LU 1 2 9 1 3 ,0 0 0 FEDERALS INC DETROIT MONTGOMERY WARD AND CO INC INTRA LU 8 7 6 1 ,6 5 0 BORMANS INC YANKEE DISTRIBUTORS INC DIV 2 ,0 0 0 Total: 6 agr eements .......... .......... 1 4 1 5 0 6742 6766 6706 6771 6749 6821 6801 6826 6814 6773 6790 6804 6700 6825 6822 6702 6751 6792 6767 6762 6788 6787 6720 6733 6812 6747 6799 6823 6723 6817 6746 6779 6765 6743 6778 6772 6819 6320 6729 6756 6755 02 02 03 03 C3 03 03 03 04 04 04 05 06 06 C6 06 06 06 07 07 08 08 09 09 09 09 09 10 1C 10 10 10 11 11 11 11 11 12 12 12 12 2 , 5QC GREAT A+P TEA CC I - A MILWAUKEE AREA RETAIL MEAT INDUSTRY 1 ,2 0 0 2 ,2 0 0 FI R ST NATL STORES INC LU 3 7 1 3 ,9 0 0 I - A PHILA FOOD STORES 1 ,2 0 0 KROGER CO DALLAS DIV KROGER CO DETROIT BRANCH LU 8 7 6 1 ,950 NATL TEA CO STANDARD GROCERY D I V I S I O N 1 ,3 5 0 UNITED SUPER MARKET ASSN LU 8 7 6 1 1 ,5 0 0 FCODTOWN-MAYFAIR MARKETS LU 1 2 6 2 2 , 35C 1 ,2 0 0 I - A CHAIN AND IND GROCERY STORES HOUSTON 1 ,0 0 0 I - A INDEPENDENT MARKETS PHILA 1 ,0 0 0 VGRNADO CORP 1 , 8C0 ACME MARKETS INC FORTY-FORT ALMACS INC LU 3 2 8 1 ,6 5 0 1 ,200 GRAND UNION CC LU 3 7 1 I L L I N O I S FOOD RETAILERS ASSN AND 2 OTHS 2 3 ,0 0 0 2 ,0 0 0 LCBLAW INC UTICA CONFIDENTIAL NATL TEA CO NATL WAREHOUSE DIV 2 , 5G0 FRED SANDERS RETAIL STORE AGMT DETROIT LU 3C 1 ,0 5 0 1 ,9 0 0 KROGER COMPANY FOOD RET ASSN OF THE GREATER NY TRADING AREA 6 , COG I - A RETAIL MEAT MARKETS 5 ,0 0 0 1 ,8 0 0 GREAT A + P TEA CO LU 5 9 0 I - A IND SUPER MARKETS GROCERY DIV LU 6 5 5 3 ,0 0 0 I - A RETAIL GRGCERY STORES ST LOUIS LU 6 5 5 3 ,5 0 0 KROGER CO P I T T S STORES LU 5 9 0 2 ,2 0 0 LOBLAW INC NY 4 PENN 2 ,0 0 0 GREAT A 4 P TEA CO INC LU 5 2 5 1 ,0 0 0 GREAT A* P TEA CO SCRANTON UNIT PENN 4 NY 1 ,9 0 0 1 ,2 0 0 I - A CHAIN 4 INDEPENDENT FOOD STORES LU 1 5 6 4 KROGER CO 1 ,3 0 0 MOUNTAIN STATES EMPLRS COUNCIL RET GROC DENV 3 ,5 0 0 FOOD EMPLOYERS COUNCIL INC LU 4 2 1 5 ,0 0 0 I - A BUTCHERS 4 RET FISH 4 POULTRY AGMT LU 1 1 5 1 ,5 0 0 I - A RETAIL D IS TRI BUT IO N AGREEMENT LU 2 2 9 1 ,2 0 0 I - A RETAIL MEAT MARKETS FROZEN FOOD LOCKER 1 ,800 KROGER CO LU 2 2 7 2 ,6 0 0 FELR LUS 5 0 0 9 2 9 4 7 0 6 7 6 1 ,5 0 0 I - A FOOD STORE CONTRACT ALAMEDA COUNTY 4 0 ,0 0 0 I - A GROCERY 4 DELICATESSEN 3 ,1 0 0 RETAIL GROCERS ASSN SAN JOSE AREA 4 2 8 4 ,6 5 0 , . . . 1 6 0 200 T otal: 41 agre eme nts ............ 6905 6902 04 07 STANDARD OIL CO OF CA LI F STANDARD STATIONS GREATER ST LOUIS AUTOMOTIVE ASSN 4 1 OTHER To ta l: 2 agr eements.......... .......... 6912 0? I-A 7109 7137 7102 7141 7127 03 03 07 11 11 HARBOR D IST TAVERN 4 REST ASSN SAN PEDRO 1 ,3 0 0 HORN AND HARDART BAKING CO 1 ,0 5 0 OREGON FOOD 4 BEVERAGE PRESIDENTS COUNCIL 6 ,0 0 0 I - A IND STANDARD RESTAURANT CONTRACT 2 .5 0 0 ST LOUIS REST OWNERS ASSN 5 LUS 1 .5 0 0 T o ta l: 5 agr eements .......... ........... 1 2 3 5 0 7301 7300 7302 03 06 09 NY RET AIL DRUGGISTS NYC 4 NJ LU 1 1 9 9 4 ,0 0 0 l - A RET AIL DRUG STORE OPERATORS 8 ,9 5 0 SEAT TL E-KI NG CNTY PHARMACEUTICAL 4 1 OTH 2 ,0 0 0 To ta l: 3 agr eements .......... .......... 1 4 9 5 0 53 53 53 53 53 53 23 00 14 34 34 34 184 332 184 305 184 305 2 4 1 1 4 1 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 54 35 35 16 00 74 34 32 34 2G 74 23 00 23 10 16 30 21 00 34 00 21 34 00 43 43 00 20 56 20 85 00 84 93 93 93 93 61 00 93 93 93 184 155 155 155 184 184 184 184 184 155 155 184 155 155 155 184 155 531 332 184 1 3 4 4 1 4 2 4 3 3 4 1 4 l 2 1 4 4 4 155 155 155 184 184 155 155 155 184 184 155 184 155 155 155 155 155 531 184 184 184 2 2 1 3 3 4 4 1 4 3 4 2 2 3 3 3 1 2 3 3 2 55 55 00 43 500 218 4 2 56 21 332 3 58 58 58 58 58 93 23 92 43 43 145 145 145 145 145 2 1 2 3 2 59 59 59 20 93 91 332 184 184 2 3 2 R e t a i l tr ad e— food s t o r e s R e t a i l t ra de — automotive d e a le rs and g a s o l i n e s e r v i c e s t a t i o n s 3 ,0 5 0 1 ,6 0 0 4650 R e t a i l t ra d e — apparel and a cc es so ry s t o r e s MAJOR SHOE CHAIN STORES T otal: 1 ,200 1 agreement......................... 1 2 0 0 R e t a i l t ra d e — ea t i n g and dr in kin g p l a c e s R e t a i l t ra d e— m i s ce l la n eo u s r e t a i l See fo o t n o te s a t end o f t a b l e . 3 6 stores T a b l e b y 9 . C o l l e c t i v e b a r g a i n i n g a g r e e m e n t s c o v e r i n g 1 , 0 0 0 w o r k e r s o r m o r e e x p i r i n g in 1 9 7 3 i n d u s t r y — C o n t i n u e d AGREE MENT NO. EX P . DATE COMPANY AND LO C AT IO N 1 NUMBER OF WORKERS S e c u ri t y and commodity b r o k e r s , d e a l e r s , CODES 2 SI C STATE UNION UNIT exchanges, and s e r v i c e s 7417 11 I-A 2 ,2 0 0 2200 62 21 163 3 7409 7406 7411 04 09 09 1 2 ,0 0 0 REALTY ADVISORY BD ON LABOR RELS 4 ,0 0 0 BLDG MANAGERS ASSN JANITORS CHICAGO 3 ,0 0 0 BRONX REALTY ADVISORY BOARD LU 3 2 - E Total: 3 agr eements. . . . ............. 1 9 0 0 0 65 65 65 21 33 21 118 118 118 2 2 2 7513 7515 7525 7501 750C 7509 7504 7508 7524 03 03 03 05 05 05 11 11 12 I - A CHICAGO DOWNTOWN HOTELS NEVADA RESORT ASSN RESORT HOTELS NEVADA RESORT HOTELS CASINOS 4 HOTELS ASSOC HOTELS 4 MOTELS INC MSTR RESIDENT AGMT ASSOC HOTELS 4 MOTELS INC MSTR HOTEL AGMT HOTEL ASSN OF NY C I T Y INC GREATER BOSTON HOTEL AND MOTOR INN ASSN HOTEL + MOTEL ASSN OF GREATER ST LOUIS SAN MATEO COUNTY RESTAURANT HOTEL OWNERS Total: 9 a g r e e m e n t s . . . . ............. 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 33 88 88 21 21 21 14 43 93 145 145 145 118 118 100 145 145 145 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 7714 7716 7720 07 09 09 NJ LAUNDRY 4 CLEANING IN STITUTE I - A LAUNDRY WORKERS AGMT SEATTLE I - A LINEN SUPPLIERS LU 2 8 4 To ta l: 72 72 72 22 91 22 236 533 236 2 3 3 7945 7947 7903 7904 02 09 10 12 I - A MAINTENANCE CONTRS AGMT LU 3 9 9 I - A SECURITY AGENCIES WATERFRONT AGMT CALIF PITTSBURGH BUILDINGS ASSN ASSOCIATED PRESS LU 2 2 2 Total: 4 agre em en ts.... 6 ,6 0 0 4 ,5 0 0 1 ,8 0 0 1 ,3 5 0 73 73 73 73 93 93 23 00 118 500 118 323 3 3 2 4 7916 7911 7919 01 01 04 ASSN OF MOTION PICTURE PRODUCERS INC ASSN OF MOTION PICTURE 4 TV PRODUCERS OFFICE I - A TELE 4 RADIO COMMERCIAL ANNOUNCEMENTS 1 ,0 0 0 2 ,2 0 0 8 ,0 0 0 78 78 78 93 93 00 531 163 162 2 2 3 7950 06 ASSN OF 4 ,1 0 0 78 00 530 2 7972 7960 04 07 2 ,0 0 0 I - A INDUSTRIAL SHOWS BASIC AGREEMENT LEAGUE OF NY THEATRES 4 SHUBERT 1 ,2 0 0 Total: 2 agreements. . . ............... 3 2 0 0 79 79 00 21 102 192 3 2 7927 7962 7931 7926 03 10 12 12 ASSOC HOSPITALS OF THE EAST BAY INC LU 2 5 0 2 ,6 0 0 1 ,7 0 0 KAISER FOUNDATION HOSPITALS LU 2 5 0 A F F IL IA TE D HOSPITALS OF SAN FRAN LU 2 5 0 1 ,7 0 0 A F F IL IA TE D HOSPS OF SAN FRAN REG NURSES 1 ,200 T otal: 4 a g r e e m e n t s . .. ............... 7 2 0 0 80 80 80 80 93 93 93 93 118 751 118 751 2 4 2 2 NEW YORK STOCK EXCHG 4 STOCK CLEARG C0RP T otal: 1 agreement.......... ............. Real e s t a t e Hotels, rooming house, camps, and other lo dg in g p l a c e s 1 1 ,0 0 0 1 3 ,0 0 0 3 OG 1 ,700 1 ,2 0 0 3 0 ,0 0 0 1 ,9 0 0 3 ,0 0 0 5 ,7 0 0 70500 Pe rso nal s e r v i c e s 2 ,0 0 0 1 ,1 0 0 1 ,450 3 a g r e e m e n t s . .. ............... 4 5 5 0 M is ce lla ne ou s bu s in es s s e r v i c e s Motion p i c t u r e s MOTION PICTURE 4 TV PRODUCERS INC T otal: 4 agre em en ts.... Amusement and r e c r e a t i o n s e r v i c e s , except motion p i c t u r e s Medical and othe r h e a lt h s e r v i c e s AGREEMENTS, t o t a l .......... 72 0 ; WORKERS, t o t a l .......... 3 , 5 1 2 , 5 0 0 * See appendix A f o r a b b r e v i a t i o n s . See appendix B f o r d e f i n i t i o n s o f co d es . NOTE: Data based on agreements on f i l e w ith the Bureau o f Labor S t a t i s t i c s , agreements. 37 exc lu di ng r a i l r o a d s , a irlin es, and government Table 10. S e l e c t e d a g r e e m e n t s r e o p e n i n g in 1 9 7 3 covering 1 ,0 0 0 w orkers or m ore, b y m on th Approximate Month of SIC reopenings code 1 U n io n 1 2 Com pany and location number of workers covered January .............. 54 Independent Meat Markets (Illinois and Missouri) Meat Cutters 2,400 April 30 Formica Corp. (Cincinnati, Ohio) Electrical Workers (IUE) 1,000 49 Pacific Lighting Service Co. and Southern Utility Woi kers; 7,500 ................ California Gas Co. (California) 49 Chemical Workers Salt River Project Agricultural Improvement and Power District (Arizona) M a y .................... 15 Electrical Workers 1,400 (IBEW) Contracting Plasterers Association of Laborers 2,000 Hotel and Restaurant 1,850 Southern California, Inc. (California) 58 East Bay Restaurant Association, Inc., (Contra Costa County, Calif.) 28 Employees Hercules, Inc. (Radford, Va.) Oil, Chemical and 2,750 Atom ic Workers June .................. 70 Sacramento Hotel, Restaurant, and Tavern Association (California) July .................. ........... 3,750 Employees 28 Union Carbide Corp. (Texas City, Tex.) Texas Metal Trades Council 1,800 37 A .O . Smith Corp. (Milwaukee, Wis.) Smith Steel Workers 4,800 58 East Bay Restaurant Association, Inc. Hotel and Restaurant 4,000 (Alameda County, Calif.) October Hotel and Restaurant 50 Employees Automotive Parts Distributors Association, Teamsters (Ind.) 1,500 Laundry, Dry Cleaning 1,100 Inc. (New York and New Jersey) D e c e m b e r......... 1 2 72 St. Louis Dry Cleaners Exchange, Associated Laundry owners of Greater St. Louis and Dyehouse (Missouri) Workers (Ind.) See appendix B for definition of codes. Union affiliated with A F L —CIO, except where noted as independent (Ind.) 3 8 Table 11. L a te listing o f a g r e e m e n t s e x p i r i n g in 1 9 7 3 covering 1 ,0 0 0 or m ore, by m o n th 1 Month of expiration SIC co d e 1 2 M a y .................. 15 Builders' Association of Chicago (Illinois) Laborers 70 Hotel Industry Agreement (Hawaii) Hotel and Restaurant Company and location Union 3 Approximate number of workers covered 14,900 3,000 Employees 15 Mid-American Regional Bargaining Carpenters 25,000 Association (Illinois). 17 National Electrical Contractors' Electrical Workers Association, Northern California 1,050 (IBEW) Chapter (Alameda County, Calif.) June.................. 17 Excavators, Inc., Illinois Road Builders' Teamsters (Ind.) 2,150 Association, and Illinois Truck and Equipment Contractors Association (Chicago, III.) A u g u st.............. 54 Food Fair Stores, Inc. (Baltimore, Md.) Retail Clerks 2,500 54 Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co., Inc. Retail Clerks 3,000 (Interstate) 20 Nabisco, Inc. (Interstate) Bakery Workers 9,250 17 National Electrical Contractors Association, Electrical Workers (IBEW) 1,500 Teamsters (Ind.) 1,150 Inc. (Orange County, Calif.) September . . . . 49 Chicago and Suburban Refuse Disposal Association (Illinois) 1 Expirations reported too late to be included in tables 8 and 9. See appendix B for definition of codes. 3 Union affiliated with A F L —CIO, except where noted as independent (Ind.). 3 9 Appendix A Common Abbreviations AGC AM ASSN ASSOC BALT BLDG BLDRS CALIF CHI CIN CLEVE CONN CONSOL CONT GENL I-A ILL IND INDUS INTL LA MASS - Associated General Contractors - American - Association - Associated - Baltimore - Building - Builders MECH METRO MFRS MICH MINPLS MINN NATL - California - Chicago - Cincinnati NEW ENG NJ NY - Cleveland - Connecticut NO NORTHW PA - Consolidated - Continental - General - Industry area (group PHILA PITTSB SAN FRAN of companies signing same contract) - Illinois - Independent - Industrial - International - Los Angeles - Massachusetts SO SOUTHE SOUTHW STRUCT US WASH WEST VA WIS 4 0 - Mechanical - Metropolitan - Manufacturers - Michigan - Minneapolis - Minnesota - National - New England - New Jersey - New York - Northern - Northwestern - Pennsylvania - Philadelphia - Pittsburgh - San Francisco - Southern - Southeastern - Southwestern - Structural - United States - Washington - West Virginia - Wisconsin Appendix B Definition of Codes SIC Codes 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 41 42 44 48 49 50 52 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 Ordnance and accessories Food and kindred products Tobacco manufactures Textile mill products Apparel and other finished products made from fabrics and similar materials Lumber and wood products, except furniture Furniture and fixtures Paper and allied products Printing, publishing, and allied industries Chemicals and allied products Petroleum refining and related industries Rubber and miscellaneous plastics products Leather and leather products Stone, clay, glass, and concrete products Primary metal industries Fabricated metal products, except ordnance, 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 Local and suburban transit and interurban passenger transportation Motor freight transportation and warehousing Water transportation Communication Electric, gas, and sanitary services Wholesale trade Retail trade— building materials, hardware, and farm equipment dealers 41 Definition of Codes— Continued SIC Codes— Continued 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 70 72 73 75 76 78 79 80 81 82 84 86 88 89 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, exchanges, and services Insurance carriers Insurance agents, brokers,and service Real estate Combinations of real estate, insurance, loans, law offices Holding and other investment companies Hotels, rooming houses, camps, and other lodging 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 42 Definition o f Codes— Continued State Codes 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 NEW ENGLAND REGION Maine New Hampshire Vermont Massachusetts Rhode Island Connecticut 20 21 22 23 MIDDLE ATLANTIC New York New Jersey Pennsylvania 30 31 32 33 34 35 EAST NORTH CENTRAL REGION Ohio Indiana Illinois Michigan Wisconsin 40 41 42 43 44 45 WEST NORTH CENTRAL REGION Minnesota Iowa Missouri North Dakota South Dakota 50 57 58 59 SOUTH ATLANTIC REGION— Continued South Carolina Georgia Florida 60 61 62 63 64 EAST SOUTH CENTRAL REGION Kentucky Tennessee Alabama Mississippi 70 71 72 73 74 WEST SOUTH CENTRAL REGION Arkansas Louisiana Oklahoma Texas 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 MOUNTAIN REGION Montana Idaho Wyoming Colorado New Mexico Arizona Utah Nevada 90 91 92 93 94 95 PACIFIC REGION Washington Oregon California Alaska Hawaii 46 Nebraska 47 Kansas 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 SOUTH ATLANTIC REGION Delaware Maryland District of Columbia Virginia West Virginia North Carolina OTHER AREAS 00 Interstate NOTE: Agreements covering employees or operations wholly within one State will be designated by the State code listed. The regional code (10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, or 90), is used where an agreement covers employees or operations in two States or more but does not go beyond 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. 43 Definition o f Codes— Continued Union Codes 1 100 101 102 107 108 112 114 115 116 118 119 120 121 122 127 129 134 143 145 146 147 155 161 162 163 164 168 170 174 175 184 186 187 192 201 202 203 204 205 218 221 230 236 243 304 305 312 319 320 321 323 332 Two AFL—CIO Unions or more Directly Affiliated Local Unions of the AFL-CIO Actors Industrial Workers; Allied Bakery Workers Boilermakers Brick and Clay Workers Bricklayers Iron Workers Service Employees Carpenters Cement Workers Chemical Workers Cigar Makers Electrical Workers (IBEW) Engineers; Operating Garment Workers; Ladies’ Laborers Hotel & Restaurant Employees Jewelry Workers Lathers Meat Cutters Molders Musicians Office Employees Painters Plasterers and Cement Masons Plumbers and Pipefitters Potters Printing Pressmen Retail Clerks Seafarers Sheet Metal Workers Stage Employees Telegraphers Textile Workers; United Tobacco Workers Typographical Union Upholsterers Machinists Toy Workers 333 334 335 337 341 342 343 346 347 352 354 357 425 461 480 484 500 524 527 531 533 542 553 600 704 751 Paperworkers Laundry and Dry Cleaning Union Graphic Arts International Union Brewery Workers Clothing Workers Furniture Workers Marine Engineers Marine and Shipbuilding Workers Maritime Union; National Newspaper Guild Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union Rubber Workers Shoe Workers; United Steelworkers Textile Workers Union Transport Workers Utility Workers Woodworkers Communication Workers Electrical Workers (IUE) Broadcast Employees and Technicians Mechanics Educational Society Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Newspaper and Mail Deliverers Guard Workers: Plant Longshoremen and Warehousemen (Ind.) Electrical Workers (UE) (Ind.) Single Firm Independent Union (s) (Ind.) Packinghouse and Dairy Workers Pulp and Paper; Western Teamsters (Ind.) Laundry, Dry Cleaning and Dyehouse Workers (Ind.) Truck Drivers; Chicago Auto Workers (Ind.) Two Unions or More— Different Affiliations (i.e., AFL—CIO and Independent Unions) Office, Sales, and Technical Employees; United Association of (Ind.) Nurses’ Association Unit Codes 1 2 3 4 Single Company. Association agreement. Industry area agreement (i.e., group of companies signing the same agreement; no formal association). Single company (multiplant)agreement. 1 Unions affiliated with A F L — CIO, except where noted as independent (Ind.) 44 ☆ U . S. G O V E R N M E N T P R IN TIN G O F F I C E : 19 7 3 O - 5 12 -3 79 (46) BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS R E G IO N A L O F F I C E S Region I 1603 JFK Federal Building Government Center Boston, Mass. 02203 Phone: 223-6762 (Area Code 617) Region V 8th Floor, 300 South Wacker Drive Chicago, III. 60606 Phone: 353-1880 (Area Code 312) Region II 1515 Broadway N e w York, N.Y. 10036 Phone: 971-5405 (Area Code 212) Region VI 1100 Commerce St., Rm. 6B7 Dallas, Tex. 75202 Phone: 749-3516 (Area Code 214) Region IN 406 Penn Square Building 1317 Filbert St. Philadelphia, Pa. 19107 Phone: 597-7796 (Area Code 215) Region VII and VIII Federal Office Building 911 Walnut St., 15th Floor Kansas City, Mo. 64106 Phone: 374-2481 (Area Code 816) Region IV Suite 540 1371 Peachtree St. NE. Atlanta, Ga. 30309 Phone: 526-5418 (Area Code 404) Region IX and X 450 Golden Gate Ave. Box 36017 San Francisco, Calif. 94102 Phone: 556-4678 (Area Code 415) ** Regions VII and VIII are serviced by Kansas City. Regions IX and X are serviced by San Francisco. U.S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR THIRD CLASS MAIL BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS W A S H I N G T O N , D.C. 20212 P O S T A G E A N D FEES PAID OFFICIAL BUSINESS U.S. D E PARTM ENT OF LABOR PENALTY FOR PRIVATE USE, $300 LAB - 441